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[📖Getting started] [❓FAQs & Troubleshooting]

Lima logo

Lima: Linux virtual machines (on macOS, in most cases)

Lima launches Linux virtual machines with automatic file sharing and port forwarding (similar to WSL2), and containerd.

Lima can be considered as a some sort of unofficial "containerd for Mac".

Lima is expected to be used on macOS hosts, but can be used on Linux hosts as well.

✅ Automatic file sharing

✅ Automatic port forwarding

✅ Built-in support for containerd (Other container engines can be used too)

✅ Intel on Intel

ARM on Intel

✅ ARM on ARM

Intel on ARM

✅ Various guest Linux distributions: AlmaLinux, Alpine, Arch Linux, Debian, Fedora, openSUSE, Oracle Linux, Rocky, Ubuntu (default), ...

Related project: sshocker (ssh with file sharing and port forwarding)

This project is unrelated to The Lima driver project (driver for ARM Mali GPUs).

The talks page contains links to slides and video from conference presentations about Lima.

Motivation

The goal of Lima is to promote containerd including nerdctl (contaiNERD ctl) to Mac users, but Lima can be used for non-container applications as well.

Community

Adopters

Container environments:

  • Rancher Desktop: Kubernetes and container management to the desktop
  • Colima: Docker (and Kubernetes) on macOS with minimal setup
  • Finch: Finch is a command line client for local container development

GUI:

Communication channels

Code of Conduct

Lima follows the CNCF Code of Conduct.

Examples

uname

$ uname -a
Darwin macbook.local 20.4.0 Darwin Kernel Version 20.4.0: Thu Apr 22 21:46:47 PDT 2021; root:xnu-7195.101.2~1/RELEASE_X86_64 x86_64

$ lima uname -a
Linux lima-default 5.11.0-16-generic #17-Ubuntu SMP Wed Apr 14 20:12:43 UTC 2021 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux

$ LIMA_INSTANCE=arm lima uname -a
Linux lima-arm 5.11.0-16-generic #17-Ubuntu SMP Wed Apr 14 20:10:16 UTC 2021 aarch64 aarch64 aarch64 GNU/Linux

See ./docs/multi-arch.md for Intel-on-ARM and ARM-on-Intel .

Sharing files across macOS and Linux

$ echo "files under /Users on macOS filesystem are readable from Linux" > some-file

$ lima cat some-file
files under /Users on macOS filesystem are readable from Linux

$ lima sh -c 'echo "/tmp/lima is writable from both macOS and Linux" > /tmp/lima/another-file'

$ cat /tmp/lima/another-file
/tmp/lima is writable from both macOS and Linux

Running containerd containers (compatible with Docker containers)

$ lima nerdctl run -d --name nginx -p 127.0.0.1:8080:80 nginx:alpine

You don't need to run "lima nerdctl" everytime, instead you can use special shortcut called "nerdctl.lima" to do the same thing. By default, it'll be installed along with the lima, so, you don't need to do anything extra. There will be a symlink called nerdctl pointing to nerdctl.lima. This is only created when there is no nerdctl entry in the directory already though. It worths to mention that this is created only via make install. Not included in Homebrew/MacPorts/nix packages.

http://127.0.0.1:8080 is accessible from both macOS and Linux.

For the usage of containerd and nerdctl (contaiNERD ctl), visit https://github.com/containerd/containerd and https://github.com/containerd/nerdctl.

Getting started

Installation

Homebrew package is available.

brew install lima
Manual installation steps

Install QEMU

Install QEMU 7.0 or later.

Install Lima

brew install jq
VERSION=$(curl -fsSL https://api.github.com/repos/lima-vm/lima/releases/latest | jq -r .tag_name)
curl -fsSL "https://github.com/lima-vm/lima/releases/download/${VERSION}/lima-${VERSION:1}-$(uname -s)-$(uname -m).tar.gz" | tar Cxzvm /usr/local
  • To install Lima from the source, run make && make install.

NOTE Lima is not regularly tested on ARM Mac (due to lack of CI).

Usage

[macOS]$ limactl start
...
INFO[0029] READY. Run `lima` to open the shell.

[macOS]$ lima uname
Linux

Command reference

limactl start

limactl start [--name=NAME] [--tty=false] <template://TEMPLATE>: start the Linux instance

$ limactl start
? Creating an instance "default"  [Use arrows to move, type to filter]
> Proceed with the current configuration
  Open an editor to review or modify the current configuration
  Choose another example (docker, podman, archlinux, fedora, ...)
  Exit
...
INFO[0029] READY. Run `lima` to open the shell.

Choose Proceed with the current configuration, and wait until "READY" to be printed on the host terminal. For automation, --tty=false flag can be used for disabling the interactive user interface.

Advanced usage

To create an instance "default" from a template "docker":

$ limactl start --name=default template://docker

NOTE: limactl start template://TEMPLATE requires Lima v0.9.0 or later. Older releases require limactl start /usr/local/share/doc/lima/examples/TEMPLATE.yaml instead.

To create an instance "default" with modified parameters:

$ limactl start --set='.cpus = 2 | .memory = "2GiB"'

To see the template list:

$ limactl start --list-templates

To create an instance "default" from a local file:

$ limactl start --name=default /usr/local/share/lima/examples/fedora.yaml

To create an instance "default" from a remote URL (use carefully, with a trustable source):

$ limactl start --name=default https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lima-vm/lima/master/examples/alpine.yaml

limactl shell

limactl shell <INSTANCE> <COMMAND>: launch <COMMAND> on Linux.

For the "default" instance, this command can be shortened as lima <COMMAND>. The lima command also accepts the instance name as the environment variable $LIMA_INSTANCE.

limactl copy

limactl copy <SOURCE> ... <TARGET>: copy files between instances, or between instances and the host

Use <INSTANCE>:<FILENAME> to specify a source or target inside an instance.

limactl list

limactl list [--json]: show the instances

limactl stop

limactl stop [--force] <INSTANCE>: stop the instance

limactl delete

limactl delete [--force] <INSTANCE>: delete the instance

limactl factory-reset

limactl factory-reset <INSTANCE>: factory reset the instance

limactl edit

limactl edit <INSTANCE>: edit the instance

limactl disk

limactl disk create <DISK> --size <SIZE>: create a new external disk to attach to an instance

limactl disk delete <DISK>: delete an existing disk

limactl disk list: list all existing disks

limactl show-ssh

  • limactl show-ssh --format=cmd <INSTANCE> (default): Full ssh command line
  • limactl show-ssh --format=args <INSTANCE>: Similar to the cmd format but omits ssh and the destination address
  • limactl show-ssh --format=options <INSTANCE>: ssh option key value pairs
  • limactl show-ssh --format=config <INSTANCE>: ~/.ssh/config format

The config file is also automatically created inside the instance directory:

$ limactl ls --format='{{.SSHConfigFile}}' default
/Users/example/.lima/default/ssh.config

$ ssh -F /Users/example/.lima/default/ssh.config lima-default

limactl completion

  • To enable bash completion, add source <(limactl completion bash) to ~/.bash_profile.

  • To enable zsh completion, see limactl completion zsh --help

⚠️ CAUTION: make sure to back up your data

Lima may have bugs that result in loss of data.

Make sure to back up your data before running Lima.

Especially, the following data might be easily lost:

  • Data in the shared writable directories (/tmp/lima by default), probably after hibernation of the host machine (e.g., after closing and reopening the laptop lid)
  • Data in the VM image, mostly when upgrading the version of lima

Configuration

See ./examples/default.yaml.

The current default spec:

  • OS: Ubuntu 22.10 (Kinetic Kudu)
  • CPU: 4 cores
  • Memory: 4 GiB
  • Disk: 100 GiB
  • Mounts: ~ (read-only), /tmp/lima (writable)
  • SSH: 127.0.0.1:60022

How it works

Developer guide

Contributing to Lima

Help wanted

🙏

  • Documents
  • CLI user experience
  • Performance optimization
  • Windows hosts
  • vsock to replace SSH (work has to be done on QEMU repo)

FAQs & Troubleshooting

Generic

Generic

"What's my login password?"

Password is disabled and locked by default. You have to use limactl shell bash (or lima bash) to open a shell.

Alternatively, you may also directly ssh into the guest: ssh -p 60022 -i ~/.lima/_config/user -o NoHostAuthenticationForLocalhost=yes 127.0.0.1.

"Does Lima work on ARM Mac?"

Yes, it should work, but not regularly tested on ARM (due to lack of CI).

"Can I run non-Ubuntu guests?"

AlmaLinux, Alpine, Arch Linux, Debian, Fedora, openSUSE, Oracle Linux, and Rocky are also known to work. See ./examples/.

An image has to satisfy the following requirements:

  • systemd or OpenRC
  • cloud-init
  • The following binaries to be preinstalled:
    • sudo
  • The following binaries to be preinstalled, or installable via the package manager:
    • sshfs
    • newuidmap and newgidmap
  • apt-get, dnf, apk, pacman, or zypper (if you want to contribute support for another package manager, run git grep apt-get to find out where to modify)

"Can I run other container engines such as Docker and Podman? What about Kubernetes?"

Yes, any container engine should work with Lima.

Container runtime examples:

Container image builder examples:

Container orchestrator examples:

The default Ubuntu image also contains LXD. Run lima sudo lxc init to set up LXD.

See also third party containerd projects based on Lima:

  • Rancher Desktop: Kubernetes and container management to the desktop
  • Colima: Docker (and Kubernetes) on macOS with minimal setup

"Can I run Lima with a remote Linux machine?"

Lima itself does not support connecting to a remote Linux machine, but sshocker, the predecessor or Lima, provides similar features for remote Linux machines.

e.g., run sshocker -v /Users/foo:/home/foo/mnt -p 8080:80 <USER>@<HOST> to expose /Users/foo to the remote machine as /home/foo/mnt, and forward localhost:8080 to the port 80 of the remote machine.

"Advantages compared to Docker for Mac?"

Lima is free software (Apache License 2.0), while Docker for Mac is not. Their EULA even prohibits disclosure of benchmarking result.

On the other hand, Moby, aka Docker for Linux, is free software, but Moby/Docker lacks several novel features of containerd, such as:

QEMU

"QEMU crashes with HV_ERROR"

If you have installed QEMU v6.0.0 or later on macOS 11 via homebrew, your QEMU binary should have been already automatically signed to enable HVF acceleration.

However, if you see HV_ERROR, you might need to sign the binary manually.

cat >entitlements.xml <<EOF
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
    <key>com.apple.security.hypervisor</key>
    <true/>
</dict>
</plist>
EOF

codesign -s - --entitlements entitlements.xml --force /usr/local/bin/qemu-system-x86_64

Note: Only on macOS versions before 10.15.7 you might need to add this entitlement in addition:

    <key>com.apple.vm.hypervisor</key>
    <true/>

"QEMU is slow"

  • Make sure that HVF is enabled with com.apple.security.hypervisor entitlement. See "QEMU crashes with HV_ERROR".
  • Emulating non-native machines (ARM-on-Intel, Intel-on-ARM) is slow by design. See docs/multi-arch.md for a workaround.

error "killed -9"

  • make sure qemu is codesigned, See "QEMU crashes with HV_ERROR".
  • if you are on macOS 10.15.7 or 11.0 or later make sure the entitlement com.apple.vm.hypervisor is not added. It only works on older macOS versions. You can clear the codesigning with codesign --remove-signature /usr/local/bin/qemu-system-x86_64 and start over.

"QEMU crashes with vmx_write_mem: mmu_gva_to_gpa XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX failed"

This error is known to happen when running an image of RHEL8-compatible distribution such as Rocky Linux 8.x on Intel Mac. A workaround is to set environment variable QEMU_SYSTEM_X86_64="qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu Haswell-v4".

https://bugs.launchpad.net/qemu/+bug/1838390

Networking

"Cannot access the guest IP 192.168.5.15 from the host"

The default guest IP 192.168.5.15 is not accessible from the host and other guests.

To add another IP address that is accessible from the host and other virtual machines, enable socket_vmnet (since Lima v0.12) or vde_vmnet (Deprecated).

See ./docs/network.md.

"Ping shows duplicate packets and massive response times"

Lima uses QEMU's SLIRP networking which does not support ping out of the box:

$ ping google.com
PING google.com (172.217.165.14): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 172.217.165.14: seq=0 ttl=42 time=2395159.646 ms
64 bytes from 172.217.165.14: seq=0 ttl=42 time=2396160.798 ms (DUP!)

For more details, see Documentation/Networking.

Filesystem sharing

"Filesystem is slow"

Try virtiofs. See docs/mount.md

"Filesystem is not writable"

The home directory is mounted as read-only by default. To enable writing, specify writable: true in the YAML:

mounts:
- location: "~"
  writable: true

Run limactl edit <INSTANCE> to open the YAML editor for an existing instance.

External projects

"I am using Rancher Desktop. How to deal with the underlying Lima?"

Rancher Desktop includes the rdctl tool (installed in ~/.rd/bin/rdctl) that provides shell access via rdctl shell.

It is not recommended to directly interact with the Rancher Desktop VM via limactl.

If you need to create an override.yaml file, its location should be:

  • macOS: $HOME/Library/Application Support/rancher-desktop/lima/_config/override.yaml
  • Linux: $HOME/.local/share/rancher-desktop/lima/_config/override.yaml

"Hints for debugging other problems?"

  • Inspect logs:
    • limactl --debug start
    • $HOME/.lima/<INSTANCE>/serial.log
    • /var/log/cloud-init-output.log (inside the guest)
    • /var/log/cloud-init.log (inside the guest)
  • Make sure that you aren't mixing up tabs and spaces in the YAML.

We are a Cloud Native Computing Foundation sandbox project.

The Linux Foundation® (TLF) has registered trademarks and uses trademarks. For a list of TLF trademarks, see Trademark Usage.

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