- Intel and M1 Macs support
- Simple CLI interface
- Docker and Containerd support
- Port Forwarding
- Volume mounts
- Kubernetes
Colima is available on Homebrew, MacPorts, and Nix. Check here for other installation options.
# Homebrew
brew install colima
# MacPorts
sudo port install colima
# Nix
nix-env -iA nixpkgs.colima
Or stay on the bleeding edge (only Homebrew)
brew install --HEAD colima
If upgrading from v0.3.4 or lower, it is required to start afresh by deleting existing instance.
colima delete # delete existing instance
colima start
Start Colima with defaults
colima start
For more usage options
colima --help
colima start --help
Or use a config file
colima start --edit
On initial startup, Colima initiates with a user specified runtime that defaults to Docker.
Docker client is required for Docker runtime. Installable with brew brew install docker
.
You can use the docker
client on macOS after colima start
with no additional setup.
colima start --runtime containerd
starts and setup Containerd. You can use colima nerdctl
to interact with
Containerd using nerdctl.
It is recommended to run colima nerdctl install
to install nerdctl
alias script in $PATH.
kubectl is required for Kubernetes. Installable with brew install kubectl
.
To enable Kubernetes, start Colima with --kubernetes
flag.
colima start --kubernetes
For Docker runtime, images built or pulled with Docker are accessible to Kubernetes.
For Containerd runtime, images built or pulled in the k8s.io
namespace are accessible to Kubernetes.
The default VM created by Colima has 2 CPUs, 2GiB memory and 60GiB storage.
The VM can be customized either by passing additional flags to colima start
.
e.g. --cpu
, --memory
, --disk
, --runtime
.
Or by editing the config file with colima start --edit
.
NOTE: disk size cannot be changed after the VM is created.
-
create VM with 1CPU, 2GiB memory and 10GiB storage.
colima start --cpu 1 --memory 2 --disk 10
-
modify an existing VM to 4CPUs and 8GiB memory.
colima stop colima start --cpu 4 --memory 8
To provide container runtimes on macOS with minimal setup.
Colima means Containers in Lima.
Since Lima is aka Linux on Mac. By transitivity, Colima can also mean Containers on Linux on Mac.
Check here for Frequently Asked Questions.
- Documentation (wiki pages)
MIT
If you (or your company) are benefiting from the project and would like to support the contributors, kindly support the project.