Understanding VM Networking

Understanding Anka VM networking

Prerequisites

  1. You’ve installed the Anka Virtualization package
  2. You’ve got an active license
  3. You’ve created your first VM Template
  4. You understand how to start and access your VM
  5. You grasp how to modify VM settings, like network-card

By default, we use Apple’s VMNET interface for networking. We also configure the network service as “Using DHCP”.

Anka VMs, by default, use a shared networking configuration with the host. It’s a kind of NAT + DHCP. Every time you start/resume a VM, it gets assigned an IP that you can see with sudo anka show {vmNameOrUUID} command.

SSH access (“Remote Login”) is enabled by default on Anka VMs.

Within the VM, you can find an IP assigned to the host which can be used to ssh or transfer files out. To determine which IP is assigned to the host, execute ipconfig getoption en0 server_identifier (typically 192.168.64.1 for shared network mode and 192.168.128.1 for host network mode)

Changing the network configuration for Anka VMs

> sudo anka modify 12.3.1 set network-card --help
Usage: anka modify set network-card [OPTIONS] [INDEX]...

  Modify network card settings

Options:
  -t, --type [shared|host|bridge|disconnected]
  -b, --bridge TEXT               host interface name to bridge with
  -m, --mac TEXT                  specify fixed MAC address
  -n, --no-mac                    deassign fixed MAC address
  --direct-mac / --no-direct-mac  expose --mac externally
  -v, --vlan INTEGER              assign VLAN ID
  -c, --controller [anet|virtio-net]
                                  set controller
  --local / --no-local            enable (default)/disable inter-VM and VM-host communication
  --help                          Display usage information
❯ anka describe 11.0.1
. . .
network_cards

+------------+--------+--------+-----------+
|   pci_slot | type   | mode   |    pci_id |
+============+========+========+===========+
|         28 | anet   | shared | 538975646 |
+------------+--------+--------+-----------+
. . .

❯ anka modify 11.0.1 set network-card --type bridge --bridge en7

❯ anka describe 11.0.1
. . .
network_cards

+------------+--------+--------+-----------+
|   pci_slot | type   | mode   |    pci_id |
+============+========+========+===========+
|         28 | anet   | bridge | 538975646 |
+------------+--------+--------+-----------+
. . .
TypeDescription
sharedThe default network type operating as NAT + DHCP. Every VM after the start/resume gets an IP address assigned by the internal DHCP server in range 192.168.64.2 - 192.168.64.254. Programs inside a VM can access external networks (outside the host) and the internet directly. Also, other VMs on the host are also accessible.

To access ports/services on VMs using a shared network, enable [port forwarding](/intel/command-line-reference/#modify-templatename-add-port-forwarding) and connect to the host IP at the forwarded port.

hostIt is very similar to the shared one, but the VM get IP addresses from range 192.168.128.2 - 192.168.128.254 and can’t access external networks outside of the host.
bridgeThe Bridged type will cause the VM to show in the network as an individual device and receive a unique IP separate from the host.

An ENV is available to set the interface name: `ANKA_BRIDGE_NAME=en0`

When using the bridge, port-forwarding is not necessary as the VM will receive a unique IP that will be accessible directly to all other devices on the network.

By default, DHCP will not see your VM's MAC address. You'll need to enable `--direct-mac` for the network-card: `anka modify VmName set network-card 0 --type bridged --direct-mac`

disconnectedThe VM will have a disconnected network cable.

Assigning a Static IP

Anka CLI version 2.2 and greater supports Static IP on VMs running on Catalina hosts (the guest OS can be any supported macOS version):

Static IP VM

MAC Addresses

Anka will dynamically assign MAC addresses to your VM. In Catalina and higher, you can assign custom MAC Addresses with the anka modify set network-card --mac option.

Be aware that if you clone your VM Template with a specific MAC, both VMs cannot run at the same time
When using bridged networking mode for your VM, dynamic MAC Addresses are not guaranteed to be unique, though, reuse/collision is extremely unlikely. We do our best to prevent this with our randomization logic.
In Mojave or older macOS versions: Even if a custom MAC is set, Apple’s VMNET doesn’t recognize it on the network outside of the VM. We do a translation from the custom MAC to the one VMNET assigns. This causes the external to VM network to see the VMNET MAC, but inside of the VM you’ll see the custom MAC.
If a MAC address isn’t specified in the VM config, it treated as dynamic and Anka handles such cases for suspended VMs.

What’s next?

FAQs

  • Should your Firewall software be blocking VM networking, you need to whitelist the ankanetd process.