

There may also be a version number to indicate the lowest version of iOS the section applies to. IOS Indicates the following section or sentence applies only to UTM running on iOS. There may also be a version number to indicate the lowest version of macOS the section applies to. MacOS Indicates the following section or sentence applies only to UTM running on macOS. Throughout the documentation, there will be information that is prepended by labels that are defined below: You can always use the search bar above to quickly find the information you want. We recommend going through the pages in order to learn how to use UTM. The pages are organized in order of most important information to the least important. Check out the links on the left for more information. In short, it allows you to run Windows, Linux, and more on your Mac, iPhone, and iPad.

Does anyone has any idea of what's going on here?Īlso must mention that on the same VirtualBox I have another VM installed (Ubuntu 18.04) on which the auto-mounting is working as a charm.UTM is a full featured system emulator and virtual machine host for iOS and macOS. However I couldn't find any relevant information of how to solve it. Maybe the last error that I got in terminal is a hint for the root of the problem. sbin/mount.vboxsf: mounting failed with the error: Invalid argument Sudo mount -t vboxsf -o uid=$USER,gid=vboxsf shared /home/myuser/shared The share does not work, cannot see the files under the shared folder from the host machine. However the same behavior as for Auto-mounting happens. In Settings -> Shared Folders dialog I unchecked Auto-mount checkbox and added a valid value in Mount point (eg. I left Mount point empty.Īfter the above setup I boot the Ubuntu 20 VM and I was expecting to see the mount under /media/sf_shared and I did see it however it was empty even though on the host machine there are several files. I created an entry under VirtualBox Ubuntu 20.04 VM Settings -> Shared Folders and completed the Folder Path to a valid Windows(host) location, the Folder Name (called shared) and checked Auto-mount and Make Permanent.

I followed (among other related threads) in order to mount a shared folder in my Ubuntu 20.04 VM.
