Developers from the Asahi Linux project have successfully booted Linux on Macs equipped with the M3 processor, marking progress in making Apple's Silicon chips compatible with alternative operating systems. While the setup currently faces significant limitations, it builds on prior successes with M1 and M2 hardware. The achievement highlights ongoing efforts to expand options for Apple users beyond macOS.
The Asahi Linux project, a community-driven initiative, has long sought to bring Linux to Apple's ARM-based processors, which are officially limited to macOS. Following successful implementations on M1 and M2 chips, the team has now extended support to the newer M3 series.
One developer, known as IntegralPilot, demonstrated running Fedora 43 Asahi Remix alongside the KDE Plasma desktop environment on a standard M3 Mac. Similar results have been reported by other contributors using M3 Pro and M3 Max configurations. At this nascent stage, core components such as the internal SSD, display, keyboard, and trackpad function adequately, providing a basic usable interface.
However, the port remains experimental and plagued by issues. Hardware acceleration via the GPU is unavailable, forcing reliance on LLVMpipe for software rendering, which hampers performance. Architectural shifts in the M3—compared to its predecessors—pose additional hurdles, including changes to the input controller, NVMe storage interface, and the power delivery controller's transition from I2C to SPMI protocols.
IntegralPilot emphasized the early development phase, noting that substantial refinement is needed before broader accessibility. The project has also begun exploratory work on even newer M4 and M5 chips, though stability for everyday users remains distant.
This development underscores the ingenuity of open-source communities in challenging proprietary ecosystems, potentially offering Apple Silicon owners greater flexibility in the future. Yet, for now, it serves more as a proof-of-concept than a practical alternative.