

**Is your feature request related to a problem? Please describe.**Ī lot of dev … elopers are now on ARM architectures. can be found in the issue, if deemed relevant. I have no idea how running (a presumed) x86-64 image on ARM would work (if at all), or if Fusion on ARM is only capable of running ARM images on ARM.Īnyone had success with this or has any knowledge to share?



This could of course be because almost every bit in this equation is bleeding edge (or at least pretty fresh):īut it could also be that I simply don’t know how one would use Vagrant on vmware. Vagrant encountered an unexpected communications error with the So I installed Vagrant, the VMWare utilities, the provider and whatnot and could see something happening, but ultimately failing (resulting in this bug report). Unfortunately, Virtualbox does not run on Apple Silicon (the M1 Macbook), so I thought I was out of luck, until I read that VMWare has its own provider and they just (September) released a Tech Preview of Fusion that runs on Apple Silicon! Run Bahmni on a Linux cloud machine (will require additional steps of deploying the jar/war file over SFTP after each development build, which can feel painful).After seeing the abysmal I/O performance of Docker up close on macOS I decided to give Vagrant a go. Most of the Bahmni team has now shifted to Docker based development workflow. If you want to run an older version of Bahmni on docker, then you will need to dockerize that version (reference: Older Bahmni docker). JIRA ticket which added this support is here: BAH-1650. This works (although did struggle setting it up on his new M1 machine). Read more here: macbook pro - Does VirtualBox run on Apple Silicon? - Ask Different We currently don’t have any plans of making Vagrant/Virtual box versions for MacM1. So, that is no longer an option for those folks. If you are trying to setup Bahmni on the newer Apple Silicon M1 chipsets, then you might run into some troubles.īahmni Vagrant (using VirtualBox) are not going to run on M1, since VirtualBox is designed for Intel x84 architectures, and M1 isn’t built on Intel-x84.
