There's no direct download of Ubuntu Desktop 22.04 for ARM64 yet, how do you install it?
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Just out of curiosity: How well does this run, i.e. would you consider using it as a daily driver? What kind of battery life are you seeing (and on what machines)? – Cliowa Sep 22 '22 at 10:47
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I ran it for a couple months without remembering it was running silently in the background. It's really not bad as long as you kill the GUI and just keep it text-only and then kill off a few more services that chew CPU cycles. – ylluminate Sep 29 '22 at 00:45
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It's unfortunate to see that the only answers here direct you to a paid subscription (Parallels $119/yr). The standard plan isn't suited for professional use. – Ricky Boyce Dec 22 '23 at 01:51
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If you noted, I did put "Parallels" specifically in the title to be very specific for the purpose of this. I do use the professional version of Parallels because I, too, need more functionality. You are welcome to try UTM, but I found it lacking in various areas and ultimately was not able to provide a sufficiently refined experience in some areas that required it for my needs. – ylluminate Dec 26 '23 at 06:56
4 Answers
UPDATE 2: A non-public (not on their main website) release of the arm64 Desktop version is now available on the daily-live folder:
https://cdimage.ubuntu.com/jammy/daily-live/current/jammy-desktop-arm64.iso
Your mileage may vary, but it could perhaps work outright as this other user has indicated.
Some were confused, here's a complete screencast of the process outlined below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=56n2q6-MXX8
- Download the ARM64 Server edition from: https://ubuntu.com/download/server/arm
- Install with the ISO when creating a new guest/vm in Parallels 17
- Update System
sudo apt update && sudo apt upgradethensudo reboot - Login and install:
sudo apt install ubuntu-desktop - Reboot (
sudo reboot) - Parallels Tools Installation: two options
Use Menubar:
- Menubar → Actions → Install Parallels Tools
- Install via shell:
cd /media/USERNAME/Parallels\ Tools sudo ./install sudo reboot
Use ISO: mount Parallels ARM64 tools ISO and install:
- Note: initially I installed Parallels Tools before installing the graphical user interface, but if you install it after the installation of
ubuntu-desktopor evenkde-standard/full/whateverthen copy paste, etc. functionality will also be installed.
- CD-ROM: "Connect image..."
- Navigate to
/Applications/and change to List view - Expand
Parallels Desktop.app/Contents/Resources/Tools/ - Select and Open
prl-tools-lin-arm.iso - Execute:
sudo mount /dev/cdrom /media/ cd /media/ sudo ./install # allow it to install appropriate tools sudo reboot
- Note: initially I installed Parallels Tools before installing the graphical user interface, but if you install it after the installation of
DOCKER:
There was a question below about whether or not Docker can work with Ubuntu 22.04 on Apple Silicon. The answer is YES. The catch or hang up that people are hitting is when they try to use "Docker Desktop" on Ubuntu (instead of directly on macOS). This tries to run a nested virtualization scenario and Apple does not have this instruction set available on the M1 series of Apple Silicon devices. The key, however, is to just use Docker itself with something like a tutorial from here: https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-install-and-use-docker-on-ubuntu-22-04
You'll then notice that after you successfully set it up and run docker run hello-world that it does work. Furthermore you can do install distributions like Alpine and run them:
$ docker pull alpine
$ docker run -it alpine
/ # ls
bin dev etc home lib media mnt opt proc root run sbin srv sys tmp usr var
/ # exit
$ docker image ls
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
alpine latest 3fb3c9af89a9 5 weeks ago 5.32MB
hello-world latest 46331d942d63 7 weeks ago 9.14kB
$ docker system prune -a --volumes
WARNING! This will remove:
- all stopped containers
- all networks not used by at least one container
- all volumes not used by at least one container
- all images without at least one container associated to them
- all build cache
Are you sure you want to continue? [y/N] y
Deleted Containers:
e02dce4144eccb4828a3775ec96c97c5741c69120981bf323732796ff2e4855f
72beba41f97505fe14532b0f700e6c1477986c35c656bac7500591194725e1ef
Deleted Images:
untagged: hello-world:latest
untagged: hello-world@sha256:80f31da1ac7b312ba29d65080fddf797dd76acfb870e677f390d5acba9741b17
deleted: sha256:46331d942d6350436f64e614d75725f6de3bb5c63e266e236e04389820a234c4
deleted: sha256:efb53921da3394806160641b72a2cbd34ca1a9a8345ac670a85a04ad3d0e3507
untagged: alpine:latest
untagged: alpine@sha256:4edbd2beb5f78b1014028f4fbb99f3237d9561100b6881aabbf5acce2c4f9454
deleted: sha256:3fb3c9af89a9178a2ab12a1f30d8df607fa46a6f176acf9448328b22d31086a2
deleted: sha256:4f4ce317c6bbf55719e49973d32d33ba456d7cb08693a6d6fb372690eacee23b
Total reclaimed space: 5.331MB
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1There is also a ARM64 Desktop image available here: http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/jammy/daily-live/current/ Not sure if that is quite new, but it seems so ;) I was able to succefully use that image to install Jammy in Parallels (I will also try UTM). Haven't found a ARM64 image for KUbuntu however :( If someone finds out about that, please let me know, thanks! – mkurz May 29 '22 at 10:18
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Cool, nice to see they finally built it @mkurz. No, could not find it anywhere before, but Kubuntu can be installed atop Server as above or on Desktop. I actually switched to Kubuntu after installation and just didn't document it above. Try
sudo apt install kde-fullor lighter meta packageskde-standardorkde-plasma-desktop. – ylluminate May 29 '22 at 18:28 -
Parallels isn't available for free. I suggest using UTM as an alternative. – Mehrshad Sep 05 '23 at 08:29
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Yeah, been flirting with UTM for some time @Mehrshad, but it's just not yet mature enough in some areas that Parallels offers. I suppose it depends on your use case. UTM definitely helps, however, with architectures not directly supported or even operating systems such as QNX even with arm64. – ylluminate Sep 12 '23 at 19:25
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the latest version of VirtualBox has macOS/ARM support though it seems that Debian works better than Ubuntu: https://forums.virtualbox.org/viewtopic.php?t=112350 – r_2009 Jan 07 '25 at 02:46
- Be on a M1 Mac - I'm using a Pro with 16gb RAM.
- Have Parallels Desktop installed - not from Mac app store in my case. I don't think the version downloaded from the Parallels site matters, I have the one above basic, but I think that just gets you more RAM.
- Download the Jammy Jellyfish Daily Build:
- Create new vm using the iso.
- I didn't go with the automatic install option from Parallels. Not sure if it works the other way. Installed, rebooted, boot sequence froze after it couldn't find cd/dvd. I think I hit enter and it worked, or I restarted it somehow.
- Performed the following that I saw from the another post on this page:
- CD-ROM: "Connect image..."
- Navigate to /Applications/ and change to List view
- Expand Parallels Desktop.app/Contents/Resources/Tools/
- Select and Open prl-tools-lin-arm.iso
- Execute: sudo mount /dev/cdrom /media/ cd /media/ sudo ./install
- allow it to install appropriate tools sudo reboot
- Worked for me!
- Now where are all the arm apps? Hopefully, they get ported over time.
- Side note, I tried really hard to get this working for Fedora 36, but couldn't get Parallels Tools to work.
- Bonus note, the speed of the system is much much faster using a M1 Mac vs 2020 mac mini with 32gb of RAM on x86 architecture. I figured they would be similar, but I was wrong. M1 is crushing it. Best of luck!
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This works fine with QEMU (source https://medium.com/@joachim8675309/vagrant-with-macbook-mx-arm64-0f590fd7e48a):
# create configuration file for arm64 vm image
cat <<EOF > Vagrantfile
Vagrant.configure("2") do |config|
config.vm.box = "perk/ubuntu-2204-arm64"
config.vm.provider "qemu" do |qe|
qe.ssh_port = "50022" # change ssh port as needed
end
end
EOF
download and startup VM using hvf
vagrant up --provider=qemu
log into the VM
vagrant ssh
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Curious, how do you think this method compares with Ubuntu's
multipasssystem? – ylluminate May 16 '24 at 19:06 -
MultiPass looks awesome. Vagrant not only supports multiple hypervisors, but can provision the systems with shell, Chef, Puppet, CFEngine, Ansible, Salt Stack, Docker, and PodMan; has online repository of numerous distros/OSes beyond Ubuntu; and integrates with tools like TestKitchen that can test systems with tools like ServerSpec, InSpec, TestInfra, and others. – Joaquin Menchaca Oct 09 '24 at 22:27
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One thing that has concerned me is performance differentials between Ubuntu on Parallels vs Multipass. At an initial glance, without benchmarking, it seems Parallels is more performant... I need to do some testing though. Holistic performance is paramount in my mind in this usecase. – ylluminate Oct 10 '24 at 05:04
I was successful running the command below:
docker run --platform linux/arm64 -p 52022:22 --name arm64 -v /Users/my_username:/home/my_username -v /tmp/:/tmp -it ubuntu:22.04
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