Balena Virt is a suite of tools for virtualising Balena OS.
There are a number of options for using Balena Virt:
- Running on a Digital Ocean Droplet, providing an easy way to try Balena Cloud without the need for physical hardware, and to provide a powerful development platform.
- Running on other VPS services and hardware. See the advanced setup which provides containers that can be used and steps for using Tailscale for multi-device setups.
- Running locally on a Linux desktop machine
- Turning a single Intel NUC into a small fleet of devices for testing and development
- Using the Balena Virt CLI for custom builds
Images can be configured to automatically join the balenaCloud by passing the API_TOKEN
environment variable and FLEET
environment variable. When passing these variables, the device will default to production mode, unless also passing in the DEV_MODE
environment variable.
API_TOKEN="sdfef2fef123"
FLEET="your-fleet"
DEV_MODE=true # Defaults to true when not configured for joining th Cloud, defaults to false when joining the Cloud
Default cores, disk size and memory will mirror the system that balenaVirt is running on.
The default OS image is the latest GENERIC X86_64 (GPT)
images.
These defaults can be overridden with environment variables. Here are some examples:
IMAGE_VERSION=2.108.28+rev3 # Image type is always GENERIC X86_64 (GPT)
CORES=4
DISK=8G
MEM=512M
Balena Virt can be run on a Digital Ocean droplet with hardware acceleration. This guide provides a link for $200 of free Digital Ocean credit; an installation script; and steps to forward the ports locally. After installation, you will be able to use virtualised OS locally just like any other device, using the Balena tools, e.g:
balena ssh 127.0.0.1
balena push 127.0.0.1
You can scale the Digital Ocean hardware to your development needs. 8 CPUs, 16GB of memory, and SSD drives make development (such as compiling binaries) far more efficient on Digital Ocean than on much of the IoT hardware used in production, while removing any need for manual configuration of development environments on your local system.
You can see some benchmarks where we compared the performance of Balena Virt on a Droplets against some common hardware.
Sign up for Digital Ocean. Using the button below you will get $200 of free credit for 60 days; plenty to run a powerful virtual device:
You will see a banner at the top of the page indicating that the credit is active and you can continue to the sign up page:
Free credit active: Get started on DigitalOcean with a $200, 60-day credit for new users.
The Digital Ocean documentation provides guidance on how if you need some helps.
We suggest a minimum of 2GB of RAM. Although as your free credit only lasts 60 days, why not fire up a more powerful machine (don't forget to destroy
the machine before your 2 months runs out):
8 CPUs
16 GB Memory
320 GB SSD Disk
6 TB transfer
$96 /mo
Connect to your Droplet as the root
user via the terminal and run the install script:
curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/balena-labs-research/balena-virt/main/vps/install.sh | sudo sh
The default number cores, disk size and memory of the virtualised device will mirror the system that Balena Virt is running on.
Mount the running virtualised OS locally with the following, where ip.ip.ip.ip
is the IP address of your remote host (for example your DigitalOcean Droplet IP):
ssh -L 22222:10.0.3.10:22222 \
-L 2375:10.0.3.10:2375 \
-L 48484:10.0.3.10:48484 \
root@ip.ip.ip.ip
You can then use the Balena CLI to interact with the OS by using the local IP address, for example:
balena ssh 127.0.0.1
balena push 127.0.0.1
Other ports can me mapped locally, for example to interact with services on the device:
ssh -L 80:10.0.3.10:80 \
root@ip.ip.ip.ip
Advanced documentation is available in the vps
folder here. It includes instructions on using other VPS services, and enabling Tailscale for multiple devices on each service.
Are you running Linux on your desktop? You can start a virtual device on your desktop with the following Docker run commands:
Start the networking requirements:
docker run -it \
--restart always \
--cap-add=net_admin \
--network host \
ghcr.io/balena-labs-research/balena-virt-networking:latest
Start the virtualised OS:
docker run -it \
--restart always \
-v bv_pid:/app/pid \
--device=/dev/kvm \
--cap-add=net_admin \
--network host \
ghcr.io/balena-labs-research/balena-virt:latest
Start additional devices by running the ghcr.io/balena-labs-research/balena-virt:latest
command again.
Install Balena OS on your NUC using the generic-amd64
image.
Deploy Balena Virt with the one-click install to turn your NUC into 4 Balena OS devices:
Change the default number of devices by adding or removing containers from the ./docker-compose.yml
file and deploying manually with balena push
.
Each device will be assigned its own IP and is accessible when you SSH to the Intel NUC.
Alternatively, you can use Tailscale to expose all the running devices to your local system as if they are on your network. On the Intel NUC run the Tailscale container:
balena run -d \
--name=tailscaled \
--restart always \
-e TS_STATE_DIR=/var/lib/tailscale \
-v tailscale-state:/var/lib/tailscale \
-v /dev/net/tun:/dev/net/tun \
--network=host \
--privileged \
tailscale/tailscale tailscaled
Then bring up the service with:
balena exec tailscaled tailscale up --advertise-routes=10.0.3.0/24 --accept-routes --reset
The Tailscale container will provide you a URL to access that adds the device to your Tailscale account.
Then enable the subnets from your Tailscale admin panel to be able to use all the devices locally through the IP addresses they are assigned by Balena Virt.
If you would rather not use Tailscale, you can use SSH to forward a virtualised device to a port on your local system:
ssh -L 22222:10.0.3.10:22222 \
-L 2375:10.0.3.10:2375 \
-L 48484:10.0.3.10:48484 \
root@ip.ip.ip.ip
Easily run virtual machines on balenaOS with native performance, powered by QEMU and KVM. Guests can even run balenaOS on balenaOS, allowing multiple containerized applications to run concurrently on one physical hardware device.
Additionally, this allows balenaOS guests to take advantage of QEMU features such as shared backing images and disk snapshots via qcow2 images, rolling back to a previous snapshot, temporary snapshots, pause and resume, and live migration to another host.
Deploy with balena push
from the ./cli
directory.
Grab a balenaOS image for your guest(s) using the dashboard, or CLI:
$ balena os download genericx86-64-ext -o rootfs.img
Images and configs can be copied to the named data volume for the application using SCP, assuming you have SSH access:
$ scp -P 22222 rootfs.img root@mydevice.local:/var/lib/docker/volumes/${appid}_resin-data/_data/
The config can be edited on your device from the dashboard inside the main
container, or using SSH:
$ balena ssh mydevice.local main
~ # vi /data/guests.yml
This disk image would then be available inside the container at /data/rootfs.img
.
Advanced documentation is available in the cli
folder here.