Davit app icon

Davit

A fully native macOS app for Apple's container platform — run Linux containers on Apple silicon, no Docker Desktop required.

Free & open source · MIT licensed · Signed & notarized

Download for macOS

View on GitHub

Requires an Apple silicon Mac running macOS 15 or later.

Or via Homebrew: brew install wouterdebie/tap/davit

Davit dashboard showing service status, resource counts, disk usage and a live CPU chart

Everything you'd expect. Nothing you don't.

Davit talks directly to Apple's open-source container daemon over XPC — the same wire path the CLI uses. No Electron, no web views, no background agents of its own.

container

Containers

Start, stop, restart and delete with live CPU, memory and IP on every row. Streaming logs with follow & boot mode, live stat charts, and raw config inspection.

One-click terminal

Open an interactive shell in any running container, straight into Terminal or iTerm — over the native API, no CLI needed.

Edit & Recreate

Containers are immutable — so Davit prefills a new one from the old config with the image's entrypoint and env subtracted, letting you change ports, env vars, mounts or resources in seconds.

In-container files

Browse any running container's filesystem right in the app — navigate folders, download files to your Mac, upload or delete — over the native API, no docker cp incantations.

Images, volumes, networks

Pull with live progress, run from any image, tag, prune. Create sized volumes and custom subnets. See what's in use before you delete it.

Registry logins

Sign in to Docker Hub, ghcr.io, quay.io or any registry to pull private images. Credentials are verified on the spot and stored in your login keychain — shared with the container CLI, so both see them.

Platform settings, editable

Default CPU/memory for new containers, registry, DNS, builder resources — edited in the app, validated by the platform's own config loader, saved as clean TOML overrides.

Installs the platform for you

No container platform installed? Davit downloads Apple's signed installer, verifies it, and sets everything up in your user Library — no administrator rights needed. It can add the container CLI to your shell, too.

Native, down to the pixels.

Built entirely in SwiftUI. Menu bar quick actions, a Dock icon only when you want one, and live charts that don't spin up a browser to render.

Container list with live per-container CPU, memory and IP

Live CPU and memory charts for a container

Container detail overview with network, ports, mounts and environment

Image list with platform variants, sizes and in-use badges

Browsing a running container's filesystem with folders, file sizes and per-file download

Registry logins in Settings, listing signed-in registries

Get started in two minutes

From a fresh install to a running container you can open in your browser.

Install & open Davit

Grab it from Releases or brew install wouterdebie/tap/davit. On first launch, if Apple's container platform isn't installed, Davit sets it up for you — no admin password needed.

Install & open Davit

Grab it from Releases or brew install wouterdebie/tap/davit. On first launch, if Apple's container platform isn't installed, Davit sets it up for you — no admin password needed.

Releases

Pull a demo image

Click Images → Pull Image and enter a small image that shows something in the browser:

nginxdemos/hello

Pull a demo image

Click Images → Pull Image and enter a small image that shows something in the browser:

Run it with a published port

Hit Run on the image (or Containers → Run Container). Set a port mapping — host 8088 → container 80 — and run.

Run it with a published port

Hit Run on the image (or Containers → Run Container). Set a port mapping — host 8088 → container 80 — and run.

Open it

From the container's Ports row, click Open in Browser (or visit localhost:8088). You'll see a page served from inside the container, showing its own hostname and address.

Open it

From the container's Ports row, click Open in Browser (or visit localhost:8088). You'll see a page served from inside the container, showing its own hostname and address.

Explore

Open the container to watch live CPU, memory and disk, stream logs, browse and download its files, drop into a terminal, or Edit & Recreate to change ports, env or resources.

Explore

Open the container to watch live CPU, memory and disk, stream logs, browse and download its files, drop into a terminal, or Edit & Recreate to change ports, env or resources.

How is this different from Docker Desktop?

It's Apple's engine. Each container runs in its own lightweight VM via Apple's Virtualization framework — sub-second boots, per-container IP addresses, optimized for Apple silicon.

OCI all the way. Pulls from Docker Hub, ghcr.io, quay.io or any registry — including private images, with registry logins managed in Settings. Your existing images just work.

Nothing between you and the daemon. Davit links Apple's own client library and speaks XPC directly — no socket shims, no license agreements, no accounts.

Tiny. A single ~17 MB app.

FAQ

The honest answer is architectural: there's no always-on multi-gigabyte Linux VM. Docker Desktop keeps one big VM running whether or not you have containers; Apple's platform instead boots a separate lightweight VM per container, sized to that container, and tears it down when the container stops. With nothing running, the platform's background services idle at roughly 25 MB. Davit itself is a native SwiftUI app (no Electron) — its footprint is mostly shared macOS framework memory. So the more containers you're not running, the less it costs you.

OrbStack is a polished commercial app with its own Docker-compatible virtualization layer. Davit is free and open source, and is a UI on top of Apple's own container platform — so the engine is Apple's, not a third party's. Both run standard OCI images. If you specifically want Apple's Containerization stack (per-container VMs, Apple-silicon-native), Davit gives you a native front-end for it; if you want a drop-in Docker daemon replacement with broad tooling compatibility, OrbStack is the more mature choice today.

Apple's own container platform

Each container gets its own IP (shown in the container's Network section), so you can always hit it directly. For name-based access, a common trick is to run Avahi inside the guest to broadcast a .local alias over mDNS/zeroconf — see this gist. Built-in name resolution is on the roadmap.

Avahi)

this gist

Yes. Sign in under Settings → Registries — Docker Hub, ghcr.io, quay.io or any OCI registry. Credentials are verified against the registry before being saved to your login keychain, and they're shared with the container CLI, so a login in Davit works for CLI pulls too (and vice-versa). For Docker Hub, use an access token rather than your password.

Yes — every release is Developer ID signed and notarized by Apple, so it opens without Gatekeeper warnings. It's open source (MIT); you can read or build it yourself. It talks only to your local container daemon and to GitHub for update checks.

No. Davit talks to the platform directly over XPC. If the platform isn't present, Davit can download and install Apple's signed package for you on first launch — no admin password required. It can optionally add the container CLI to your shell from Settings if you want it.