--- hide: - navigation --- Try running a Tart VM on your Apple Silicon device running macOS 12.0 (Monterey) or later (will download a 25 GB image): ```bash brew install cirruslabs/cli/tart tart clone ghcr.io/cirruslabs/macos-ventura-base:latest ventura-base tart run ventura-base ```

## SSH access If the guest VM is running and configured to accept incoming SSH connections you can conveniently connect to it like so: ```bash ssh admin@$(tart ip macos-monterey-base) ``` ## Mounting directories To mount a directory, run the VM with the `--dir` argument: ```bash tart run --dir=project:~/src/project vm ``` Here, the `project` specifies a mount name, whereas the `~/src/project` is a path to the host's directory to expose to the VM. It is also possible to mount directories in read-only mode by adding a third parameter, `ro`: ```bash tart run --dir=project:~/src/project:ro vm ``` To mount multiple directories, repeat the `--dir` argument for each directory: ```bash tart run --dir=www1:~/project1/www --dir=www2:~/project2/www ``` Note that the first parameter in each `--dir` argument must be unique, otherwise only the last `--dir` argument using that name will be used. Note: to use the directory mounting feature, the host needs to run macOS 13.0 (Ventura) or newer. ### Accessing mounted directories in macOS guests All shared directories are automatically mounted to `/Volumes/My Shared Files` directory. The directory we've mounted above will be accessible from the `/Volumes/My Shared Files/project` path inside a guest VM. Note: to use the directory mounting feature, the guest VM needs to run macOS 13.0 (Ventura) or newer. ### Accessing mounted directories in Linux guests To be able to access the shared directories from the Linux guest, you need to manually mount the virtual filesystem first: ```bash mount -t virtiofs com.apple.virtio-fs.automount /mnt/shared ``` The directory we've mounted above will be accessible from the `/mnt/shared/project` path inside a guest VM.