homebrew-macos-cross-toolchains
lima
homebrew-macos-cross-toolchains | lima | |
---|---|---|
3 | 106 | |
761 | 13,972 | |
- | 1.0% | |
6.7 | 9.7 | |
2 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Ruby | Go | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
homebrew-macos-cross-toolchains
- ARMv8 AArch64/ARM64 Full Beginner's Assembly Tutorial
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M1 Users - How are you Cross Compiling?
The messense/homebrew-macos-cross-toolchains gets me past ring but fails on another dependency I have, audiopus_sys:
- Precompiled toolchains for easier cross compiling from macOS to Linux
lima
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Colima k8s nix setup
You can run a virtual machine (e.g. lima) from inside a nix-shell, exactly as you would do with a regular shell.
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Ask HN: Startup Devs -What's your biggest pain while managing cloud deployments?
for others similarly curious, here's an example of the thing: https://github.com/noop-inc/template-java-spring-boot/blob/m...
they seem to be using the excellent lima <https://github.com/lima-vm/lima#readme> for booting on macOS; I run colima for its containerd and k8s support but strongly recommend both projects $(brew install lima colima)
- macOS 14.4 causes JVM crashes
- Lima launches Linux virtual machines for macOS
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Simulate an Ubuntu-like VM inside macOS
Lima is what I use as well. It's quick and easy to just fire up a VM with default settings, but also very easy to configure with different file sharing options, port forwarding, different linux distributions, etc. (their examples are also pretty good IMO [1]).
In particular I use it to run an amd64 VM, which I need to run a stubborn service for work that doesn't run on arm CPUs.
[1] https://github.com/lima-vm/lima/tree/master/examples
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Why are Apple Silicon VMs so different?
Lima (1) is a project that packages Linux distros for MacOS and executes them via qemu in the backend. Maybe you could solve your problem by launching one of their vms and inspecting the command line it generates. You might find an option you were missing.
(1) https://github.com/lima-vm/lima
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The beginning of my eBPF Journey - Kprobe Adventures with BCC
If you wish to delve into all the configuration possibilities for Lima VM, you can visit this resource.
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UTM – Virtual Machines for iOS and macOS
I'd say Lima and Colima should be enough for most use cases:
https://lima-vm.io/
https://github.com/abiosoft/colima
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Lima: Linux Virtual Machines on macOS
Github: https://github.com/lima-vm/lima
Lima wraps QEMU in a simple CLI, with neat features for container users, such as filesystem sharing and automatic localhost port forwarding, as well as DNS and proxy propagation for enterprise networks. Rancher Desktop wraps Lima with k3s integration and GUI.
Talks: https://github.com/lima-vm/lima/blob/master/docs/talks.md
- FLaNK Stack Weekly for 17 July 2023
What are some alternatives?
cross - “Zero setup” cross compilation and “cross testing” of Rust crates
colima - Container runtimes on macOS (and Linux) with minimal setup
opus - Modern audio compression for the internet.
multipass - Multipass orchestrates virtual Ubuntu instances
audiopus_sys - Rust FFI-binding of Opus.
podman - Podman: A tool for managing OCI containers and pods.
homebrew-i386-elf-toolchain - Homebrew formulas for buildling a valid GCC toolchain for the i386-elf target.
Docker-OSX - Run macOS VM in a Docker! Run near native OSX-KVM in Docker! X11 Forwarding! CI/CD for OS X Security Research! Docker mac Containers.
UTM - Virtual machines for iOS and macOS
gcc-mrisc32 - Fork of gcc with support for MRISC32
minikube - Run Kubernetes locally