1.7 KiB
Guide to Bridged Networking
To set up bridged networking for the macOS VM, use one of the following methods:
Using /etc/network/interfaces
It is possible to create the bridge and tun/tap interfaces by adding the following lines to /etc/network/interfaces
. Replace DEVICENAME
with your ethernet card's device name, and MYUSERNAME
with the user that is starting the VM.
auto br0
iface br0 inet dhcp
bridge_ports DEVICENAME tap0
auto tap0
iface tap0 inet dhcp
pre-up tunctl -u MYUSERNAME -t tap0
Using NetworkManager
You can use NetworkManager to control the bridge and tun/tap interfaces, by creating them with the following commands. Replace DEVICENAME
with your ethernet card's device name.
Make the Bridge
nmcli connection add type bridge \
ifname br1 con-name mybridge
Attach Bridge to Ethernet
nmcli connection add type bridge-slave \
ifname DEVICENAME con-name mynetwork master br1
Make the Tun/Tap
nmcli connection add type tun \
ifname tap0 con-name mytap \
mode tap owner `id -u`
Attach Tun/Tap to Bridge
nmcli connection mod mytap connection.slave-type bridge \
connection.master br1
Attach Bridge to QEMU
Once you have set up the bridge and tun/tap on the host, you'll have to add the following line to basic.sh
, replacing -netdev user,id=net0
. Change tap0
to your corresponding device name.
-netdev tap,id=net0,ifname=tap0,script=no,downscript=no \
You can optionally use the vmxnet3
driver for higher performance compared to the default e1000. Note that replacing it requires macOS El Capitan or higher.
-device vmxnet3,netdev=net0,id=net0,mac=52:54:00:c9:18:27 \