
This video demonstrates the whole process step-by-step. Red Hat was able to install RHEL 9 as a guest virtual machine on an M1 Mac running a beta version of Ventura. The improvements in Ventura enable Linux distributions with ARM builds, such as RHEL 9, to run on Apple silicon with near-native performance. There can also be advantages to running production Linux-based workloads on Apple silicon. But with the virtualization improvements in Ventura, developers using Apple silicon can run a local Linux virtual machine natively on their workstations with a seamless GUI experience and no dependence on connectivity to separate infrastructure. However, users of the latest Apple silicon hardware had hurdles to overcome in order to run ARM-based Linux distributions within local VMs, which often meant that connecting to external Linux infrastructure was the easiest option. Running Linux in a local virtual machine is a convenient option that has mostly been a seamless experience on Macs running Intel-based processors. Running RHEL 9 on Apple siliconĭevelopers who use MacBooks or other Apple hardware often find value in utilizing a separate Linux host in order to build, test, and/or run software that is ultimately intended to be deployed on Linux. Spoiler alert: it worked great! Read on for the details and two video demos. Red Hat recently took a closer look at a beta release of Ventura to see how easy it would be to run virtualized versions of two key technologies- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 and the single node version of the Red Hat OpenShift Container Platform-on Apple silicon. New features of the framework include EFI bootloader support and the ability to render the desktop GUI in a window. Apple's Virtualization Framework is gaining new features in the upcoming release of macOS Ventura that will make it easy to run ARM Linux virtual machines natively on the M1 processor or other Apple silicon chips.
