Using Docker simplifies having all the required dependencies and tools (including most recent versions of [libimobiledevice](https://libimobiledevice.org)) readily installed. Install Docker following the [official documentation](https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/). Once installed, you can clone MVT's repository and build its Docker image: ```bash git clone https://github.com/mvt-project/mvt.git cd mvt docker build -t mvt . ``` Optionally, you may need to specify your platform to Docker in order to build successfully (Apple M1) ```bash docker build --platform amd64 -t mvt . ``` Test if the image was created successfully: ```bash docker run -it mvt ``` If a prompt is spawned successfully, you can close it with `exit`. If you wish to use MVT to test an Android device you will need to enable the container's access to the host's USB devices. You can do so by enabling the `--privileged` flag and mounting the USB bus device as a volume: ```bash docker run -it --privileged -v /dev/bus/usb:/dev/bus/usb mvt ``` **Please note:** the `--privileged` parameter is generally regarded as a security risk. If you want to learn more about this check out [this explainer on container escapes](https://blog.trailofbits.com/2019/07/19/understanding-docker-container-escapes/) as it gives access to the whole system. Recent versions of Docker provide a `--device` parameter allowing to specify a precise USB device without enabling `--privileged`: ```bash docker run -it --device=/dev/ mvt ```