Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

You have successfully unsubscribed! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates about Ubuntu and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Boot ARM64 virtual machines on QEMU

Note:
This documentation has moved to a new home! Please update your bookmarks to the new URL for the up-to-date version of this page.

Ubuntu ARM64 images can run inside QEMU. You can either do this fully emulated (e.g. on an x86 host) or accelerated with KVM if you have an ARM64 host. This page describes how to do both.

Note:
This requires Ubuntu 20.04 or greater

Install QEMU

The first step is to install the qemu-system-arm package, which needs to be done regardless of where the ARM64 virtual machine will run:

sudo apt install qemu-system-arm

Create necessary support files

Next, create a VM-specific flash volume for storing NVRAM variables, which are necessary when booting EFI firmware:

truncate -s 64m varstore.img

We also need to copy the ARM UEFI firmware into a bigger file:

truncate -s 64m efi.img
dd if=/usr/share/qemu-efi-aarch64/QEMU_EFI.fd of=efi.img conv=notrunc

Fetch the Ubuntu cloud image

You need to fetch the ARM64 variant of the Ubuntu cloud image you would like to use in the virtual machine. You can go to the official Ubuntu cloud image website, select the Ubuntu release, and then download the variant whose filename ends in -arm64.img. For example, if you want to use the latest Jammy cloud image, you should download the file named jammy-server-cloudimg-arm64.img.

Run QEMU natively on an ARM64 host

If you have access to an ARM64 host, you should be able to create and launch an ARM64 virtual machine there. Note that the command below assumes that you have already set up a network bridge to be used by the virtual machine.

sudo qemu-system-aarch64 \
 -enable-kvm \
 -m 1024 \
 -cpu host \
 -M virt \
 -nographic \
 -drive if=pflash,format=raw,file=efi.img,readonly=on \
 -drive if=pflash,format=raw,file=varstore.img \
 -drive if=none,file=jammy-server-cloudimg-arm64.img,id=hd0 \
 -device virtio-blk-device,drive=hd0 -netdev type=tap,id=net0 \
 -device virtio-net-device,netdev=net0

Run an emulated ARM64 VM on x86

You can also emulate an ARM64 virtual machine on an x86 host. To do that:

sudo qemu-system-aarch64 \
 -m 2048 \
 -cpu max \
 -M virt \
 -nographic \
 -drive if=pflash,format=raw,file=efi.img,readonly=on \
 -drive if=pflash,format=raw,file=varstore.img \
 -drive if=none,file=jammy-server-cloudimg-arm64.img,id=hd0 \
 -device virtio-blk-device,drive=hd0 \
 -netdev type=tap,id=net0 \
 -device virtio-net-device,netdev=net0

Troubleshooting

No output and no response

If you get no output from the QEMU command above, aligning your host and guest release versions may help. For example, if you generated efi.img on Focal but want to emulate Jammy (with the Jammy cloud image), the firmware may not be fully compatible. Generating efi.img on Jammy when emulating Jammy with the Jammy cloud image may help.

This page was last modified 2 months ago. Help improve this document in the forum.