ConfigsApr 26, 2026·3 min read

Multipass — Instant Ubuntu VMs on Any Desktop

Multipass by Canonical launches Ubuntu virtual machines in seconds on macOS, Windows, and Linux, providing lightweight cloud-style development environments locally.

Introduction

Multipass is a lightweight VM manager by Canonical that lets you spin up Ubuntu instances in seconds on macOS, Windows, or Linux. It provides a cloud-init compatible workflow, making it easy to create reproducible development and testing environments without the overhead of full hypervisor management.

What Multipass Does

  • Launches Ubuntu VMs in under 30 seconds with a single command
  • Supports cloud-init for automated provisioning on first boot
  • Manages VM lifecycle (start, stop, delete, snapshot) through a simple CLI
  • Mounts host directories into guest VMs for seamless file sharing
  • Uses native hypervisors (HyperKit/QEMU on macOS, Hyper-V on Windows, KVM on Linux)

Architecture Overview

Multipass runs a local daemon that manages VM lifecycle through the host's native hypervisor. On macOS it uses QEMU or HyperKit, on Windows it uses Hyper-V or VirtualBox, and on Linux it uses QEMU/KVM or LXD. The CLI communicates with the daemon over a local gRPC socket. Each VM boots from an official Ubuntu cloud image with cloud-init applied.

Self-Hosting & Configuration

  • Install via brew install --cask multipass on macOS, Chocolatey on Windows, or snap on Linux
  • Set the default hypervisor with multipass set local.driver=qemu (or hyperkit, hyperv)
  • Pass cloud-init YAML with multipass launch --cloud-init config.yaml
  • Mount host directories with multipass mount ~/projects dev:/home/ubuntu/projects
  • Configure default CPU, memory, and disk with multipass set local.default-* keys

Key Features

  • Sub-minute VM launch times using pre-built Ubuntu cloud images
  • Full cloud-init support for reproducible provisioning scripts
  • Native hypervisor integration for near-bare-metal performance
  • Host directory mounts for seamless development workflows
  • Snapshot and restore for quick environment rollbacks

Comparison with Similar Tools

  • Lima — Linux VMs on macOS with containerd focus; Multipass is Ubuntu-specific with tighter Canonical integration
  • Vagrant — multi-provider VM management with Vagrantfiles; Multipass is simpler and faster for Ubuntu-only workflows
  • Docker Desktop — container-based environments; Multipass provides full VMs when containers are not sufficient
  • UTM — macOS VM app with GUI; Multipass is CLI-first and optimized for automated provisioning
  • WSL 2 — Windows-only Linux layer; Multipass runs full VMs across all three major operating systems

FAQ

Q: Which Ubuntu versions does Multipass support? A: Multipass supports all current Ubuntu LTS releases and the latest interim release. Use multipass find to list available images.

Q: Can I run non-Ubuntu images? A: Multipass is designed for Ubuntu images. For other distributions, consider Lima or Vagrant.

Q: How does Multipass compare to running Docker containers? A: Multipass provides full virtual machines with their own kernel, suitable for testing kernel modules, systemd services, or workloads that need a complete OS.

Q: Does Multipass support ARM architectures? A: Yes. On Apple Silicon Macs, Multipass runs ARM64 Ubuntu images natively through QEMU or the Virtualization framework.

Sources

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