VirtualBox

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.3//EN"
3"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.3/docbookx.dtd">
4<book>
5 <bookinfo>
6 <title>$VBOX_PRODUCT<superscript>®</superscript></title>
7
8 <subtitle>Programming Guide and Reference</subtitle>
9
10 <edition>Version $VBOX_VERSION_STRING</edition>
11
12 <corpauthor>$VBOX_VENDOR</corpauthor>
13
14 <address>http://www.virtualbox.org</address>
15
16 <copyright>
17 <year>2004-$VBOX_C_YEAR</year>
18
19 <holder>$VBOX_VENDOR</holder>
20 </copyright>
21 </bookinfo>
22
23 <chapter>
24 <title>Introduction</title>
25
26 <para>VirtualBox comes with comprehensive support for third-party
27 developers. This Software Development Kit (SDK) contains all the
28 documentation and interface files that are needed to write code that
29 interacts with VirtualBox.</para>
30
31 <sect1>
32 <title>Modularity: the building blocks of VirtualBox</title>
33
34 <para>VirtualBox is cleanly separated into several layers, which can be
35 visualized like in the picture below:</para>
36
37 <mediaobject>
38 <imageobject>
39 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/vbox-components.png"
40 width="12cm" />
41 </imageobject>
42 </mediaobject>
43
44 <para>The orange area represents code that runs in kernel mode, the blue
45 area represents userspace code.</para>
46
47 <para>At the bottom of the stack resides the hypervisor -- the core of
48 the virtualization engine, controlling execution of the virtual machines
49 and making sure they do not conflict with each other or whatever the
50 host computer is doing otherwise.</para>
51
52 <para>On top of the hypervisor, additional internal modules provide
53 extra functionality. For example, the RDP server, which can deliver the
54 graphical output of a VM remotely to an RDP client, is a separate module
55 that is only loosely tacked into the virtual graphics device. Live
56 Migration and Resource Monitor are additional modules currently in the
57 process of being added to VirtualBox.</para>
58
59 <para>What is primarily of interest for purposes of the SDK is the API
60 layer block that sits on top of all the previously mentioned blocks.
61 This API, which we call the <emphasis role="bold">"Main API"</emphasis>,
62 exposes the entire feature set of the virtualization engine below. It is
63 completely documented in this SDK Reference -- see <xref
64 linkend="sdkref_classes" /> and <xref linkend="sdkref_enums" /> -- and
65 available to anyone who wishes to control VirtualBox programmatically.
66 We chose the name "Main API" to differentiate it from other programming
67 interfaces of VirtualBox that may be publicly accessible.</para>
68
69 <para>With the Main API, you can create, configure, start, stop and
70 delete virtual machines, retrieve performance statistics about running
71 VMs, configure the VirtualBox installation in general, and more. In
72 fact, internally, the front-end programs
73 <computeroutput>VirtualBox</computeroutput> and
74 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> use nothing but this API as
75 well -- there are no hidden backdoors into the virtualization engine for
76 our own front-ends. This ensures the entire Main API is both
77 well-documented and well-tested. (The same applies to
78 <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput>, which is not shown in the
79 image.)</para>
80 </sect1>
81
82 <sect1 id="webservice-or-com">
83 <title>Two guises of the same "Main API": the web service or
84 COM/XPCOM</title>
85
86 <para>There are several ways in which the Main API can be called by
87 other code:<orderedlist>
88 <listitem>
89 <para>VirtualBox comes with a <emphasis role="bold">web
90 service</emphasis> that maps nearly the entire Main API. The web
91 service ships in a stand-alone executable
92 (<computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput>) that, when running,
93 acts as an HTTP server, accepts SOAP connections and processes
94 them.</para>
95
96 <para>Since the entire web service API is publicly described in a
97 web service description file (in WSDL format), you can write
98 client programs that call the web service in any language with a
99 toolkit that understands WSDL. These days, that includes most
100 programming languages that are available: Java, C++, .NET, PHP,
101 Python, Perl and probably many more.</para>
102
103 <para>All of this is explained in detail in subsequent chapters of
104 this book.</para>
105
106 <para>There are two ways in which you can write client code that
107 uses the web service:<orderedlist>
108 <listitem>
109 <para>For Java as well as Python, the SDK contains
110 easy-to-use classes that allow you to use the web service in
111 an object-oriented, straightforward manner. We shall refer
112 to this as the <emphasis role="bold">"object-oriented web
113 service (OOWS)"</emphasis>.</para>
114
115 <para>The OO bindings for Java are described in <xref
116 linkend="javaapi" />, those for Python in <xref lang=""
117 linkend="glue-python-ws" />.</para>
118 </listitem>
119
120 <listitem>
121 <para>Alternatively, you can use the web service directly,
122 without the object-oriented client layer. We shall refer to
123 this as the <emphasis role="bold">"raw web
124 service"</emphasis>.</para>
125
126 <para>You will then have neither native object orientation
127 nor full type safety, since web services are neither
128 object-oriented nor stateful. However, in this way, you can
129 write client code even in languages for which we do not ship
130 object-oriented client code; all you need is a programming
131 language with a toolkit that can parse WSDL and generate
132 client wrapper code from it.</para>
133
134 <para>We describe this further in <xref
135 linkend="raw-webservice" />, with samples for Java and
136 Perl.</para>
137 </listitem>
138 </orderedlist></para>
139 </listitem>
140
141 <listitem>
142 <para>Internally, for portability and easier maintenance, the Main
143 API is implemented using the <emphasis role="bold">Component
144 Object Model (COM),</emphasis> an interprocess mechanism for
145 software components originally introduced by Microsoft for
146 Microsoft Windows. On a Windows host, VirtualBox will use
147 Microsoft COM; on other hosts where COM is not present, it ships
148 with XPCOM, a free software implementation of COM originally
149 created by the Mozilla project for their browsers.</para>
150
151 <para>So, if you are familiar with COM and the C++ programming
152 language (or with any other programming language that can handle
153 COM/XPCOM objects, such as Java, Visual Basic or C#), then you can
154 use the COM/XPCOM API directly. VirtualBox comes with all
155 necessary files and documentation to build fully functional COM
156 applications. For an introduction, please see <xref
157 linkend="api_com" /> below.</para>
158
159 <para>The VirtualBox front-ends (the graphical user interfaces as
160 well as the command line), which are all written in C++, use
161 COM/XPCOM to call the Main API. Technically, the web service is
162 another front-end to this COM API, mapping almost all of it to
163 SOAP clients.</para>
164 </listitem>
165 </orderedlist></para>
166
167 <para>If you wonder which way to choose, here are a few
168 comparisons:<table>
169 <title>Comparison web service vs. COM/XPCOM</title>
170
171 <tgroup cols="2">
172 <tbody>
173 <row>
174 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Web service</emphasis></entry>
175
176 <entry><emphasis role="bold">COM/XPCOM</emphasis></entry>
177 </row>
178
179 <row>
180 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Pro:</emphasis> Easy to use with
181 Java and Python with the object-oriented web service;
182 extensive support even with other languages (C++, .NET, PHP,
183 Perl and others)</entry>
184
185 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Con:</emphasis> Usable from
186 languages where COM bridge available (most languages on
187 Windows platform, Python and C++ on other hosts)</entry>
188 </row>
189
190 <row>
191 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Pro:</emphasis> Client can be on
192 remote machine</entry>
193
194 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Con: </emphasis>Client must be on
195 the same host where virtual machine is executed</entry>
196 </row>
197
198 <row>
199 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Con: </emphasis>Significant
200 overhead due to XML marshalling over the wire for each method
201 call</entry>
202
203 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Pro: </emphasis>Relatively low
204 invocation overhead</entry>
205 </row>
206 </tbody>
207 </tgroup>
208 </table></para>
209
210 <para>In the following chapters, we will describe the different ways in
211 which to program VirtualBox, starting with the method that is easiest to
212 use and then increase complexity as we go along.</para>
213 </sect1>
214
215 <sect1 id="api_soap_intro">
216 <title>About web services in general</title>
217
218 <para>Web services are a particular type of programming interface.
219 Whereas, with "normal" programming, a program calls an application
220 programming interface (API) defined by another program or the operating
221 system and both sides of the interface have to agree on the calling
222 convention and, in most cases, use the same programming language, web
223 services use Internet standards such as HTTP and XML to
224 communicate.<footnote>
225 <para>In some ways, web services promise to deliver the same thing
226 as CORBA and DCOM did years ago. However, while these previous
227 technologies relied on specific binary protocols and thus proved to
228 be difficult to use between diverging platforms, web services
229 circumvent these incompatibilities by using text-only standards like
230 HTTP and XML. On the downside (and, one could say, typical of things
231 related to XML), a lot of standards are involved before a web
232 service can be implemented. Many of the standards invented around
233 XML are used one way or another. As a result, web services are slow
234 and verbose, and the details can be incredibly messy. The relevant
235 standards here are called SOAP and WSDL, where SOAP describes the
236 format of the messages that are exchanged (an XML document wrapped
237 in an HTTP header), and WSDL is an XML format that describes a
238 complete API provided by a web service. WSDL in turn uses XML Schema
239 to describe types, which is not exactly terse either. However, as
240 you will see from the samples provided in this chapter, the
241 VirtualBox web service shields you from these details and is easy to
242 use.</para>
243 </footnote></para>
244
245 <para>In order to successfully use a web service, a number of things are
246 required -- primarily, a web service accepting connections; service
247 descriptions; and then a client that connects to that web service. The
248 connections are governed by the SOAP standard, which describes how
249 messages are to be exchanged between a service and its clients; the
250 service descriptions are governed by WSDL.</para>
251
252 <para>In the case of VirtualBox, this translates into the following
253 three components:<orderedlist>
254 <listitem>
255 <para>The VirtualBox web service (the "server"): this is the
256 <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> executable shipped
257 with VirtualBox. Once you start this executable (which acts as a
258 HTTP server on a specific TCP/IP port), clients can connect to the
259 web service and thus control a VirtualBox installation.</para>
260 </listitem>
261
262 <listitem>
263 <para>VirtualBox also comes with WSDL files that describe the
264 services provided by the web service. You can find these files in
265 the <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/webservice/</computeroutput>
266 directory. These files are understood by the web service toolkits
267 that are shipped with most programming languages and enable you to
268 easily access a web service even if you don't use our
269 object-oriented client layers. VirtualBox is shipped with
270 pregenerated web service glue code for several languages (Python,
271 Perl, Java).</para>
272 </listitem>
273
274 <listitem>
275 <para>A client that connects to the web service in order to
276 control the VirtualBox installation.</para>
277
278 <para>Unless you play with some of the samples shipped with
279 VirtualBox, this needs to be written by you.</para>
280 </listitem>
281 </orderedlist></para>
282 </sect1>
283
284 <sect1 id="runvboxwebsrv">
285 <title>Running the web service</title>
286
287 <para>The web service ships in an stand-alone executable,
288 <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput>, that, when running, acts as
289 a HTTP server, accepts SOAP connections and processes them -- remotely
290 or from the same machine.<note>
291 <para>The web service executable is not contained with the
292 VirtualBox SDK, but instead ships with the standard VirtualBox
293 binary package for your specific platform. Since the SDK contains
294 only platform-independent text files and documentation, the binaries
295 are instead shipped with the platform-specific packages. For this
296 reason the information how to run it as a service is included in the
297 VirtualBox documentation.</para>
298 </note></para>
299
300 <para>The <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> program, which
301 implements the web service, is a text-mode (console) program which,
302 after being started, simply runs until it is interrupted with Ctrl-C or
303 a kill command.</para>
304
305 <para>Once the web service is started, it acts as a front-end to the
306 VirtualBox installation of the user account that it is running under. In
307 other words, if the web service is run under the user account of
308 <computeroutput>user1</computeroutput>, it will see and manipulate the
309 virtual machines and other data represented by the VirtualBox data of
310 that user (for example, on a Linux machine, under
311 <computeroutput>/home/user1/.config/VirtualBox</computeroutput>; see the
312 VirtualBox User Manual for details on where this data is stored).</para>
313
314 <sect2 id="vboxwebsrv-ref">
315 <title>Command line options of vboxwebsrv</title>
316
317 <para>The web service supports the following command line
318 options:</para>
319
320 <itemizedlist>
321 <listitem>
322 <para><computeroutput>--help</computeroutput> (or
323 <computeroutput>-h</computeroutput>): print a brief summary of
324 command line options.</para>
325 </listitem>
326
327 <listitem>
328 <para><computeroutput>--background</computeroutput> (or
329 <computeroutput>-b</computeroutput>): run the web service as a
330 background daemon. This option is not supported on Windows
331 hosts.</para>
332 </listitem>
333
334 <listitem>
335 <para><computeroutput>--host</computeroutput> (or
336 <computeroutput>-H</computeroutput>): This specifies the host to
337 bind to and defaults to "localhost".</para>
338 </listitem>
339
340 <listitem>
341 <para><computeroutput>--port</computeroutput> (or
342 <computeroutput>-p</computeroutput>): This specifies which port to
343 bind to on the host and defaults to 18083.</para>
344 </listitem>
345
346 <listitem>
347 <para><computeroutput>--ssl</computeroutput> (or
348 <computeroutput>-s</computeroutput>): This enables SSL support.</para>
349 </listitem>
350
351 <listitem>
352 <para><computeroutput>--keyfile</computeroutput> (or
353 <computeroutput>-K</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
354 containing the server private key and the certificate. This is a
355 mandatory parameter if SSL is enabled.</para>
356 </listitem>
357
358 <listitem>
359 <para><computeroutput>--passwordfile</computeroutput> (or
360 <computeroutput>-a</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
361 containing the password for the server private key. If unspecified
362 or an empty string is specified this is interpreted as an empty
363 password (i.e. the private key is not protected by a password). If
364 the file name <computeroutput>-</computeroutput> is specified then
365 then the password is read from the standard input stream, otherwise
366 from the specified file. The user is responsible for appropriate
367 access rights to protect the confidential password.</para>
368 </listitem>
369
370 <listitem>
371 <para><computeroutput>--cacert</computeroutput> (or
372 <computeroutput>-c</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
373 containing the CA certificate appropriate for the server
374 certificate.</para>
375 </listitem>
376
377 <listitem>
378 <para><computeroutput>--capath</computeroutput> (or
379 <computeroutput>-C</computeroutput>): This specifies the directory
380 containing several CA certificates appropriate for the server
381 certificate.</para>
382 </listitem>
383
384 <listitem>
385 <para><computeroutput>--dhfile</computeroutput> (or
386 <computeroutput>-D</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
387 containing the DH key. Alternatively it can contain the number of
388 bits of the DH key to generate. If left empty, RSA is used.</para>
389 </listitem>
390
391 <listitem>
392 <para><computeroutput>--randfile</computeroutput> (or
393 <computeroutput>-r</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
394 containing the seed for the random number generator. If left empty,
395 an operating system specific source of the seed.</para>
396 </listitem>
397
398 <listitem>
399 <para><computeroutput>--timeout</computeroutput> (or
400 <computeroutput>-t</computeroutput>): This specifies the session
401 timeout, in seconds, and defaults to 300 (five minutes). A web
402 service client that has logged on but makes no calls to the web
403 service will automatically be disconnected after the number of
404 seconds specified here, as if it had called the
405 <computeroutput>IWebSessionManager::logoff()</computeroutput>
406 method provided by the web service itself.</para>
407
408 <para>It is normally vital that each web service client call this
409 method, as the web service can accumulate large amounts of memory
410 when running, especially if a web service client does not properly
411 release managed object references. As a result, this timeout value
412 should not be set too high, especially on machines with a high
413 load on the web service, or the web service may eventually deny
414 service.</para>
415 </listitem>
416
417 <listitem>
418 <para><computeroutput>--check-interval</computeroutput> (or
419 <computeroutput>-i</computeroutput>): This specifies the interval
420 in which the web service checks for timed-out clients, in seconds,
421 and defaults to 5. This normally does not need to be
422 changed.</para>
423 </listitem>
424
425 <listitem>
426 <para><computeroutput>--threads</computeroutput> (or
427 <computeroutput>-T</computeroutput>): This specifies the maximum
428 number or worker threads, and defaults to 100. This normally does
429 not need to be changed.</para>
430 </listitem>
431
432 <listitem>
433 <para><computeroutput>--keepalive</computeroutput> (or
434 <computeroutput>-k</computeroutput>): This specifies the maximum
435 number of requests which can be sent in one web service connection,
436 and defaults to 100. This normally does not need to be changed.</para>
437 </listitem>
438
439 <listitem>
440 <para><computeroutput>--authentication</computeroutput> (or
441 <computeroutput>-A</computeroutput>): This specifies the desired
442 web service authentication method. If the parameter is not
443 specified or the empty string is specified it does not change the
444 authentication method, otherwise it is set to the specified value.
445 Using this parameter is a good measure against accidental
446 misconfiguration, as the web service ensures periodically that it
447 isn't changed.</para>
448 </listitem>
449
450 <listitem>
451 <para><computeroutput>--verbose</computeroutput> (or
452 <computeroutput>-v</computeroutput>): Normally, the web service
453 outputs only brief messages to the console each time a request is
454 served. With this option, the web service prints much more detailed
455 data about every request and the COM methods that those requests
456 are mapped to internally, which can be useful for debugging client
457 programs.</para>
458 </listitem>
459
460 <listitem>
461 <para><computeroutput>--pidfile</computeroutput> (or
462 <computeroutput>-P</computeroutput>): Name of the PID file which is
463 created when the daemon was started.</para>
464 </listitem>
465
466 <listitem>
467 <para><computeroutput>--logfile</computeroutput> (or
468 <computeroutput>-F</computeroutput>)
469 <computeroutput>&lt;file&gt;</computeroutput>: If this is
470 specified, the web service not only prints its output to the
471 console, but also writes it to the specified file. The file is
472 created if it does not exist; if it does exist, new output is
473 appended to it. This is useful if you run the web service
474 unattended and need to debug problems after they have
475 occurred.</para>
476 </listitem>
477
478 <listitem>
479 <para><computeroutput>--logrotate</computeroutput> (or
480 <computeroutput>-R</computeroutput>): Number of old log files to
481 keep, defaults to 10. Log rotation is disabled if set to 0.</para>
482 </listitem>
483
484 <listitem>
485 <para><computeroutput>--logsize</computeroutput> (or
486 <computeroutput>-S</computeroutput>): Maximum size of log file in
487 bytes, defaults to 100MB. Log rotation is triggered if the file
488 grows beyond this limit.</para>
489 </listitem>
490
491 <listitem>
492 <para><computeroutput>--loginterval</computeroutput> (or
493 <computeroutput>-I</computeroutput>): Maximum time interval to be
494 put in a log file before rotation is triggered, in seconds, and
495 defaults to one day.</para>
496 </listitem>
497 </itemizedlist>
498 </sect2>
499
500 <sect2 id="websrv_authenticate">
501 <title>Authenticating at web service logon</title>
502
503 <para>As opposed to the COM/XPCOM variant of the Main API, a client
504 that wants to use the web service must first log on by calling the
505 <computeroutput>IWebsessionManager::logon()</computeroutput> API (see
506 <xref linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon" />) that is specific to the
507 web service. Logon is necessary for the web service to be stateful;
508 internally, it maintains a session for each client that connects to
509 it.</para>
510
511 <para>The <computeroutput>IWebsessionManager::logon()</computeroutput>
512 API takes a user name and a password as arguments, which the web
513 service then passes to a customizable authentication plugin that
514 performs the actual authentication.</para>
515
516 <para>For testing purposes, it is recommended that you first disable
517 authentication with this command:<screen>VBoxManage setproperty websrvauthlibrary null</screen></para>
518
519 <para><warning>
520 <para>This will cause all logons to succeed, regardless of user
521 name or password. This should of course not be used in a
522 production environment.</para>
523 </warning>Generally, the mechanism by which clients are
524 authenticated is configurable by way of the
525 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> command:</para>
526
527 <para><screen>VBoxManage setproperty websrvauthlibrary default|null|&lt;library&gt;</screen></para>
528
529 <para>This way you can specify any shared object/dynamic link module
530 that conforms with the specifications for VirtualBox external
531 authentication modules as laid out in section <emphasis
532 role="bold">VRDE authentication</emphasis> of the VirtualBox User
533 Manual; the web service uses the same kind of modules as the
534 VirtualBox VRDE server. For technical details on VirtualBox external
535 authentication modules see <xref linkend="vbox-auth" /></para>
536
537 <para>By default, after installation, the web service uses the
538 VBoxAuth module that ships with VirtualBox. This module uses PAM on
539 Linux hosts to authenticate users. Any valid username/password
540 combination is accepted, it does not have to be the username and
541 password of the user running the web service daemon. Unless
542 <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> runs as root, PAM
543 authentication can fail, because sometimes the file
544 <computeroutput>/etc/shadow</computeroutput>, which is used by PAM, is
545 not readable. On most Linux distribution PAM uses a suid root helper
546 internally, so make sure you test this before deploying it. One can
547 override this behavior by setting the environment variable
548 <computeroutput>VBOX_PAM_ALLOW_INACTIVE</computeroutput> which will
549 suppress failures when unable to read the shadow password file. Please
550 use this variable carefully, and only if you fully understand what
551 you're doing.</para>
552 </sect2>
553 </sect1>
554 </chapter>
555
556 <chapter>
557 <title>Environment-specific notes</title>
558
559 <para>The Main API described in <xref linkend="sdkref_classes" /> and
560 <xref linkend="sdkref_enums" /> is mostly identical in all the supported
561 programming environments which have been briefly mentioned in the
562 introduction of this book. As a result, the Main API's general concepts
563 described in <xref linkend="concepts" /> are the same whether you use the
564 object-oriented web service (OOWS) for JAX-WS or a raw web service
565 connection via, say, Perl, or whether you use C++ COM bindings.</para>
566
567 <para>Some things are different depending on your environment, however.
568 These differences are explained in this chapter.</para>
569
570 <sect1 id="glue">
571 <title>Using the object-oriented web service (OOWS)</title>
572
573 <para>As explained in <xref linkend="webservice-or-com" />, VirtualBox
574 ships with client-side libraries for Java, Python and PHP that allow you
575 to use the VirtualBox web service in an intuitive, object-oriented way.
576 These libraries shield you from the client-side complications of managed
577 object references and other implementation details that come with the
578 VirtualBox web service. (If you are interested in these complications,
579 have a look at <xref linkend="raw-webservice" />).</para>
580
581 <para>We recommend that you start your experiments with the VirtualBox
582 web service by using our object-oriented client libraries for JAX-WS, a
583 web service toolkit for Java, which enables you to write code to
584 interact with VirtualBox in the simplest manner possible.</para>
585
586 <para>As "interfaces", "attributes" and "methods" are COM concepts,
587 please read the documentation in <xref linkend="sdkref_classes" /> and
588 <xref linkend="sdkref_enums" /> with the following notes in mind.</para>
589
590 <para>The OOWS bindings attempt to map the Main API as closely as
591 possible to the Java, Python and PHP languages. In other words, objects
592 are objects, interfaces become classes, and you can call methods on
593 objects as you would on local objects.</para>
594
595 <para>The main difference remains with attributes: to read an attribute,
596 call a "getXXX" method, with "XXX" being the attribute name with a
597 capitalized first letter. So when the Main API Reference says that
598 <computeroutput>IMachine</computeroutput> has a "name" attribute (see
599 <xref linkend="IMachine__name" xreflabel="IMachine::name" />), call
600 <computeroutput>getName()</computeroutput> on an IMachine object to
601 obtain a machine's name. Unless the attribute is marked as read-only in
602 the documentation, there will also be a corresponding "set"
603 method.</para>
604
605 <sect2 id="glue-jax-ws">
606 <title>The object-oriented web service for JAX-WS</title>
607
608 <para>JAX-WS is a powerful toolkit by Sun Microsystems to build both
609 server and client code with Java. It is part of Java 6 (JDK 1.6), but
610 can also be obtained separately for Java 5 (JDK 1.5). The VirtualBox
611 SDK comes with precompiled OOWS bindings working with both Java 5 and
612 6.</para>
613
614 <para>The following sections explain how to get the JAX-WS sample code
615 running and explain a few common practices when using the JAX-WS
616 object-oriented web service.</para>
617
618 <sect3>
619 <title>Preparations</title>
620
621 <para>Since JAX-WS is already integrated into Java 6, no additional
622 preparations are needed for Java 6.</para>
623
624 <para>If you are using Java 5 (JDK 1.5.x), you will first need to
625 download and install an external JAX-WS implementation, as Java 5
626 does not support JAX-WS out of the box; for example, you can
627 download one from here: <ulink
628 url="https://jax-ws.dev.java.net/2.1.4/JAXWS2.1.4-20080502.jar">https://jax-ws.dev.java.net/2.1.4/JAXWS2.1.4-20080502.jar</ulink>.
629 Then perform the installation (<computeroutput>java -jar
630 JAXWS2.1.4-20080502.jar</computeroutput>).</para>
631 </sect3>
632
633 <sect3>
634 <title>Getting started: running the sample code</title>
635
636 <para>To run the OOWS for JAX-WS samples that we ship with the SDK,
637 perform the following steps: <orderedlist>
638 <listitem>
639 <para>Open a terminal and change to the directory where the
640 JAX-WS samples reside.<footnote>
641 <para>In
642 <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/glue/java/</computeroutput>.</para>
643 </footnote> Examine the header of
644 <computeroutput>Makefile</computeroutput> to see if the
645 supplied variables (Java compiler, Java executable) and a few
646 other details match your system settings.</para>
647 </listitem>
648
649 <listitem>
650 <para>To start the VirtualBox web service, open a second
651 terminal and change to the directory where the VirtualBox
652 executables are located. Then type:<screen>./vboxwebsrv -v</screen></para>
653
654 <para>The web service now waits for connections and will run
655 until you press Ctrl+C in this second terminal. The -v
656 argument causes it to log all connections to the terminal.
657 (See <xref linkend="runvboxwebsrv" os="" /> for details on how
658 to run the web service.)</para>
659 </listitem>
660
661 <listitem>
662 <para>Back in the first terminal and still in the samples
663 directory, to start a simple client example just type:<screen>make run16</screen></para>
664
665 <para>if you're on a Java 6 system; on a Java 5 system, run
666 <computeroutput>make run15</computeroutput> instead.</para>
667
668 <para>This should work on all Unix-like systems such as Linux
669 and Solaris. For Windows systems, use commands similar to what
670 is used in the Makefile.</para>
671
672 <para>This will compile the
673 <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> code on the
674 first call and then execute the resulting
675 <computeroutput>clienttest</computeroutput> class to show the
676 locally installed VMs (see below).</para>
677 </listitem>
678 </orderedlist></para>
679
680 <para>The <computeroutput>clienttest</computeroutput> sample
681 imitates a few typical command line tasks that
682 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>, VirtualBox's regular
683 command-line front-end, would provide (see the VirtualBox User
684 Manual for details). In particular, you can run:<itemizedlist>
685 <listitem>
686 <para><computeroutput>java clienttest show
687 vms</computeroutput>: show the virtual machines that are
688 registered locally.</para>
689 </listitem>
690
691 <listitem>
692 <para><computeroutput>java clienttest list
693 hostinfo</computeroutput>: show various information about the
694 host this VirtualBox installation runs on.</para>
695 </listitem>
696
697 <listitem>
698 <para><computeroutput>java clienttest startvm
699 &lt;vmname|uuid&gt;</computeroutput>: start the given virtual
700 machine.</para>
701 </listitem>
702 </itemizedlist></para>
703
704 <para>The <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> sample
705 code illustrates common basic practices how to use the VirtualBox
706 OOWS for JAX-WS, which we will explain in more detail in the
707 following chapters.</para>
708 </sect3>
709
710 <sect3>
711 <title>Logging on to the web service</title>
712
713 <para>Before a web service client can do anything useful, two
714 objects need to be created, as can be seen in the
715 <computeroutput>clienttest</computeroutput> constructor:<orderedlist>
716 <listitem>
717 <para>An instance of <xref linkend="IWebsessionManager"
718 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager" />, which is an interface
719 provided by the web service to manage "web sessions" -- that
720 is, stateful connections to the web service with persistent
721 objects upon which methods can be invoked.</para>
722
723 <para>In the OOWS for JAX-WS, the IWebsessionManager class
724 must be constructed explicitly, and a URL must be provided in
725 the constructor that specifies where the web service (the
726 server) awaits connections. The code in
727 <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> connects to
728 "http://localhost:18083/", which is the default.</para>
729
730 <para>The port number, by default 18083, must match the port
731 number given to the
732 <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> command line; see
733 <xref linkend="vboxwebsrv-ref" />.</para>
734 </listitem>
735
736 <listitem>
737 <para>After that, the code calls <xref
738 linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon"
739 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::logon()" />, which is the first
740 call that actually communicates with the server. This
741 authenticates the client with the web service and returns an
742 instance of <xref linkend="IVirtualBox"
743 xreflabel="IVirtualBox" />, the most fundamental interface of
744 the VirtualBox web service, from which all other functionality
745 can be derived.</para>
746
747 <para>If logon doesn't work, please take another look at <xref
748 linkend="websrv_authenticate" />.</para>
749 </listitem>
750 </orderedlist></para>
751 </sect3>
752
753 <sect3>
754 <title>Object management</title>
755
756 <para>The current OOWS for JAX-WS has certain memory management
757 related limitations. When you no longer need an object, call its
758 <xref linkend="IManagedObjectRef__release"
759 xreflabel="IManagedObjectRef::release()" /> method explicitly, which
760 frees appropriate managed reference, as is required by the raw
761 web service; see <xref linkend="managed-object-references" /> for
762 details. This limitation may be reconsidered in a future version of
763 the VirtualBox SDK.</para>
764 </sect3>
765 </sect2>
766
767 <sect2 id="glue-python-ws">
768 <title>The object-oriented web service for Python</title>
769
770 <para>VirtualBox comes with two flavors of a Python API: one for web
771 service, discussed here, and one for the COM/XPCOM API discussed in
772 <xref linkend="pycom" />. The client code is mostly similar, except
773 for the initialization part, so it is up to the application developer
774 to choose the appropriate technology. Moreover, a common Python glue
775 layer exists, abstracting out concrete platform access details, see
776 <xref linkend="glue-python" />.</para>
777
778 <para>As indicated in <xref linkend="webservice-or-com" />, the
779 COM/XPCOM API gives better performance without the SOAP overhead, and
780 does not require a web server to be running. On the other hand, the
781 COM/XPCOM Python API requires a suitable Python bridge for your Python
782 installation (VirtualBox ships the most important ones for each
783 platform<footnote>
784 <para>On On Mac OS X only the Python versions bundled with the OS
785 are officially supported. This means Python 2.3 for 10.4, Python
786 2.5 for 10.5 and Python 2.5 and 2.6 for 10.6.</para>
787 </footnote>). On Windows, you can use the Main API from Python if the Win32 extensions
788 package for Python<footnote>
789 <para>See <ulink
790 url="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=78018">http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=78018</ulink>.</para>
791 </footnote> is installed. Version of Python Win32 extensions earlier than 2.16 are known to have bugs,
792 leading to issues with VirtualBox Python bindings, and also some early builds of Python 2.5 for Windows have issues with
793 reporting platform name on some Windows versions, so please make sure to use latest available Python
794 and Win32 extensions.</para>
795
796 <para>The VirtualBox OOWS for Python relies on the Python ZSI SOAP
797 implementation (see <ulink
798 url="http://pywebsvcs.sourceforge.net/zsi.html">http://pywebsvcs.sourceforge.net/zsi.html</ulink>),
799 which you will need to install locally before trying the examples.
800 Most Linux distributions come with package for ZSI, such as
801 <computeroutput>python-zsi</computeroutput> in Ubuntu.</para>
802
803 <para>To get started, open a terminal and change to the
804 <computeroutput>bindings/glue/python/sample</computeroutput>
805 directory, which contains an example of a simple interactive shell
806 able to control a VirtualBox instance. The shell is written using the
807 API layer, thereby hiding different implementation details, so it is
808 actually an example of code share among XPCOM, MSCOM and web services.
809 If you are interested in how to interact with the web services layer
810 directly, have a look at
811 <computeroutput>install/vboxapi/__init__.py</computeroutput> which
812 contains the glue layer for all target platforms (i.e. XPCOM, MSCOM
813 and web services).</para>
814
815 <para>To start the shell, perform the following commands: <screen>/opt/VirtualBox/vboxwebsrv -t 0
816 # start web service with object autocollection disabled
817export VBOX_PROGRAM_PATH=/opt/VirtualBox
818 # your VirtualBox installation directory
819export VBOX_SDK_PATH=/home/youruser/vbox-sdk
820 # where you've extracted the SDK
821./vboxshell.py -w </screen>See <xref linkend="vboxshell" /> for more
822 details on the shell's functionality. For you, as a VirtualBox
823 application developer, the vboxshell sample could be interesting as an
824 example of how to write code targeting both local and remote cases
825 (COM/XPCOM and SOAP). The common part of the shell is the same -- the
826 only difference is how it interacts with the invocation layer. You can
827 use the <computeroutput>connect</computeroutput> shell command to
828 connect to remote VirtualBox servers; in this case you can skip
829 starting the local web server.</para>
830 </sect2>
831
832 <sect2>
833 <title>The object-oriented web service for PHP</title>
834
835 <para>VirtualBox also comes with object-oriented web service (OOWS)
836 wrappers for PHP5. These wrappers rely on the PHP SOAP
837 Extension<footnote>
838 <para>See <ulink url="???">http://www.php.net/soap</ulink>.</para>
839 </footnote>, which can be installed by configuring PHP with
840 <computeroutput>--enable-soap</computeroutput>.</para>
841 </sect2>
842 </sect1>
843
844 <sect1 id="raw-webservice">
845 <title>Using the raw web service with any language</title>
846
847 <para>The following examples show you how to use the raw web service,
848 without the object-oriented client-side code that was described in the
849 previous chapter.</para>
850
851 <para>Generally, when reading the documentation in <xref
852 linkend="sdkref_classes" /> and <xref linkend="sdkref_enums" />, due to
853 the limitations of SOAP and WSDL lined out in <xref
854 linkend="rawws-conventions" />, please have the following notes in
855 mind:</para>
856
857 <para><orderedlist>
858 <listitem>
859 <para>Any COM method call becomes a <emphasis role="bold">plain
860 function call</emphasis> in the raw web service, with the object
861 as an additional first parameter (before the "real" parameters
862 listed in the documentation). So when the documentation says that
863 the <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> interface
864 supports the <computeroutput>createMachine()</computeroutput>
865 method (see <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine"
866 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::createMachine()" />), the web service
867 operation is
868 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox_createMachine(...)</computeroutput>,
869 and a managed object reference to an
870 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> object must be passed
871 as the first argument.</para>
872 </listitem>
873
874 <listitem>
875 <para>For <emphasis role="bold">attributes</emphasis> in
876 interfaces, there will be at least one "get" function; there will
877 also be a "set" function, unless the attribute is "readonly". The
878 attribute name will be appended to the "get" or "set" prefix, with
879 a capitalized first letter. So, the "version" readonly attribute
880 of the <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> interface can
881 be retrieved by calling
882 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox_getVersion(vbox)</computeroutput>,
883 with <computeroutput>vbox</computeroutput> being the VirtualBox
884 object.</para>
885 </listitem>
886
887 <listitem>
888 <para>Whenever the API documentation says that a method (or an
889 attribute getter) returns an <emphasis
890 role="bold">object</emphasis>, it will returned a managed object
891 reference in the web service instead. As said above, managed
892 object references should be released if the web service client
893 does not log off again immediately!</para>
894 </listitem>
895 </orderedlist></para>
896
897 <para></para>
898
899 <sect2 id="webservice-java-sample">
900 <title>Raw web service example for Java with Axis</title>
901
902 <para>Axis is an older web service toolkit created by the Apache
903 foundation. If your distribution does not have it installed, you can
904 get a binary from <ulink
905 url="http://www.apache.org">http://www.apache.org</ulink>. The
906 following examples assume that you have Axis 1.4 installed.</para>
907
908 <para>The VirtualBox SDK ships with an example for Axis that, again,
909 is called <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> and that
910 imitates a few of the commands of
911 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> over the wire.</para>
912
913 <para>Then perform the following steps:<orderedlist>
914 <listitem>
915 <para>Create a working directory somewhere. Under your
916 VirtualBox installation directory, find the
917 <computeroutput>sdk/webservice/samples/java/axis/</computeroutput>
918 directory and copy the file
919 <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> to your working
920 directory.</para>
921 </listitem>
922
923 <listitem>
924 <para>Open a terminal in your working directory. Execute the
925 following command:<screen> java org.apache.axis.wsdl.WSDL2Java /path/to/vboxwebService.wsdl</screen></para>
926
927 <para>The <computeroutput>vboxwebService.wsdl</computeroutput>
928 file should be located in the
929 <computeroutput>sdk/webservice/</computeroutput>
930 directory.</para>
931
932 <para>If this fails, your Apache Axis may not be located on your
933 system classpath, and you may have to adjust the CLASSPATH
934 environment variable. Something like this:<screen>export CLASSPATH="/path-to-axis-1_4/lib/*":$CLASSPATH</screen></para>
935
936 <para>Use the directory where the Axis JAR files are located.
937 Mind the quotes so that your shell passes the "*" character to
938 the java executable without expanding. Alternatively, add a
939 corresponding <computeroutput>-classpath</computeroutput>
940 argument to the "java" call above.</para>
941
942 <para>If the command executes successfully, you should see an
943 "org" directory with subdirectories containing Java source files
944 in your working directory. These classes represent the
945 interfaces that the VirtualBox web service offers, as described
946 by the WSDL file.</para>
947
948 <para>This is the bit that makes using web services so
949 attractive to client developers: if a language's toolkit
950 understands WSDL, it can generate large amounts of support code
951 automatically. Clients can then easily use this support code and
952 can be done with just a few lines of code.</para>
953 </listitem>
954
955 <listitem>
956 <para>Next, compile the
957 <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> source:<screen>javac clienttest.java </screen></para>
958
959 <para>This should yield a "clienttest.class" file.</para>
960 </listitem>
961
962 <listitem>
963 <para>To start the VirtualBox web service, open a second
964 terminal and change to the directory where the VirtualBox
965 executables are located. Then type:<screen>./vboxwebsrv -v</screen></para>
966
967 <para>The web service now waits for connections and will run
968 until you press Ctrl+C in this second terminal. The -v argument
969 causes it to log all connections to the terminal. (See <xref
970 linkend="runvboxwebsrv" os="" /> for details on how to run the
971 web service.)</para>
972 </listitem>
973
974 <listitem>
975 <para>Back in the original terminal where you compiled the Java
976 source, run the resulting binary, which will then connect to the
977 web service:<screen>java clienttest</screen></para>
978
979 <para>The client sample will connect to the web service (on
980 localhost, but the code could be changed to connect remotely if
981 the web service was running on a different machine) and make a
982 number of method calls. It will output the version number of
983 your VirtualBox installation and a list of all virtual machines
984 that are currently registered (with a bit of seemingly random
985 data, which will be explained later).</para>
986 </listitem>
987 </orderedlist></para>
988 </sect2>
989
990 <sect2 id="raw-webservice-perl">
991 <title>Raw web service example for Perl</title>
992
993 <para>We also ship a small sample for Perl. It uses the SOAP::Lite
994 perl module to communicate with the VirtualBox web service.</para>
995
996 <para>The
997 <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/webservice/perl/lib/</computeroutput>
998 directory contains a pre-generated Perl module that allows for
999 communicating with the web service from Perl. You can generate such a
1000 module yourself using the "stubmaker" tool that comes with SOAP::Lite,
1001 but since that tool is slow as well as sometimes unreliable, we are
1002 shipping a working module with the SDK for your convenience.</para>
1003
1004 <para>Perform the following steps:<orderedlist>
1005 <listitem>
1006 <para>If SOAP::Lite is not yet installed on your system, you
1007 will need to install the package first. On Debian-based systems,
1008 the package is called
1009 <computeroutput>libsoap-lite-perl</computeroutput>; on Gentoo,
1010 it's <computeroutput>dev-perl/SOAP-Lite</computeroutput>.</para>
1011 </listitem>
1012
1013 <listitem>
1014 <para>Open a terminal in the
1015 <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/webservice/perl/samples/</computeroutput>
1016 directory.</para>
1017 </listitem>
1018
1019 <listitem>
1020 <para>To start the VirtualBox web service, open a second
1021 terminal and change to the directory where the VirtualBox
1022 executables are located. Then type:<screen>./vboxwebsrv -v</screen></para>
1023
1024 <para>The web service now waits for connections and will run
1025 until you press Ctrl+C in this second terminal. The -v argument
1026 causes it to log all connections to the terminal. (See <xref
1027 linkend="runvboxwebsrv" os="" /> for details on how to run the
1028 web service.)</para>
1029 </listitem>
1030
1031 <listitem>
1032 <para>In the first terminal with the Perl sample, run the
1033 clienttest.pl script:<screen>perl -I ../lib clienttest.pl</screen></para>
1034 </listitem>
1035 </orderedlist></para>
1036 </sect2>
1037
1038 <sect2>
1039 <title>Programming considerations for the raw web service</title>
1040
1041 <para>If you use the raw web service, you need to keep a number of
1042 things in mind, or you will sooner or later run into issues that are
1043 not immediately obvious. By contrast, the object-oriented client-side
1044 libraries described in <xref linkend="glue" /> take care of these
1045 things automatically and thus greatly simplify using the web
1046 service.</para>
1047
1048 <sect3 id="rawws-conventions">
1049 <title>Fundamental conventions</title>
1050
1051 <para>If you are familiar with other web services, you may find the
1052 VirtualBox web service to behave a bit differently to accommodate
1053 for the fact that VirtualBox web service more or less maps the
1054 VirtualBox Main COM API. The following main differences had to be
1055 taken care of:<itemizedlist>
1056 <listitem>
1057 <para>Web services, as expressed by WSDL, are not
1058 object-oriented. Even worse, they are normally stateless (or,
1059 in web services terminology, "loosely coupled"). Web service
1060 operations are entirely procedural, and one cannot normally
1061 make assumptions about the state of a web service between
1062 function calls.</para>
1063
1064 <para>In particular, this normally means that you cannot work
1065 on objects in one method call that were created by another
1066 call.</para>
1067 </listitem>
1068
1069 <listitem>
1070 <para>By contrast, the VirtualBox Main API, being expressed in
1071 COM, is object-oriented and works entirely on objects, which
1072 are grouped into public interfaces, which in turn have
1073 attributes and methods associated with them.</para>
1074 </listitem>
1075 </itemizedlist> For the VirtualBox web service, this results in
1076 three fundamental conventions:<orderedlist>
1077 <listitem>
1078 <para>All <emphasis role="bold">function names</emphasis> in
1079 the VirtualBox web service consist of an interface name and a
1080 method name, joined together by an underscore. This is because
1081 there are only functions ("operations") in WSDL, but no
1082 classes, interfaces, or methods.</para>
1083
1084 <para>In addition, all calls to the VirtualBox web service
1085 (except for logon, see below) take a <emphasis
1086 role="bold">managed object reference</emphasis> as the first
1087 argument, representing the object upon which the underlying
1088 method is invoked. (Managed object references are explained in
1089 detail below; see <xref
1090 linkend="managed-object-references" />.)</para>
1091
1092 <para>So, when one would normally code, in the pseudo-code of
1093 an object-oriented language, to invoke a method upon an
1094 object:<screen>IMachine machine;
1095result = machine.getName();</screen></para>
1096
1097 <para>In the VirtualBox web service, this looks something like
1098 this (again, pseudo-code):<screen>IMachineRef machine;
1099result = IMachine_getName(machine);</screen></para>
1100 </listitem>
1101
1102 <listitem>
1103 <para>To make the web service stateful, and objects persistent
1104 between method calls, the VirtualBox web service introduces a
1105 <emphasis role="bold">session manager</emphasis> (by way of
1106 the <xref linkend="IWebsessionManager"
1107 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager" /> interface), which manages
1108 object references. Any client wishing to interact with the web
1109 service must first log on to the session manager and in turn
1110 receives a managed object reference to an object that supports
1111 the <xref linkend="IVirtualBox" xreflabel="IVirtualBox" />
1112 interface (the basic interface in the Main API).</para>
1113 </listitem>
1114 </orderedlist></para>
1115
1116 <para>In other words, as opposed to other web services, <emphasis
1117 role="bold">the VirtualBox web service is both object-oriented and
1118 stateful.</emphasis></para>
1119 </sect3>
1120
1121 <sect3>
1122 <title>Example: A typical web service client session</title>
1123
1124 <para>A typical short web service session to retrieve the version
1125 number of the VirtualBox web service (to be precise, the underlying
1126 Main API version number) looks like this:<orderedlist>
1127 <listitem>
1128 <para>A client logs on to the web service by calling <xref
1129 linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon"
1130 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::logon()" /> with a valid user
1131 name and password. See <xref linkend="websrv_authenticate" />
1132 for details about how authentication works.</para>
1133 </listitem>
1134
1135 <listitem>
1136 <para>On the server side,
1137 <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> creates a session,
1138 which persists until the client calls <xref
1139 linkend="IWebsessionManager__logoff"
1140 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::logoff()" /> or the session
1141 times out after a configurable period of inactivity (see <xref
1142 linkend="vboxwebsrv-ref" />).</para>
1143
1144 <para>For the new session, the web service creates an instance
1145 of <xref linkend="IVirtualBox" xreflabel="IVirtualBox" />.
1146 This interface is the most central one in the Main API and
1147 allows access to all other interfaces, either through
1148 attributes or method calls. For example, IVirtualBox contains
1149 a list of all virtual machines that are currently registered
1150 (as they would be listed on the left side of the VirtualBox
1151 main program).</para>
1152
1153 <para>The web service then creates a managed object reference
1154 for this instance of IVirtualBox and returns it to the calling
1155 client, which receives it as the return value of the logon
1156 call. Something like this:</para>
1157
1158 <screen>string oVirtualBox;
1159oVirtualBox = webservice.IWebsessionManager_logon("user", "pass");</screen>
1160
1161 <para>(The managed object reference "oVirtualBox" is just a
1162 string consisting of digits and dashes. However, it is a
1163 string with a meaning and will be checked by the web service.
1164 For details, see below. As hinted above, <xref
1165 linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon"
1166 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::logon()" /> is the
1167 <emphasis>only</emphasis> operation provided by the web
1168 service which does not take a managed object reference as the
1169 first argument!)</para>
1170 </listitem>
1171
1172 <listitem>
1173 <para>The VirtualBox Main API documentation says that the
1174 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> interface has a
1175 <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__version" xreflabel="version" />
1176 attribute, which is a string. For each attribute, there is a
1177 "get" and a "set" method in COM, which maps to according
1178 operations in the web service. So, to retrieve the "version"
1179 attribute of this <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput>
1180 object, the web service client does this:<screen>string version;
1181version = webservice.IVirtualBox_getVersion(oVirtualBox);
1182
1183print version;</screen></para>
1184
1185 <para>And it will print
1186 "$VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD".</para>
1187 </listitem>
1188
1189 <listitem>
1190 <para>The web service client calls <xref
1191 linkend="IWebsessionManager__logoff"
1192 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::logoff()" /> with the
1193 VirtualBox managed object reference. This will clean up all
1194 allocated resources.</para>
1195 </listitem>
1196 </orderedlist></para>
1197 </sect3>
1198
1199 <sect3 id="managed-object-references">
1200 <title>Managed object references</title>
1201
1202 <para>To a web service client, a managed object reference looks like
1203 a string: two 64-bit hex numbers separated by a dash. This string,
1204 however, represents a COM object that "lives" in the web service
1205 process. The two 64-bit numbers encoded in the managed object
1206 reference represent a session ID (which is the same for all objects
1207 in the same web service session, i.e. for all objects after one
1208 logon) and a unique object ID within that session.</para>
1209
1210 <para>Managed object references are created in two
1211 situations:<orderedlist>
1212 <listitem>
1213 <para>When a client logs on, by calling <xref
1214 linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon"
1215 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::logon()" />.</para>
1216
1217 <para>Upon logon, the websession manager creates one instance
1218 of <xref linkend="IVirtualBox" xreflabel="IVirtualBox" /> and
1219 another object of <xref linkend="ISession"
1220 xreflabel="ISession" /> representing the web service session.
1221 This can be retrieved using <xref
1222 linkend="IWebsessionManager__getSessionObject"
1223 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::getSessionObject()" />.</para>
1224
1225 <para>(Technically, there is always only one <xref
1226 linkend="IVirtualBox" xreflabel="IVirtualBox" /> object, which
1227 is shared between all sessions and clients, as it is a COM
1228 singleton. However, each session receives its own managed
1229 object reference to it. The <xref linkend="ISession"
1230 xreflabel="ISession" /> object, however, is created and
1231 destroyed for each session.)</para>
1232 </listitem>
1233
1234 <listitem>
1235 <para>Whenever a web service clients invokes an operation
1236 whose COM implementation creates COM objects.</para>
1237
1238 <para>For example, <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine"
1239 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::createMachine()" /> creates a new
1240 instance of <xref linkend="IMachine" xreflabel="IMachine" />;
1241 the COM object returned by the COM method call is then wrapped
1242 into a managed object reference by the web server, and this
1243 reference is returned to the web service client.</para>
1244 </listitem>
1245 </orderedlist></para>
1246
1247 <para>Internally, in the web service process, each managed object
1248 reference is simply a small data structure, containing a COM pointer
1249 to the "real" COM object, the web session ID and the object ID. This
1250 structure is allocated on creation and stored efficiently in hashes,
1251 so that the web service can look up the COM object quickly whenever
1252 a web service client wishes to make a method call. The random
1253 session ID also ensures that one web service client cannot intercept
1254 the objects of another.</para>
1255
1256 <para>Managed object references are not destroyed automatically and
1257 must be released by explicitly calling <xref
1258 linkend="IManagedObjectRef__release"
1259 xreflabel="IManagedObjectRef::release()" />. This is important, as
1260 otherwise hundreds or thousands of managed object references (and
1261 corresponding COM objects, which can consume much more memory!) can
1262 pile up in the web service process and eventually cause it to deny
1263 service.</para>
1264
1265 <para>To reiterate: The underlying COM object, which the reference
1266 points to, is only freed if the managed object reference is
1267 released. It is therefore vital that web service clients properly
1268 clean up after the managed object references that are returned to
1269 them.</para>
1270
1271 <para>When a web service client calls <xref
1272 linkend="IWebsessionManager__logoff"
1273 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::logoff()" />, all managed object
1274 references created during the session are automatically freed. For
1275 short-lived sessions that do not create a lot of objects, logging
1276 off may therefore be sufficient, although it is certainly not "best
1277 practice".</para>
1278 </sect3>
1279
1280 <sect3>
1281 <title>Some more detail about web service operation</title>
1282
1283 <sect4 id="soap">
1284 <title>SOAP messages</title>
1285
1286 <para>Whenever a client makes a call to a web service, this
1287 involves a complicated procedure internally. These calls are
1288 remote procedure calls. Each such procedure call typically
1289 consists of two "message" being passed, where each message is a
1290 plain-text HTTP request with a standard HTTP header and a special
1291 XML document following. This XML document encodes the name of the
1292 procedure to call and the argument names and values passed to
1293 it.</para>
1294
1295 <para>To give you an idea of what such a message looks like,
1296 assuming that a web service provides a procedure called
1297 "SayHello", which takes a string "name" as an argument and returns
1298 "Hello" with a space and that name appended, the request message
1299 could look like this:</para>
1300
1301 <para><screen>&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;
1302&lt;SOAP-ENV:Envelope
1303 xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
1304 xmlns:SOAP-ENC="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
1305 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
1306 xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
1307 xmlns:test="http://test/"&gt;
1308&lt;SOAP-ENV:Body&gt;
1309 &lt;test:SayHello&gt;
1310 &lt;name&gt;Peter&lt;/name&gt;
1311 &lt;/test:SayHello&gt;
1312 &lt;/SOAP-ENV:Body&gt;
1313&lt;/SOAP-ENV:Envelope&gt;</screen>A similar message -- the "response" message
1314 -- would be sent back from the web service to the client,
1315 containing the return value "Hello Peter".</para>
1316
1317 <para>Most programming languages provide automatic support to
1318 generate such messages whenever code in that programming language
1319 makes such a request. In other words, these programming languages
1320 allow for writing something like this (in pseudo-C++ code):</para>
1321
1322 <para><screen>webServiceClass service("localhost", 18083); // server and port
1323string result = service.SayHello("Peter"); // invoke remote procedure</screen>and
1324 would, for these two pseudo-lines, automatically perform these
1325 steps:</para>
1326
1327 <para><orderedlist>
1328 <listitem>
1329 <para>prepare a connection to a web service running on port
1330 18083 of "localhost";</para>
1331 </listitem>
1332
1333 <listitem>
1334 <para>for the <computeroutput>SayHello()</computeroutput>
1335 function of the web service, generate a SOAP message like in
1336 the above example by encoding all arguments of the remote
1337 procedure call (which could involve all kinds of type
1338 conversions and complex marshalling for arrays and
1339 structures);</para>
1340 </listitem>
1341
1342 <listitem>
1343 <para>connect to the web service via HTTP and send that
1344 message;</para>
1345 </listitem>
1346
1347 <listitem>
1348 <para>wait for the web service to send a response
1349 message;</para>
1350 </listitem>
1351
1352 <listitem>
1353 <para>decode that response message and put the return value
1354 of the remote procedure into the "result" variable.</para>
1355 </listitem>
1356 </orderedlist></para>
1357 </sect4>
1358
1359 <sect4 id="wsdl">
1360 <title>Service descriptions in WSDL</title>
1361
1362 <para>In the above explanations about SOAP, it was left open how
1363 the programming language learns about how to translate function
1364 calls in its own syntax into proper SOAP messages. In other words,
1365 the programming language needs to know what operations the web
1366 service supports and what types of arguments are required for the
1367 operation's data in order to be able to properly serialize and
1368 deserialize the data to and from the web service. For example, if
1369 a web service operation expects a number in "double" floating
1370 point format for a particular parameter, the programming language
1371 cannot send to it a string instead.</para>
1372
1373 <para>For this, the Web Service Definition Language (WSDL) was
1374 invented, another XML substandard that describes exactly what
1375 operations the web service supports and, for each operation, which
1376 parameters and types are needed with each request and response
1377 message. WSDL descriptions can be incredibly verbose, and one of
1378 the few good things that can be said about this standard is that
1379 it is indeed supported by most programming languages.</para>
1380
1381 <para>So, if it is said that a programming language "supports" web
1382 services, this typically means that a programming language has
1383 support for parsing WSDL files and somehow integrating the remote
1384 procedure calls into the native language syntax -- for example,
1385 like in the Java sample shown in <xref
1386 linkend="webservice-java-sample" />.</para>
1387
1388 <para>For details about how programming languages support web
1389 services, please refer to the documentation that comes with the
1390 individual languages. Here are a few pointers:</para>
1391
1392 <orderedlist>
1393 <listitem>
1394 <para>For <emphasis role="bold">C++,</emphasis> among many
1395 others, the gSOAP toolkit is a good option. Parts of gSOAP are
1396 also used in VirtualBox to implement the VirtualBox web
1397 service.</para>
1398 </listitem>
1399
1400 <listitem>
1401 <para>For <emphasis role="bold">Java,</emphasis> there are
1402 several implementations already described in this document
1403 (see <xref linkend="glue-jax-ws" /> and <xref
1404 linkend="webservice-java-sample" />).</para>
1405 </listitem>
1406
1407 <listitem>
1408 <para><emphasis role="bold">Perl</emphasis> supports WSDL via
1409 the SOAP::Lite package. This in turn comes with a tool called
1410 <computeroutput>stubmaker.pl</computeroutput> that allows you
1411 to turn any WSDL file into a Perl package that you can import.
1412 (You can also import any WSDL file "live" by having it parsed
1413 every time the script runs, but that can take a while.) You
1414 can then code (again, assuming the above example):<screen>my $result = servicename-&gt;sayHello("Peter");</screen></para>
1415
1416 <para>A sample that uses SOAP::Lite was described in <xref
1417 linkend="raw-webservice-perl" />.</para>
1418 </listitem>
1419 </orderedlist>
1420 </sect4>
1421 </sect3>
1422 </sect2>
1423 </sect1>
1424
1425 <sect1 id="api_com">
1426 <title>Using COM/XPCOM directly</title>
1427
1428 <para>If you do not require <emphasis>remote</emphasis> procedure calls
1429 such as those offered by the VirtualBox web service, and if you know
1430 Python or C++ as well as COM, you might find it preferable to program
1431 VirtualBox's Main API directly via COM.</para>
1432
1433 <para>COM stands for "Component Object Model" and is a standard
1434 originally introduced by Microsoft in the 1990s for Microsoft Windows.
1435 It allows for organizing software in an object-oriented way and across
1436 processes; code in one process may access objects that live in another
1437 process.</para>
1438
1439 <para>COM has several advantages: it is language-neutral, meaning that
1440 even though all of VirtualBox is internally written in C++, programs
1441 written in other languages could communicate with it. COM also cleanly
1442 separates interface from implementation, so that external programs need
1443 not know anything about the messy and complicated details of VirtualBox
1444 internals.</para>
1445
1446 <para>On a Windows host, all parts of VirtualBox will use the COM
1447 functionality that is native to Windows. On other hosts (including
1448 Linux), VirtualBox comes with a built-in implementation of XPCOM, as
1449 originally created by the Mozilla project, which we have enhanced to
1450 support interprocess communication on a level comparable to Microsoft
1451 COM. Internally, VirtualBox has an abstraction layer that allows the
1452 same VirtualBox code to work both with native COM as well as our XPCOM
1453 implementation.</para>
1454
1455 <sect2 id="pycom">
1456 <title>Python COM API</title>
1457
1458 <para>On Windows, Python scripts can use COM and VirtualBox interfaces
1459 to control almost all aspects of virtual machine execution. As an
1460 example, use the following commands to instantiate the VirtualBox
1461 object and start a VM: <screen>
1462 vbox = win32com.client.Dispatch("VirtualBox.VirtualBox")
1463 session = win32com.client.Dispatch("VirtualBox.Session")
1464 mach = vbox.findMachine("uuid or name of machine to start")
1465 progress = mach.launchVMProcess(session, "gui", "")
1466 progress.waitForCompletion(-1)
1467 </screen> Also, see
1468 <computeroutput>/bindings/glue/python/samples/vboxshell.py</computeroutput>
1469 for more advanced usage scenarious. However, unless you have specific
1470 requirements, we strongly recommend to use the generic glue layer
1471 described in the next section to access MS COM objects.</para>
1472 </sect2>
1473
1474 <sect2 id="glue-python">
1475 <title>Common Python bindings layer</title>
1476
1477 <para>As different wrappers ultimately provide access to the same
1478 underlying API, and to simplify porting and development of Python
1479 application using the VirtualBox Main API, we developed a common glue
1480 layer that abstracts out most platform-specific details from the
1481 application and allows the developer to focus on application logic.
1482 The VirtualBox installer automatically sets up this glue layer for the
1483 system default Python install. See below for details on how to set up
1484 the glue layer if you want to use a different Python
1485 installation.</para>
1486
1487 <para>In this layer, the class
1488 <computeroutput>VirtualBoxManager</computeroutput> hides most
1489 platform-specific details. It can be used to access both the local
1490 (COM) and the web service based API. The following code can be used by
1491 an application to use the glue layer.</para>
1492
1493 <screen># This code assumes vboxapi.py from VirtualBox distribution
1494# being in PYTHONPATH, or installed system-wide
1495from vboxapi import VirtualBoxManager
1496
1497# This code initializes VirtualBox manager with default style
1498# and parameters
1499virtualBoxManager = VirtualBoxManager(None, None)
1500
1501# Alternatively, one can be more verbose, and initialize
1502# glue with web service backend, and provide authentication
1503# information
1504virtualBoxManager = VirtualBoxManager("WEBSERVICE",
1505 {'url':'http://myhost.com::18083/',
1506 'user':'me',
1507 'password':'secret'}) </screen>
1508
1509 <para>We supply the <computeroutput>VirtualBoxManager</computeroutput>
1510 constructor with 2 arguments: style and parameters. Style defines
1511 which bindings style to use (could be "MSCOM", "XPCOM" or
1512 "WEBSERVICE"), and if set to <computeroutput>None</computeroutput>
1513 defaults to usable platform bindings (MS COM on Windows, XPCOM on
1514 other platforms). The second argument defines parameters, passed to
1515 the platform-specific module, as we do in the second example, where we
1516 pass username and password to be used to authenticate against the web
1517 service.</para>
1518
1519 <para>After obtaining the
1520 <computeroutput>VirtualBoxManager</computeroutput> instance, one can
1521 perform operations on the IVirtualBox class. For example, the
1522 following code will a start virtual machine by name or ID:</para>
1523
1524 <screen>from vboxapi import VirtualBoxManager
1525mgr = VirtualBoxManager(None, None)
1526vbox = mgr.vbox
1527name = "Linux"
1528mach = vbox.findMachine(name)
1529session = mgr.mgr.getSessionObject(vbox)
1530progress = mach.launchVMProcess(session, "gui", "")
1531progress.waitForCompletion(-1)
1532mgr.closeMachineSession(session)
1533 </screen>
1534 <para>
1535 Following code will print all registered machines and their log folders
1536 </para>
1537 <screen>from vboxapi import VirtualBoxManager
1538mgr = VirtualBoxManager(None, None)
1539vbox = mgr.vbox
1540
1541for m in mgr.getArray(vbox, 'machines'):
1542print "Machine '%s' logs in '%s'" %(m.name, m.logFolder)
1543 </screen>
1544
1545 <para>Code above demonstrates cross-platform access to array properties
1546 (certain limitations prevent one from using
1547 <computeroutput>vbox.machines</computeroutput> to access a list of
1548 available virtual machines in case of XPCOM), and a mechanism of
1549 uniform session creation and closing
1550 (<computeroutput>mgr.mgr.getSessionObject()</computeroutput>).</para>
1551
1552 <para>In case you want to use the glue layer with a different Python
1553 installation, use these steps in a shell to add the necessary
1554 files:</para>
1555
1556 <screen> # cd VBOX_INSTALL_PATH/sdk/installer
1557 # PYTHON vboxapisetup.py install</screen>
1558 </sect2>
1559
1560 <sect2 id="cppcom">
1561 <title>C++ COM API</title>
1562
1563 <para>C++ is the language that VirtualBox itself is written in, so C++
1564 is the most direct way to use the Main API -- but it is not
1565 necessarily the easiest, as using COM and XPCOM has its own set of
1566 complications.</para>
1567
1568 <para>VirtualBox ships with sample programs that demonstrate how to
1569 use the Main API to implement a number of tasks on your host platform.
1570 These samples can be found in the
1571 <computeroutput>/bindings/xpcom/samples</computeroutput> directory for
1572 Linux, Mac OS X and Solaris and
1573 <computeroutput>/bindings/mscom/samples</computeroutput> for Windows.
1574 The two samples are actually different, because the one for Windows
1575 uses native COM, whereas the other uses our XPCOM implementation, as
1576 described above.</para>
1577
1578 <para>Since COM and XPCOM are conceptually very similar but vary in
1579 the implementation details, we have created a "glue" layer that
1580 shields COM client code from these differences. All VirtualBox uses is
1581 this glue layer, so the same code written once works on both Windows
1582 hosts (with native COM) as well as on other hosts (with our XPCOM
1583 implementation). It is recommended to always use this glue code
1584 instead of using the COM and XPCOM APIs directly, as it is very easy
1585 to make your code completely independent from the platform it is
1586 running on.<!-- A third sample,
1587 <computeroutput>tstVBoxAPIGlue.cpp</computeroutput>, illustrates how to
1588 use the glue layer.
1589--></para>
1590
1591 <para>In order to encapsulate platform differences between Microsoft
1592 COM and XPCOM, the following items should be kept in mind when using
1593 the glue layer:</para>
1594
1595 <para><orderedlist>
1596 <listitem>
1597 <para><emphasis role="bold">Attribute getters and
1598 setters.</emphasis> COM has the notion of "attributes" in
1599 interfaces, which roughly compare to C++ member variables in
1600 classes. The difference is that for each attribute declared in
1601 an interface, COM automatically provides a "get" method to
1602 return the attribute's value. Unless the attribute has been
1603 marked as "readonly", a "set" attribute is also provided.</para>
1604
1605 <para>To illustrate, the IVirtualBox interface has a "version"
1606 attribute, which is read-only and of the "wstring" type (the
1607 standard string type in COM). As a result, you can call the
1608 "get" method for this attribute to retrieve the version number
1609 of VirtualBox.</para>
1610
1611 <para>Unfortunately, the implementation differs between COM and
1612 XPCOM. Microsoft COM names the "get" method like this:
1613 <computeroutput>get_Attribute()</computeroutput>, whereas XPCOM
1614 uses this syntax:
1615 <computeroutput>GetAttribute()</computeroutput> (and accordingly
1616 for "set" methods). To hide these differences, the VirtualBox
1617 glue code provides the
1618 <computeroutput>COMGETTER(attrib)</computeroutput> and
1619 <computeroutput>COMSETTER(attrib)</computeroutput> macros. So,
1620 <computeroutput>COMGETTER(version)()</computeroutput> (note, two
1621 pairs of brackets) expands to
1622 <computeroutput>get_Version()</computeroutput> on Windows and
1623 <computeroutput>GetVersion()</computeroutput> on other
1624 platforms.</para>
1625 </listitem>
1626
1627 <listitem>
1628 <para><emphasis role="bold">Unicode conversions.</emphasis>
1629 While the rest of the modern world has pretty much settled on
1630 encoding strings in UTF-8, COM, unfortunately, uses UCS-16
1631 encoding. This requires a lot of conversions, in particular
1632 between the VirtualBox Main API and the Qt GUI, which, like the
1633 rest of Qt, likes to use UTF-8.</para>
1634
1635 <para>To facilitate these conversions, VirtualBox provides the
1636 <computeroutput>com::Bstr</computeroutput> and
1637 <computeroutput>com::Utf8Str</computeroutput> classes, which
1638 support all kinds of conversions back and forth.</para>
1639 </listitem>
1640
1641 <listitem>
1642 <para><emphasis role="bold">COM autopointers.</emphasis>
1643 Possibly the greatest pain of using COM -- reference counting --
1644 is alleviated by the
1645 <computeroutput>ComPtr&lt;&gt;</computeroutput> template
1646 provided by the <computeroutput>ptr.h</computeroutput> file in
1647 the glue layer.</para>
1648 </listitem>
1649 </orderedlist></para>
1650 </sect2>
1651
1652 <sect2 id="event-queue">
1653 <title>Event queue processing</title>
1654
1655 <para>Both VirtualBox client programs and frontends should
1656 periodically perform processing of the main event queue, and do that
1657 on the application's main thread. In case of a typical GUI Windows/Mac
1658 OS application this happens automatically in the GUI's dispatch loop.
1659 However, for CLI only application, the appropriate actions have to be
1660 taken. For C++ applications, the VirtualBox SDK provided glue method
1661 <screen>
1662 int EventQueue::processEventQueue(uint32_t cMsTimeout)
1663 </screen> can be used for both blocking and non-blocking operations.
1664 For the Python bindings, a common layer provides the method <screen>
1665 VirtualBoxManager.waitForEvents(ms)
1666 </screen> with similar semantics.</para>
1667
1668 <para>Things get somewhat more complicated for situations where an
1669 application using VirtualBox cannot directly control the main event
1670 loop and the main event queue is separated from the event queue of the
1671 programming librarly (for example in case of Qt on Unix platforms). In
1672 such a case, the application developer is advised to use a
1673 platform/toolkit specific event injection mechanism to force event
1674 queue checks either based on periodical timer events delivered to the
1675 main thread, or by using custom platform messages to notify the main
1676 thread when events are available. See the VBoxSDL and Qt (VirtualBox)
1677 frontends as examples.</para>
1678 </sect2>
1679
1680 <sect2 id="vbcom">
1681 <title>Visual Basic and Visual Basic Script (VBS) on Windows
1682 hosts</title>
1683
1684 <para>On Windows hosts, one can control some of the VirtualBox Main
1685 API functionality from VBS scripts, and pretty much everything from
1686 Visual Basic programs.<footnote>
1687 <para>The difference results from the way VBS treats COM
1688 safearrays, which are used to keep lists in the Main API. VBS
1689 expects every array element to be a
1690 <computeroutput>VARIANT</computeroutput>, which is too strict a
1691 limitation for any high performance API. We may lift this
1692 restriction for interface APIs in a future version, or
1693 alternatively provide conversion APIs.</para>
1694 </footnote></para>
1695
1696 <para>VBS is scripting language available in any recent Windows
1697 environment. As an example, the following VBS code will print
1698 VirtualBox version: <screen>
1699 set vb = CreateObject("VirtualBox.VirtualBox")
1700 Wscript.Echo "VirtualBox version " &amp; vb.version
1701 </screen> See
1702 <computeroutput>bindings/mscom/vbs/sample/vboxinfo.vbs</computeroutput>
1703 for the complete sample.</para>
1704
1705 <para>Visual Basic is a popular high level language capable of
1706 accessing COM objects. The following VB code will iterate over all
1707 available virtual machines:<screen>
1708 Dim vb As VirtualBox.IVirtualBox
1709
1710 vb = CreateObject("VirtualBox.VirtualBox")
1711 machines = ""
1712 For Each m In vb.Machines
1713 m = m &amp; " " &amp; m.Name
1714 Next
1715 </screen> See
1716 <computeroutput>bindings/mscom/vb/sample/vboxinfo.vb</computeroutput>
1717 for the complete sample.</para>
1718 </sect2>
1719
1720 <sect2 id="cbinding">
1721 <title>C binding to XPCOM API</title>
1722
1723 <note>
1724 <para>This section currently applies to Linux hosts only.</para>
1725 </note>
1726
1727 <para>Starting with version 2.2, VirtualBox offers a C binding for the
1728 XPCOM API.</para>
1729
1730 <para>The C binding provides a layer enabling object creation, method
1731 invocation and attribute access from C.</para>
1732
1733 <sect3 id="c-gettingstarted">
1734 <title>Getting started</title>
1735
1736 <para>The following sections describe how to use the C binding in a
1737 C program.</para>
1738
1739 <para>For Linux, a sample program is provided which demonstrates use
1740 of the C binding to initialize XPCOM, get handles for VirtualBox and
1741 Session objects, make calls to list and start virtual machines, and
1742 uninitialize resources when done. The program uses the VBoxGlue
1743 library to open the C binding layer during runtime.</para>
1744
1745 <para>The sample program
1746 <computeroutput>tstXPCOMCGlue</computeroutput> is located in the bin
1747 directory and can be run without arguments. It lists registered
1748 machines on the host along with some additional information and ask
1749 for a machine to start. The source for this program is available in
1750 <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/xpcom/cbinding/samples/</computeroutput>
1751 directory. The source for the VBoxGlue library is available in the
1752 <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/xpcom/cbinding/</computeroutput>
1753 directory.</para>
1754 </sect3>
1755
1756 <sect3 id="c-initialization">
1757 <title>XPCOM initialization</title>
1758
1759 <para>Just like in C++, XPCOM needs to be initialized before it can
1760 be used. The <computeroutput>VBoxCAPI_v2_5.h</computeroutput> header
1761 provides the interface to the C binding. Here's how to initialize
1762 XPCOM:</para>
1763
1764 <screen>#include "VBoxCAPI_v2_5.h"
1765...
1766PCVBOXXPCOM g_pVBoxFuncs = NULL;
1767IVirtualBox *vbox = NULL;
1768ISession *session = NULL;
1769
1770/*
1771 * VBoxGetXPCOMCFunctions() is the only function exported by
1772 * VBoxXPCOMC.so and the only one needed to make virtualbox
1773 * work with C. This functions gives you the pointer to the
1774 * function table (g_pVBoxFuncs).
1775 *
1776 * Once you get the function table, then how and which functions
1777 * to use is explained below.
1778 *
1779 * g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComInitialize does all the necessary startup
1780 * action and provides us with pointers to vbox and session handles.
1781 * It should be matched by a call to g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComUninitialize()
1782 * when done.
1783 */
1784
1785g_pVBoxFuncs = VBoxGetXPCOMCFunctions(VBOX_XPCOMC_VERSION);
1786g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComInitialize(&amp;vbox, &amp;session);</screen>
1787
1788 <para>If either <computeroutput>vbox</computeroutput> or
1789 <computeroutput>session</computeroutput> is still
1790 <computeroutput>NULL</computeroutput>, initialization failed and the
1791 XPCOM API cannot be used.</para>
1792 </sect3>
1793
1794 <sect3 id="c-invocation">
1795 <title>XPCOM method invocation</title>
1796
1797 <para>Method invocation is straightforward. It looks pretty much
1798 like the C++ way, augmented with an extra indirection due to
1799 accessing the vtable and passing a pointer to the object as the
1800 first argument to serve as the <computeroutput>this</computeroutput>
1801 pointer.</para>
1802
1803 <para>Using the C binding, all method invocations return a numeric
1804 result code.</para>
1805
1806 <para>If an interface is specified as returning an object, a pointer
1807 to a pointer to the appropriate object must be passed as the last
1808 argument. The method will then store an object pointer in that
1809 location.</para>
1810
1811 <para>In other words, to call an object's method what you need
1812 is</para>
1813
1814 <screen>IObject *object;
1815nsresult rc;
1816...
1817/*
1818 * Calling void IObject::method(arg, ...)
1819 */
1820rc = object-&gt;vtbl-&gt;Method(object, arg, ...);
1821
1822...
1823IFoo *foo;
1824/*
1825 * Calling IFoo IObject::method(arg, ...)
1826 */
1827rc = object-&gt;vtbl-&gt;Method(object, args, ..., &amp;foo);</screen>
1828
1829 <para>As a real-world example of a method invocation, let's call
1830 <xref linkend="IMachine__launchVMProcess"
1831 xreflabel="IMachine::launchVMProcess" /> which returns an
1832 IProgress object. Note again that the method name is
1833 capitalized.</para>
1834
1835 <screen>IProgress *progress;
1836...
1837rc = vbox-&gt;vtbl-&gt;LaunchVMProcess(
1838 machine, /* this */
1839 session, /* arg 1 */
1840 sessionType, /* arg 2 */
1841 env, /* arg 3 */
1842 &amp;progress /* Out */
1843);</screen>
1844 </sect3>
1845
1846 <sect3 id="c-attributes">
1847 <title>XPCOM attribute access</title>
1848
1849 <para>A construct similar to calling non-void methods is used to
1850 access object attributes. For each attribute there exists a getter
1851 method, the name of which is composed of
1852 <computeroutput>Get</computeroutput> followed by the capitalized
1853 attribute name. Unless the attribute is read-only, an analogous
1854 <computeroutput>Set</computeroutput> method exists. Let's apply
1855 these rules to read the <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__revision"
1856 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::revision" /> attribute.</para>
1857
1858 <para>Using the <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> handle
1859 <computeroutput>vbox</computeroutput> obtained above, calling its
1860 <computeroutput>GetRevision</computeroutput> method looks like
1861 this:</para>
1862
1863 <screen>PRUint32 rev;
1864
1865rc = vbox-&gt;vtbl-&gt;GetRevision(vbox, &amp;rev);
1866if (NS_SUCCEEDED(rc))
1867{
1868 printf("Revision: %u\n", (unsigned)rev);
1869}</screen>
1870
1871 <para>All objects with their methods and attributes are documented
1872 in <xref linkend="sdkref_classes" />.</para>
1873 </sect3>
1874
1875 <sect3 id="c-string-handling">
1876 <title>String handling</title>
1877
1878 <para>When dealing with strings you have to be aware of a string's
1879 encoding and ownership.</para>
1880
1881 <para>Internally, XPCOM uses UTF-16 encoded strings. A set of
1882 conversion functions is provided to convert other encodings to and
1883 from UTF-16. The type of a UTF-16 character is
1884 <computeroutput>PRUnichar</computeroutput>. Strings of UTF-16
1885 characters are arrays of that type. Most string handling functions
1886 take pointers to that type. Prototypes for the following conversion
1887 functions are declared in
1888 <computeroutput>VBoxCAPI_v2_5.h</computeroutput>.</para>
1889
1890 <sect4>
1891 <title>Conversion of UTF-16 to and from UTF-8</title>
1892
1893 <screen>int (*pfnUtf16ToUtf8)(const PRUnichar *pwszString, char **ppszString);
1894int (*pfnUtf8ToUtf16)(const char *pszString, PRUnichar **ppwszString);</screen>
1895 </sect4>
1896
1897 <sect4>
1898 <title>Ownership</title>
1899
1900 <para>The ownership of a string determines who is responsible for
1901 releasing resources associated with the string. Whenever XPCOM
1902 creates a string, ownership is transferred to the caller. To avoid
1903 resource leaks, the caller should release resources once the
1904 string is no longer needed.</para>
1905 </sect4>
1906 </sect3>
1907
1908 <sect3 id="c-uninitialization">
1909 <title>XPCOM uninitialization</title>
1910
1911 <para>Uninitialization is performed by
1912 <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComUninitialize().</computeroutput>
1913 If your program can exit from more than one place, it is a good idea
1914 to install this function as an exit handler with Standard C's
1915 <computeroutput>atexit()</computeroutput> just after calling
1916 <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComInitialize()</computeroutput>
1917 , e.g. <screen>#include &lt;stdlib.h&gt;
1918#include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
1919
1920...
1921
1922/*
1923 * Make sure g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComUninitialize() is called at exit, no
1924 * matter if we return from the initial call to main or call exit()
1925 * somewhere else. Note that atexit registered functions are not
1926 * called upon abnormal termination, i.e. when calling abort() or
1927 * signal(). Separate provisions must be taken for these cases.
1928 */
1929
1930if (atexit(g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComUninitialize()) != 0) {
1931 fprintf(stderr, "failed to register g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComUninitialize()\n");
1932 exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
1933}</screen></para>
1934
1935 <para>Another idea would be to write your own <computeroutput>void
1936 myexit(int status)</computeroutput> function, calling
1937 <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComUninitialize()</computeroutput>
1938 followed by the real <computeroutput>exit()</computeroutput>, and
1939 use it instead of <computeroutput>exit()</computeroutput> throughout
1940 your program and at the end of
1941 <computeroutput>main.</computeroutput></para>
1942
1943 <para>If you expect the program to be terminated by a signal (e.g.
1944 user types CTRL-C sending SIGINT) you might want to install a signal
1945 handler setting a flag noting that a signal was sent and then
1946 calling
1947 <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComUninitialize()</computeroutput>
1948 later on (usually <emphasis>not</emphasis> from the handler itself
1949 .)</para>
1950
1951 <para>That said, if a client program forgets to call
1952 <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnComUninitialize()</computeroutput>
1953 before it terminates, there is a mechanism in place which will
1954 eventually release references held by the client. You should not
1955 rely on this, however.</para>
1956 </sect3>
1957
1958 <sect3 id="c-linking">
1959 <title>Compiling and linking</title>
1960
1961 <para>A program using the C binding has to open the library during
1962 runtime using the help of glue code provided and as shown in the
1963 example <computeroutput>tstXPCOMCGlue.c</computeroutput>.
1964 Compilation and linking can be achieved, e.g., with a makefile
1965 fragment similar to</para>
1966
1967 <screen># Where is the XPCOM include directory?
1968INCS_XPCOM = -I../../include
1969# Where is the glue code directory?
1970GLUE_DIR = ..
1971GLUE_INC = -I..
1972
1973#Compile Glue Library
1974VBoxXPCOMCGlue.o: $(GLUE_DIR)/VBoxXPCOMCGlue.c
1975 $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(INCS_XPCOM) $(GLUE_INC) -o $@ -c $&lt;
1976
1977# Compile.
1978program.o: program.c VBoxCAPI_v2_5.h
1979 $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(INCS_XPCOM) $(GLUE_INC) -o $@ -c $&lt;
1980
1981# Link.
1982program: program.o VBoxXPCOMCGlue.o
1983 $(CC) -o $@ $^ -ldl</screen>
1984 </sect3>
1985 </sect2>
1986 </sect1>
1987 </chapter>
1988
1989 <chapter id="concepts">
1990 <title>Basic VirtualBox concepts; some examples</title>
1991
1992 <para>The following explains some basic VirtualBox concepts such as the
1993 VirtualBox object, sessions and how virtual machines are manipulated and
1994 launched using the Main API. The coding examples use a pseudo-code style
1995 closely related to the object-oriented web service (OOWS) for JAX-WS.
1996 Depending on which environment you are using, you will need to adjust the
1997 examples.</para>
1998
1999 <sect1>
2000 <title>Obtaining basic machine information. Reading attributes</title>
2001
2002 <para>Any program using the Main API will first need access to the
2003 global VirtualBox object (see <xref linkend="IVirtualBox"
2004 xreflabel="IVirtualBox" />), from which all other functionality of the
2005 API is derived. With the OOWS for JAX-WS, this is returned from the
2006 <xref linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon"
2007 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::logon()" /> call.</para>
2008
2009 <para>To enumerate virtual machines, one would look at the "machines"
2010 array attribute in the VirtualBox object (see <xref
2011 linkend="IVirtualBox__machines" xreflabel="IVirtualBox::machines" />).
2012 This array contains all virtual machines currently registered with the
2013 host, each of them being an instance of <xref linkend="IMachine"
2014 xreflabel="IMachine" />. From each such instance, one can query
2015 additional information, such as the UUID, the name, memory, operating
2016 system and more by looking at the attributes; see the attributes list in
2017 <xref linkend="IMachine" xreflabel="IMachine documentation" />.</para>
2018
2019 <para>As mentioned in the preceding chapters, depending on your
2020 programming environment, attributes are mapped to corresponding "get"
2021 and (if the attribute is not read-only) "set" methods. So when the
2022 documentation says that IMachine has a "<xref linkend="IMachine__name"
2023 xreflabel="name" />" attribute, this means you need to code something
2024 like the following to get the machine's name:<screen>IMachine machine = ...;
2025String name = machine.getName();</screen>Boolean attribute getters can
2026 sometimes be called <computeroutput>isAttribute()</computeroutput> due
2027 to JAX-WS naming conventions.</para>
2028 </sect1>
2029
2030 <sect1>
2031 <title>Changing machine settings. Sessions</title>
2032
2033 <para>As said in the previous section, to read a machine's attribute,
2034 one invokes the corresponding "get" method. One would think that to
2035 change settings of a machine, it would suffice to call the corresponding
2036 "set" method -- for example, to set a VM's memory to 1024 MB, one would
2037 call <computeroutput>setMemorySize(1024)</computeroutput>. Try that, and
2038 you will get an error: "The machine is not mutable."</para>
2039
2040 <para>So unfortunately, things are not that easy. VirtualBox is a
2041 complicated environment in which multiple processes compete for possibly
2042 the same resources, especially machine settings. As a result, machines
2043 must be "locked" before they can either be modified or started. This is
2044 to prevent multiple processes from making conflicting changes to a
2045 machine: it should, for example, not be allowed to change the memory
2046 size of a virtual machine while it is running. (You can't add more
2047 memory to a real computer while it is running either, at least not to an
2048 ordinary PC.) Also, two processes must not change settings at the same
2049 time, or start a machine at the same time.</para>
2050
2051 <para>These requirements are implemented in the Main API by way of
2052 "sessions", in particular, the <xref linkend="ISession"
2053 xreflabel="ISession" /> interface. Each process which talks to
2054 VirtualBox needs its own instance of ISession. In the web service, you
2055 cannot create such an object, but
2056 <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> creates one for you when you
2057 log on, which you can obtain by calling <xref
2058 linkend="IWebsessionManager__getSessionObject"
2059 xreflabel="IWebsessionManager::getSessionObject()" />.</para>
2060
2061 <para>This session object must then be used like a mutex semaphore in
2062 common programming environments. Before you can change machine settings,
2063 you must write-lock the machine by calling <xref
2064 linkend="IMachine__lockMachine" xreflabel="IMachine::lockMachine()" />
2065 with your process's session object.</para>
2066
2067 <para>After the machine has been locked, the <xref
2068 linkend="ISession__machine" xreflabel="ISession::machine" /> attribute
2069 contains a copy of the original IMachine object upon which the session
2070 was opened, but this copy is "mutable": you can invoke "set" methods on
2071 it.</para>
2072
2073 <para>When done making the changes to the machine, you must call <xref
2074 linkend="IMachine__saveSettings"
2075 xreflabel="IMachine::saveSettings()" />, which will copy the changes you
2076 have made from your "mutable" machine back to the real machine and write
2077 them out to the machine settings XML file. This will make your changes
2078 permanent.</para>
2079
2080 <para>Finally, it is important to always unlock the machine again, by
2081 calling <xref linkend="ISession__unlockMachine"
2082 xreflabel="ISession::unlockMachine()" />. Otherwise, when the calling
2083 process end, the machine will receive the "aborted" state, which can
2084 lead to loss of data.</para>
2085
2086 <para>So, as an example, the sequence to change a machine's memory to
2087 1024 MB is something like this:<screen>IWebsessionManager mgr ...;
2088IVirtualBox vbox = mgr.logon(user, pass);
2089...
2090IMachine machine = ...; // read-only machine
2091ISession session = mgr.getSessionObject();
2092machine.lockMachine(session, LockType.Write); // machine is now locked for writing
2093IMachine mutable = session.getMachine(); // obtain the mutable machine copy
2094mutable.setMemorySize(1024);
2095mutable.saveSettings(); // write settings to XML
2096session.unlockMachine();</screen></para>
2097 </sect1>
2098
2099 <sect1>
2100 <title>Launching virtual machines</title>
2101
2102 <para>To launch a virtual machine, you call <xref
2103 linkend="IMachine__launchVMProcess"
2104 xreflabel="IMachine::launchVMProcess()" />. In doing so, the caller
2105 instructs the VirtualBox engine to start a new process with the virtual
2106 machine in it, since to the host, each virtual machine looks like a
2107 single process, even if it has hundreds of its own processes inside.
2108 (This new VM process in turn obtains a write lock on the machine, as
2109 described above, to prevent conflicting changes from other processes;
2110 this is why opening another session will fail while the VM is
2111 running.)</para>
2112
2113 <para>Starting a machine looks something like this:<screen>IWebsessionManager mgr ...;
2114IVirtualBox vbox = mgr.logon(user, pass);
2115...
2116IMachine machine = ...; // read-only machine
2117ISession session = mgr.getSessionObject();
2118IProgress prog = machine.launchVMProcess(session,
2119 "gui", // session type
2120 ""); // possibly environment setting
2121prog.waitForCompletion(10000); // give the process 10 secs
2122if (prog.getResultCode() != 0) // check success
2123 System.out.println("Cannot launch VM!")</screen></para>
2124
2125 <para>The caller's session object can then be used as a sort of remote
2126 control to the VM process that was launched. It contains a "console"
2127 object (see <xref linkend="ISession__console"
2128 xreflabel="ISession::console" />) with which the VM can be paused,
2129 stopped, snapshotted or other things.</para>
2130 </sect1>
2131
2132 <sect1>
2133 <title>VirtualBox events</title>
2134
2135 <para>In VirtualBox, "events" provide a uniform mechanism to register
2136 for and consume specific events. A VirtualBox client can register an
2137 "event listener" (represented by the <xref linkend="IEventListener"
2138 xreflabel="IEventListener" /> interface), which will then get notified
2139 by the server when an event (represented by the <xref linkend="IEvent"
2140 xreflabel="IEvent" /> interface) happens.</para>
2141
2142 <para>The IEvent interface is an abstract parent interface for all
2143 events that can occur in VirtualBox. The actual events that the server
2144 sends out are then of one of the specific subclasses, for example <xref
2145 linkend="IMachineStateChangedEvent"
2146 xreflabel="IMachineStateChangedEvent" /> or <xref
2147 linkend="IMediumChangedEvent" xreflabel="IMediumChangedEvent" />.</para>
2148
2149 <para>As an example, the VirtualBox GUI waits for machine events and can
2150 thus update its display when the machine state changes or machine
2151 settings are modified, even if this happens in another client. This is
2152 how the GUI can automatically refresh its display even if you manipulate
2153 a machine from another client, for example, from VBoxManage.</para>
2154
2155 <para>To register an event listener to listen to events, use code like
2156 this:<screen>EventSource es = console.getEventSource();
2157IEventListener listener = es.createListener();
2158VBoxEventType aTypes[] = (VBoxEventType.OnMachineStateChanged);
2159 // list of event types to listen for
2160es.registerListener(listener, aTypes, false /* active */);
2161 // register passive listener
2162IEvent ev = es.getEvent(listener, 1000);
2163 // wait up to one second for event to happen
2164if (ev != null)
2165{
2166 // downcast to specific event interface (in this case we have only registered
2167 // for one type, otherwise IEvent::type would tell us)
2168 IMachineStateChangedEvent mcse = IMachineStateChangedEvent.queryInterface(ev);
2169 ... // inspect and do something
2170 es.eventProcessed(listener, ev);
2171}
2172...
2173es.unregisterListener(listener); </screen></para>
2174
2175 <para>A graphical user interface would probably best start its own
2176 thread to wait for events and then process these in a loop.</para>
2177
2178 <para>The events mechanism was introduced with VirtualBox 3.3 and
2179 replaces various callback interfaces which were called for each event in
2180 the interface. The callback mechanism was not compatible with scripting
2181 languages, local Java bindings and remote web services as they do not
2182 support callbacks. The new mechanism with events and event listeners
2183 works with all of these.</para>
2184
2185 <para>To simplify developement of application using events, concept of
2186 event aggregator was introduced. Essentially it's mechanism to aggregate
2187 multiple event sources into single one, and then work with this single
2188 aggregated event source instead of original sources. As an example, one
2189 can evaluate demo recorder in VirtualBox Python shell, shipped with SDK
2190 - it records mouse and keyboard events, represented as separate event
2191 sources. Code is essentially like this:<screen>
2192 listener = console.eventSource.createListener()
2193 agg = console.eventSource.createAggregator([console.keyboard.eventSource, console.mouse.eventSource])
2194 agg.registerListener(listener, [ctx['global'].constants.VBoxEventType_Any], False)
2195 registered = True
2196 end = time.time() + dur
2197 while time.time() &lt; end:
2198 ev = agg.getEvent(listener, 1000)
2199 processEent(ev)
2200 agg.unregisterListener(listener)</screen> Without using aggregators
2201 consumer have to poll on both sources, or start multiple threads to
2202 block on those sources.</para>
2203 </sect1>
2204 </chapter>
2205
2206 <chapter id="vboxshell">
2207 <title>The VirtualBox shell</title>
2208
2209 <para>VirtualBox comes with an extensible shell, which allows you to
2210 control your virtual machines from the command line. It is also a
2211 nontrivial example of how to use the VirtualBox APIs from Python, for all
2212 three COM/XPCOM/WS styles of the API.</para>
2213
2214 <para>You can easily extend this shell with your own commands. Create a
2215 subdirectory named <computeroutput>.config/VirtualBox/shexts</computeroutput>
2216 below your home directory (respectively <computeroutput>.VirtualBox/shexts</computeroutput> on a Windows system and <computeroutput>Library/VirtualBox/shexts</computeroutput> on OS X) and put a Python file implementing your shell
2217 extension commands in this directory. This file must contain an array
2218 named <computeroutput>commands</computeroutput> containing your command
2219 definitions: <screen>
2220 commands = {
2221 'cmd1': ['Command cmd1 help', cmd1],
2222 'cmd2': ['Command cmd2 help', cmd2]
2223 }
2224 </screen> For example, to create a command for creating hard drive
2225 images, the following code can be used: <screen>
2226 def createHdd(ctx,args):
2227 # Show some meaningful error message on wrong input
2228 if (len(args) &lt; 3):
2229 print "usage: createHdd sizeM location type"
2230 return 0
2231
2232 # Get arguments
2233 size = int(args[1])
2234 loc = args[2]
2235 if len(args) &gt; 3:
2236 format = args[3]
2237 else:
2238 # And provide some meaningful defaults
2239 format = "vdi"
2240
2241 # Call VirtualBox API, using context's fields
2242 hdd = ctx['vb'].createHardDisk(format, loc)
2243 # Access constants using ctx['global'].constants
2244 progress = hdd.createBaseStorage(size, (ctx['global'].constants.MediumVariant_Standard, ))
2245 # use standard progress bar mechanism
2246 ctx['progressBar'](progress)
2247
2248
2249 # Report errors
2250 if not hdd.id:
2251 print "cannot create disk (file %s exist?)" %(loc)
2252 return 0
2253
2254 # Give user some feedback on success too
2255 print "created HDD with id: %s" %(hdd.id)
2256
2257 # 0 means continue execution, other values mean exit from the interpreter
2258 return 0
2259
2260 commands = {
2261 'myCreateHDD': ['Create virtual HDD, createHdd size location type', createHdd]
2262 }
2263 </screen> Just store the above text in the file
2264 <computeroutput>createHdd</computeroutput> (or any other meaningful name)
2265 in <computeroutput>.config/VirtualBox/shexts/</computeroutput>. Start the
2266 VirtualBox shell, or just issue the
2267 <computeroutput>reloadExts</computeroutput> command, if the shell is
2268 already running. Your new command will now be available.</para>
2269 </chapter>
2270
2271 <!--$VIRTUALBOX_MAIN_API_REFERENCE-->
2272
2273 <chapter id="hgcm">
2274 <title>Host-Guest Communication Manager</title>
2275
2276 <para>The VirtualBox Host-Guest Communication Manager (HGCM) allows a
2277 guest application or a guest driver to call a host shared library. The
2278 following features of VirtualBox are implemented using HGCM: <itemizedlist>
2279 <listitem>
2280 <para>Shared Folders</para>
2281 </listitem>
2282
2283 <listitem>
2284 <para>Shared Clipboard</para>
2285 </listitem>
2286
2287 <listitem>
2288 <para>Guest configuration interface</para>
2289 </listitem>
2290 </itemizedlist></para>
2291
2292 <para>The shared library contains a so called HGCM service. The guest HGCM
2293 clients establish connections to the service to call it. When calling a
2294 HGCM service the client supplies a function code and a number of
2295 parameters for the function.</para>
2296
2297 <sect1>
2298 <title>Virtual hardware implementation</title>
2299
2300 <para>HGCM uses the VMM virtual PCI device to exchange data between the
2301 guest and the host. The guest always acts as an initiator of requests. A
2302 request is constructed in the guest physical memory, which must be
2303 locked by the guest. The physical address is passed to the VMM device
2304 using a 32 bit <computeroutput>out edx, eax</computeroutput>
2305 instruction. The physical memory must be allocated below 4GB by 64 bit
2306 guests.</para>
2307
2308 <para>The host parses the request header and data and queues the request
2309 for a host HGCM service. The guest continues execution and usually waits
2310 on a HGCM event semaphore.</para>
2311
2312 <para>When the request has been processed by the HGCM service, the VMM
2313 device sets the completion flag in the request header, sets the HGCM
2314 event and raises an IRQ for the guest. The IRQ handler signals the HGCM
2315 event semaphore and all HGCM callers check the completion flag in the
2316 corresponding request header. If the flag is set, the request is
2317 considered completed.</para>
2318 </sect1>
2319
2320 <sect1>
2321 <title>Protocol specification</title>
2322
2323 <para>The HGCM protocol definitions are contained in the
2324 <computeroutput>VBox/VBoxGuest.h</computeroutput></para>
2325
2326 <sect2>
2327 <title>Request header</title>
2328
2329 <para>HGCM request structures contains a generic header
2330 (VMMDevHGCMRequestHeader): <table>
2331 <title>HGCM Request Generic Header</title>
2332
2333 <tgroup cols="2">
2334 <tbody>
2335 <row>
2336 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>
2337
2338 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2339 </row>
2340
2341 <row>
2342 <entry>size</entry>
2343
2344 <entry>Size of the entire request.</entry>
2345 </row>
2346
2347 <row>
2348 <entry>version</entry>
2349
2350 <entry>Version of the header, must be set to
2351 <computeroutput>0x10001</computeroutput>.</entry>
2352 </row>
2353
2354 <row>
2355 <entry>type</entry>
2356
2357 <entry>Type of the request.</entry>
2358 </row>
2359
2360 <row>
2361 <entry>rc</entry>
2362
2363 <entry>HGCM return code, which will be set by the VMM
2364 device.</entry>
2365 </row>
2366
2367 <row>
2368 <entry>reserved1</entry>
2369
2370 <entry>A reserved field 1.</entry>
2371 </row>
2372
2373 <row>
2374 <entry>reserved2</entry>
2375
2376 <entry>A reserved field 2.</entry>
2377 </row>
2378
2379 <row>
2380 <entry>flags</entry>
2381
2382 <entry>HGCM flags, set by the VMM device.</entry>
2383 </row>
2384
2385 <row>
2386 <entry>result</entry>
2387
2388 <entry>The HGCM result code, set by the VMM device.</entry>
2389 </row>
2390 </tbody>
2391 </tgroup>
2392 </table> <note>
2393 <itemizedlist>
2394 <listitem>
2395 <para>All fields are 32 bit.</para>
2396 </listitem>
2397
2398 <listitem>
2399 <para>Fields from <computeroutput>size</computeroutput> to
2400 <computeroutput>reserved2</computeroutput> are a standard VMM
2401 device request header, which is used for other interfaces as
2402 well.</para>
2403 </listitem>
2404 </itemizedlist>
2405 </note></para>
2406
2407 <para>The <emphasis role="bold">type</emphasis> field indicates the
2408 type of the HGCM request: <table>
2409 <title>Request Types</title>
2410
2411 <tgroup cols="2">
2412 <tbody>
2413 <row>
2414 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name (decimal
2415 value)</emphasis></entry>
2416
2417 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2418 </row>
2419
2420 <row>
2421 <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMConnect
2422 (<computeroutput>60</computeroutput>)</entry>
2423
2424 <entry>Connect to a HGCM service.</entry>
2425 </row>
2426
2427 <row>
2428 <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMDisconnect
2429 (<computeroutput>61</computeroutput>)</entry>
2430
2431 <entry>Disconnect from the service.</entry>
2432 </row>
2433
2434 <row>
2435 <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMCall32
2436 (<computeroutput>62</computeroutput>)</entry>
2437
2438 <entry>Call a HGCM function using the 32 bit
2439 interface.</entry>
2440 </row>
2441
2442 <row>
2443 <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMCall64
2444 (<computeroutput>63</computeroutput>)</entry>
2445
2446 <entry>Call a HGCM function using the 64 bit
2447 interface.</entry>
2448 </row>
2449
2450 <row>
2451 <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMCancel
2452 (<computeroutput>64</computeroutput>)</entry>
2453
2454 <entry>Cancel a HGCM request currently being processed by a
2455 host HGCM service.</entry>
2456 </row>
2457 </tbody>
2458 </tgroup>
2459 </table></para>
2460
2461 <para>The <emphasis role="bold">flags</emphasis> field may contain:
2462 <table>
2463 <title>Flags</title>
2464
2465 <tgroup cols="2">
2466 <tbody>
2467 <row>
2468 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name (hexadecimal
2469 value)</emphasis></entry>
2470
2471 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2472 </row>
2473
2474 <row>
2475 <entry>VBOX_HGCM_REQ_DONE
2476 (<computeroutput>0x00000001</computeroutput>)</entry>
2477
2478 <entry>The request has been processed by the host
2479 service.</entry>
2480 </row>
2481
2482 <row>
2483 <entry>VBOX_HGCM_REQ_CANCELLED
2484 (<computeroutput>0x00000002</computeroutput>)</entry>
2485
2486 <entry>This request was cancelled.</entry>
2487 </row>
2488 </tbody>
2489 </tgroup>
2490 </table></para>
2491 </sect2>
2492
2493 <sect2>
2494 <title>Connect</title>
2495
2496 <para>The connection request must be issued by the guest HGCM client
2497 before it can call the HGCM service (VMMDevHGCMConnect): <table>
2498 <title>Connect request</title>
2499
2500 <tgroup cols="2">
2501 <tbody>
2502 <row>
2503 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>
2504
2505 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2506 </row>
2507
2508 <row>
2509 <entry>header</entry>
2510
2511 <entry>The generic HGCM request header with type equal to
2512 VMMDevReq_HGCMConnect
2513 (<computeroutput>60</computeroutput>).</entry>
2514 </row>
2515
2516 <row>
2517 <entry>type</entry>
2518
2519 <entry>The type of the service location information (32
2520 bit).</entry>
2521 </row>
2522
2523 <row>
2524 <entry>location</entry>
2525
2526 <entry>The service location information (128 bytes).</entry>
2527 </row>
2528
2529 <row>
2530 <entry>clientId</entry>
2531
2532 <entry>The client identifier assigned to the connecting
2533 client by the HGCM subsystem (32 bit).</entry>
2534 </row>
2535 </tbody>
2536 </tgroup>
2537 </table> The <emphasis role="bold">type</emphasis> field tells the
2538 HGCM how to look for the requested service: <table>
2539 <title>Location Information Types</title>
2540
2541 <tgroup cols="2">
2542 <tbody>
2543 <row>
2544 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name (hexadecimal
2545 value)</emphasis></entry>
2546
2547 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2548 </row>
2549
2550 <row>
2551 <entry>VMMDevHGCMLoc_LocalHost
2552 (<computeroutput>0x1</computeroutput>)</entry>
2553
2554 <entry>The requested service is a shared library located on
2555 the host and the location information contains the library
2556 name.</entry>
2557 </row>
2558
2559 <row>
2560 <entry>VMMDevHGCMLoc_LocalHost_Existing
2561 (<computeroutput>0x2</computeroutput>)</entry>
2562
2563 <entry>The requested service is a preloaded one and the
2564 location information contains the service name.</entry>
2565 </row>
2566 </tbody>
2567 </tgroup>
2568 </table> <note>
2569 <para>Currently preloaded HGCM services are hard-coded in
2570 VirtualBox: <itemizedlist>
2571 <listitem>
2572 <para>VBoxSharedFolders</para>
2573 </listitem>
2574
2575 <listitem>
2576 <para>VBoxSharedClipboard</para>
2577 </listitem>
2578
2579 <listitem>
2580 <para>VBoxGuestPropSvc</para>
2581 </listitem>
2582
2583 <listitem>
2584 <para>VBoxSharedOpenGL</para>
2585 </listitem>
2586 </itemizedlist></para>
2587 </note> There is no difference between both types of HGCM services,
2588 only the location mechanism is different.</para>
2589
2590 <para>The client identifier is returned by the host and must be used
2591 in all subsequent requests by the client.</para>
2592 </sect2>
2593
2594 <sect2>
2595 <title>Disconnect</title>
2596
2597 <para>This request disconnects the client and makes the client
2598 identifier invalid (VMMDevHGCMDisconnect): <table>
2599 <title>Disconnect request</title>
2600
2601 <tgroup cols="2">
2602 <tbody>
2603 <row>
2604 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>
2605
2606 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2607 </row>
2608
2609 <row>
2610 <entry>header</entry>
2611
2612 <entry>The generic HGCM request header with type equal to
2613 VMMDevReq_HGCMDisconnect
2614 (<computeroutput>61</computeroutput>).</entry>
2615 </row>
2616
2617 <row>
2618 <entry>clientId</entry>
2619
2620 <entry>The client identifier previously returned by the
2621 connect request (32 bit).</entry>
2622 </row>
2623 </tbody>
2624 </tgroup>
2625 </table></para>
2626 </sect2>
2627
2628 <sect2>
2629 <title>Call32 and Call64</title>
2630
2631 <para>Calls the HGCM service entry point (VMMDevHGCMCall) using 32 bit
2632 or 64 bit addresses: <table>
2633 <title>Call request</title>
2634
2635 <tgroup cols="2">
2636 <tbody>
2637 <row>
2638 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>
2639
2640 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2641 </row>
2642
2643 <row>
2644 <entry>header</entry>
2645
2646 <entry>The generic HGCM request header with type equal to
2647 either VMMDevReq_HGCMCall32
2648 (<computeroutput>62</computeroutput>) or
2649 VMMDevReq_HGCMCall64
2650 (<computeroutput>63</computeroutput>).</entry>
2651 </row>
2652
2653 <row>
2654 <entry>clientId</entry>
2655
2656 <entry>The client identifier previously returned by the
2657 connect request (32 bit).</entry>
2658 </row>
2659
2660 <row>
2661 <entry>function</entry>
2662
2663 <entry>The function code to be processed by the service (32
2664 bit).</entry>
2665 </row>
2666
2667 <row>
2668 <entry>cParms</entry>
2669
2670 <entry>The number of following parameters (32 bit). This
2671 value is 0 if the function requires no parameters.</entry>
2672 </row>
2673
2674 <row>
2675 <entry>parms</entry>
2676
2677 <entry>An array of parameter description structures
2678 (HGCMFunctionParameter32 or
2679 HGCMFunctionParameter64).</entry>
2680 </row>
2681 </tbody>
2682 </tgroup>
2683 </table></para>
2684
2685 <para>The 32 bit parameter description (HGCMFunctionParameter32)
2686 consists of 32 bit type field and 8 bytes of an opaque value, so 12
2687 bytes in total. The 64 bit variant (HGCMFunctionParameter64) consists
2688 of the type and 12 bytes of a value, so 16 bytes in total.</para>
2689
2690 <para><table>
2691 <title>Parameter types</title>
2692
2693 <tgroup cols="2">
2694 <tbody>
2695 <row>
2696 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Type</emphasis></entry>
2697
2698 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Format of the
2699 value</emphasis></entry>
2700 </row>
2701
2702 <row>
2703 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_32bit (1)</entry>
2704
2705 <entry>A 32 bit value.</entry>
2706 </row>
2707
2708 <row>
2709 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_64bit (2)</entry>
2710
2711 <entry>A 64 bit value.</entry>
2712 </row>
2713
2714 <row>
2715 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_PhysAddr (3)</entry>
2716
2717 <entry>A 32 bit size followed by a 32 bit or 64 bit guest
2718 physical address.</entry>
2719 </row>
2720
2721 <row>
2722 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr (4)</entry>
2723
2724 <entry>A 32 bit size followed by a 32 bit or 64 bit guest
2725 linear address. The buffer is used both for guest to host
2726 and for host to guest data.</entry>
2727 </row>
2728
2729 <row>
2730 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_In (5)</entry>
2731
2732 <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr but the buffer is
2733 used only for host to guest data.</entry>
2734 </row>
2735
2736 <row>
2737 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Out (6)</entry>
2738
2739 <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr but the buffer is
2740 used only for guest to host data.</entry>
2741 </row>
2742
2743 <row>
2744 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Locked (7)</entry>
2745
2746 <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr but the buffer is
2747 already locked by the guest.</entry>
2748 </row>
2749
2750 <row>
2751 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Locked_In (1)</entry>
2752
2753 <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_In but the buffer
2754 is already locked by the guest.</entry>
2755 </row>
2756
2757 <row>
2758 <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Locked_Out (1)</entry>
2759
2760 <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Out but the buffer
2761 is already locked by the guest.</entry>
2762 </row>
2763 </tbody>
2764 </tgroup>
2765 </table></para>
2766
2767 <para>The</para>
2768 </sect2>
2769
2770 <sect2>
2771 <title>Cancel</title>
2772
2773 <para>This request cancels a call request (VMMDevHGCMCancel): <table>
2774 <title>Cancel request</title>
2775
2776 <tgroup cols="2">
2777 <tbody>
2778 <row>
2779 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>
2780
2781 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2782 </row>
2783
2784 <row>
2785 <entry>header</entry>
2786
2787 <entry>The generic HGCM request header with type equal to
2788 VMMDevReq_HGCMCancel
2789 (<computeroutput>64</computeroutput>).</entry>
2790 </row>
2791 </tbody>
2792 </tgroup>
2793 </table></para>
2794 </sect2>
2795 </sect1>
2796
2797 <sect1>
2798 <title>Guest software interface</title>
2799
2800 <para>The guest HGCM clients can call HGCM services from both drivers
2801 and applications.</para>
2802
2803 <sect2>
2804 <title>The guest driver interface</title>
2805
2806 <para>The driver interface is implemented in the VirtualBox guest
2807 additions driver (VBoxGuest), which works with the VMM virtual device.
2808 Drivers must use the VBox Guest Library (VBGL), which provides an API
2809 for HGCM clients (<computeroutput>VBox/VBoxGuestLib.h</computeroutput>
2810 and <computeroutput>VBox/VBoxGuest.h</computeroutput>).</para>
2811
2812 <para><screen>
2813DECLVBGL(int) VbglHGCMConnect (VBGLHGCMHANDLE *pHandle, VBoxGuestHGCMConnectInfo *pData);
2814 </screen> Connects to the service: <screen>
2815 VBoxGuestHGCMConnectInfo data;
2816
2817 memset (&amp;data, sizeof (VBoxGuestHGCMConnectInfo));
2818
2819 data.result = VINF_SUCCESS;
2820 data.Loc.type = VMMDevHGCMLoc_LocalHost_Existing;
2821 strcpy (data.Loc.u.host.achName, "VBoxSharedFolders");
2822
2823 rc = VbglHGCMConnect (&amp;handle, &amp;data);
2824
2825 if (RT_SUCCESS (rc))
2826 {
2827 rc = data.result;
2828 }
2829
2830 if (RT_SUCCESS (rc))
2831 {
2832 /* Get the assigned client identifier. */
2833 ulClientID = data.u32ClientID;
2834 }
2835 </screen></para>
2836
2837 <para><screen>
2838DECLVBGL(int) VbglHGCMDisconnect (VBGLHGCMHANDLE handle, VBoxGuestHGCMDisconnectInfo *pData);
2839 </screen> Disconnects from the service. <screen>
2840 VBoxGuestHGCMDisconnectInfo data;
2841
2842 RtlZeroMemory (&amp;data, sizeof (VBoxGuestHGCMDisconnectInfo));
2843
2844 data.result = VINF_SUCCESS;
2845 data.u32ClientID = ulClientID;
2846
2847 rc = VbglHGCMDisconnect (handle, &amp;data);
2848 </screen></para>
2849
2850 <para><screen>
2851DECLVBGL(int) VbglHGCMCall (VBGLHGCMHANDLE handle, VBoxGuestHGCMCallInfo *pData, uint32_t cbData);
2852 </screen> Calls a function in the service. <screen>
2853typedef struct _VBoxSFRead
2854{
2855 VBoxGuestHGCMCallInfo callInfo;
2856
2857 /** pointer, in: SHFLROOT
2858 * Root handle of the mapping which name is queried.
2859 */
2860 HGCMFunctionParameter root;
2861
2862 /** value64, in:
2863 * SHFLHANDLE of object to read from.
2864 */
2865 HGCMFunctionParameter handle;
2866
2867 /** value64, in:
2868 * Offset to read from.
2869 */
2870 HGCMFunctionParameter offset;
2871
2872 /** value64, in/out:
2873 * Bytes to read/How many were read.
2874 */
2875 HGCMFunctionParameter cb;
2876
2877 /** pointer, out:
2878 * Buffer to place data to.
2879 */
2880 HGCMFunctionParameter buffer;
2881
2882} VBoxSFRead;
2883
2884/** Number of parameters */
2885#define SHFL_CPARMS_READ (5)
2886
2887...
2888
2889 VBoxSFRead data;
2890
2891 /* The call information. */
2892 data.callInfo.result = VINF_SUCCESS; /* Will be returned by HGCM. */
2893 data.callInfo.u32ClientID = ulClientID; /* Client identifier. */
2894 data.callInfo.u32Function = SHFL_FN_READ; /* The function code. */
2895 data.callInfo.cParms = SHFL_CPARMS_READ; /* Number of parameters. */
2896
2897 /* Initialize parameters. */
2898 data.root.type = VMMDevHGCMParmType_32bit;
2899 data.root.u.value32 = pMap-&gt;root;
2900
2901 data.handle.type = VMMDevHGCMParmType_64bit;
2902 data.handle.u.value64 = hFile;
2903
2904 data.offset.type = VMMDevHGCMParmType_64bit;
2905 data.offset.u.value64 = offset;
2906
2907 data.cb.type = VMMDevHGCMParmType_32bit;
2908 data.cb.u.value32 = *pcbBuffer;
2909
2910 data.buffer.type = VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Out;
2911 data.buffer.u.Pointer.size = *pcbBuffer;
2912 data.buffer.u.Pointer.u.linearAddr = (uintptr_t)pBuffer;
2913
2914 rc = VbglHGCMCall (handle, &amp;data.callInfo, sizeof (data));
2915
2916 if (RT_SUCCESS (rc))
2917 {
2918 rc = data.callInfo.result;
2919 *pcbBuffer = data.cb.u.value32; /* This is returned by the HGCM service. */
2920 }
2921 </screen></para>
2922 </sect2>
2923
2924 <sect2>
2925 <title>Guest application interface</title>
2926
2927 <para>Applications call the VirtualBox Guest Additions driver to
2928 utilize the HGCM interface. There are IOCTL's which correspond to the
2929 <computeroutput>Vbgl*</computeroutput> functions: <itemizedlist>
2930 <listitem>
2931 <para><computeroutput>VBOXGUEST_IOCTL_HGCM_CONNECT</computeroutput></para>
2932 </listitem>
2933
2934 <listitem>
2935 <para><computeroutput>VBOXGUEST_IOCTL_HGCM_DISCONNECT</computeroutput></para>
2936 </listitem>
2937
2938 <listitem>
2939 <para><computeroutput>VBOXGUEST_IOCTL_HGCM_CALL</computeroutput></para>
2940 </listitem>
2941 </itemizedlist></para>
2942
2943 <para>These IOCTL's get the same input buffer as
2944 <computeroutput>VbglHGCM*</computeroutput> functions and the output
2945 buffer has the same format as the input buffer. The same address can
2946 be used as the input and output buffers.</para>
2947
2948 <para>For example see the guest part of shared clipboard, which runs
2949 as an application and uses the HGCM interface.</para>
2950 </sect2>
2951 </sect1>
2952
2953 <sect1>
2954 <title>HGCM Service Implementation</title>
2955
2956 <para>The HGCM service is a shared library with a specific set of entry
2957 points. The library must export the
2958 <computeroutput>VBoxHGCMSvcLoad</computeroutput> entry point: <screen>
2959extern "C" DECLCALLBACK(DECLEXPORT(int)) VBoxHGCMSvcLoad (VBOXHGCMSVCFNTABLE *ptable)
2960 </screen></para>
2961
2962 <para>The service must check the
2963 <computeroutput>ptable-&gt;cbSize</computeroutput> and
2964 <computeroutput>ptable-&gt;u32Version</computeroutput> fields of the
2965 input structure and fill the remaining fields with function pointers of
2966 entry points and the size of the required client buffer size.</para>
2967
2968 <para>The HGCM service gets a dedicated thread, which calls service
2969 entry points synchronously, that is the service will be called again
2970 only when a previous call has returned. However, the guest calls can be
2971 processed asynchronously. The service must call a completion callback
2972 when the operation is actually completed. The callback can be issued
2973 from another thread as well.</para>
2974
2975 <para>Service entry points are listed in the
2976 <computeroutput>VBox/hgcmsvc.h</computeroutput> in the
2977 <computeroutput>VBOXHGCMSVCFNTABLE</computeroutput> structure. <table>
2978 <title>Service entry points</title>
2979
2980 <tgroup cols="2">
2981 <tbody>
2982 <row>
2983 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Entry</emphasis></entry>
2984
2985 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
2986 </row>
2987
2988 <row>
2989 <entry>pfnUnload</entry>
2990
2991 <entry>The service is being unloaded.</entry>
2992 </row>
2993
2994 <row>
2995 <entry>pfnConnect</entry>
2996
2997 <entry>A client <computeroutput>u32ClientID</computeroutput>
2998 is connected to the service. The
2999 <computeroutput>pvClient</computeroutput> parameter points to
3000 an allocated memory buffer which can be used by the service to
3001 store the client information.</entry>
3002 </row>
3003
3004 <row>
3005 <entry>pfnDisconnect</entry>
3006
3007 <entry>A client is being disconnected.</entry>
3008 </row>
3009
3010 <row>
3011 <entry>pfnCall</entry>
3012
3013 <entry>A guest client calls a service function. The
3014 <computeroutput>callHandle</computeroutput> must be used in
3015 the VBOXHGCMSVCHELPERS::pfnCallComplete callback when the call
3016 has been processed.</entry>
3017 </row>
3018
3019 <row>
3020 <entry>pfnHostCall</entry>
3021
3022 <entry>Called by the VirtualBox host components to perform
3023 functions which should be not accessible by the guest. Usually
3024 this entry point is used by VirtualBox to configure the
3025 service.</entry>
3026 </row>
3027
3028 <row>
3029 <entry>pfnSaveState</entry>
3030
3031 <entry>The VM state is being saved and the service must save
3032 relevant information using the SSM API
3033 (<computeroutput>VBox/ssm.h</computeroutput>).</entry>
3034 </row>
3035
3036 <row>
3037 <entry>pfnLoadState</entry>
3038
3039 <entry>The VM is being restored from the saved state and the
3040 service must load the saved information and be able to
3041 continue operations from the saved state.</entry>
3042 </row>
3043 </tbody>
3044 </tgroup>
3045 </table></para>
3046 </sect1>
3047 </chapter>
3048
3049 <chapter id="rdpweb">
3050 <title>RDP Web Control</title>
3051
3052 <para>The VirtualBox <emphasis>RDP Web Control</emphasis> (RDPWeb)
3053 provides remote access to a running VM. RDPWeb is a RDP (Remote Desktop
3054 Protocol) client based on Flash technology and can be used from a Web
3055 browser with a Flash plugin.</para>
3056
3057 <sect1>
3058 <title>RDPWeb features</title>
3059
3060 <para>RDPWeb is embedded into a Web page and can connect to VRDP server
3061 in order to displays the VM screen and pass keyboard and mouse events to
3062 the VM.</para>
3063 </sect1>
3064
3065 <sect1>
3066 <title>RDPWeb reference</title>
3067
3068 <para>RDPWeb consists of two required components:<itemizedlist>
3069 <listitem>
3070 <para>Flash movie
3071 <computeroutput>RDPClientUI.swf</computeroutput></para>
3072 </listitem>
3073
3074 <listitem>
3075 <para>JavaScript helpers
3076 <computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput></para>
3077 </listitem>
3078 </itemizedlist></para>
3079
3080 <para>The VirtualBox SDK contains sample HTML code
3081 including:<itemizedlist>
3082 <listitem>
3083 <para>JavaScript library for embedding Flash content
3084 <computeroutput>SWFObject.js</computeroutput></para>
3085 </listitem>
3086
3087 <listitem>
3088 <para>Sample HTML page
3089 <computeroutput>webclient3.html</computeroutput></para>
3090 </listitem>
3091 </itemizedlist></para>
3092
3093 <sect2>
3094 <title>RDPWeb functions</title>
3095
3096 <para><computeroutput>RDPClientUI.swf</computeroutput> and
3097 <computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> work with each other.
3098 JavaScript code is responsible for a proper SWF initialization,
3099 delivering mouse events to the SWF and processing resize requests from
3100 the SWF. On the other hand, the SWF contains a few JavaScript callable
3101 methods, which are used both from
3102 <computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> and the user HTML
3103 page.</para>
3104
3105 <sect3>
3106 <title>JavaScript functions</title>
3107
3108 <para><computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> contains helper
3109 functions. In the following table ElementId refers to an HTML
3110 element name or attribute, and Element to the HTML element itself.
3111 HTML code<programlisting>
3112 &lt;div id="FlashRDP"&gt;
3113 &lt;/div&gt;
3114</programlisting> would have ElementId equal to FlashRDP and Element equal to
3115 the div element.</para>
3116
3117 <para><itemizedlist>
3118 <listitem>
3119 <programlisting>RDPWebClient.embedSWF(SWFFileName, ElementId)</programlisting>
3120
3121 <para>Uses SWFObject library to replace the HTML element with
3122 the Flash movie.</para>
3123 </listitem>
3124
3125 <listitem>
3126 <programlisting>RDPWebClient.isRDPWebControlById(ElementId)</programlisting>
3127
3128 <para>Returns true if the given id refers to a RDPWeb Flash
3129 element.</para>
3130 </listitem>
3131
3132 <listitem>
3133 <programlisting>RDPWebClient.isRDPWebControlByElement(Element)</programlisting>
3134
3135 <para>Returns true if the given element is a RDPWeb Flash
3136 element.</para>
3137 </listitem>
3138
3139 <listitem>
3140 <programlisting>RDPWebClient.getFlashById(ElementId)</programlisting>
3141
3142 <para>Returns an element, which is referenced by the given id.
3143 This function will try to resolve any element, event if it is
3144 not a Flash movie.</para>
3145 </listitem>
3146 </itemizedlist></para>
3147 </sect3>
3148
3149 <sect3>
3150 <title>Flash methods callable from JavaScript</title>
3151
3152 <para><computeroutput>RDPWebClienUI.swf</computeroutput> methods can
3153 be called directly from JavaScript code on a HTML page.</para>
3154
3155 <itemizedlist>
3156 <listitem>
3157 <para>getProperty(Name)</para>
3158 </listitem>
3159
3160 <listitem>
3161 <para>setProperty(Name)</para>
3162 </listitem>
3163
3164 <listitem>
3165 <para>connect()</para>
3166 </listitem>
3167
3168 <listitem>
3169 <para>disconnect()</para>
3170 </listitem>
3171
3172 <listitem>
3173 <para>keyboardSendCAD()</para>
3174 </listitem>
3175 </itemizedlist>
3176 </sect3>
3177
3178 <sect3>
3179 <title>Flash JavaScript callbacks</title>
3180
3181 <para><computeroutput>RDPWebClienUI.swf</computeroutput> calls
3182 JavaScript functions provided by the HTML page.</para>
3183 </sect3>
3184 </sect2>
3185
3186 <sect2>
3187 <title>Embedding RDPWeb in an HTML page</title>
3188
3189 <para>It is necessary to include
3190 <computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> helper script. If
3191 SWFObject library is used, the
3192 <computeroutput>swfobject.js</computeroutput> must be also included
3193 and RDPWeb flash content can be embedded to a Web page using dynamic
3194 HTML. The HTML must include a "placeholder", which consists of 2
3195 <computeroutput>div</computeroutput> elements.</para>
3196 </sect2>
3197 </sect1>
3198
3199 <sect1>
3200 <title>RDPWeb change log</title>
3201
3202 <sect2>
3203 <title>Version 1.2.28</title>
3204
3205 <itemizedlist>
3206 <listitem>
3207 <para><computeroutput>keyboardLayout</computeroutput>,
3208 <computeroutput>keyboardLayouts</computeroutput>,
3209 <computeroutput>UUID</computeroutput> properties.</para>
3210 </listitem>
3211
3212 <listitem>
3213 <para>Support for German keyboard layout on the client.</para>
3214 </listitem>
3215
3216 <listitem>
3217 <para>Rebranding to Oracle.</para>
3218 </listitem>
3219 </itemizedlist>
3220 </sect2>
3221
3222 <sect2>
3223 <title>Version 1.1.26</title>
3224
3225 <itemizedlist>
3226 <listitem>
3227 <para><computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> is a part of
3228 the distribution package.</para>
3229 </listitem>
3230
3231 <listitem>
3232 <para><computeroutput>lastError</computeroutput> property.</para>
3233 </listitem>
3234
3235 <listitem>
3236 <para><computeroutput>keyboardSendScancodes</computeroutput> and
3237 <computeroutput>keyboardSendCAD</computeroutput> methods.</para>
3238 </listitem>
3239 </itemizedlist>
3240 </sect2>
3241
3242 <sect2>
3243 <title>Version 1.0.24</title>
3244
3245 <itemizedlist>
3246 <listitem>
3247 <para>Initial release.</para>
3248 </listitem>
3249 </itemizedlist>
3250 </sect2>
3251 </sect1>
3252 </chapter>
3253
3254 <chapter id="vbox-auth">
3255 <title>VirtualBox external authentication modules</title>
3256
3257 <para>VirtualBox supports arbitrary external modules to perform
3258 authentication. The module is used when the authentication method is set
3259 to "external" for a particular VM VRDE access and the library was
3260 specified with <computeroutput>VBoxManage setproperty
3261 vrdeauthlibrary</computeroutput>. Web service also use the authentication
3262 module which was specified with <computeroutput>VBoxManage setproperty
3263 websrvauthlibrary</computeroutput>.</para>
3264
3265 <para>This library will be loaded by the VM or web service process on
3266 demand, i.e. when the first remote desktop connection is made by a client
3267 or when a client that wants to use the web service logs on.</para>
3268
3269 <para>External authentication is the most flexible as the external handler
3270 can both choose to grant access to everyone (like the "null"
3271 authentication method would) and delegate the request to the guest
3272 authentication component. When delegating the request to the guest
3273 component, the handler will still be called afterwards with the option to
3274 override the result.</para>
3275
3276 <para>An authentication library is required to implement exactly one entry
3277 point:</para>
3278
3279 <screen>#include "VBoxAuth.h"
3280
3281/**
3282 * Authentication library entry point.
3283 *
3284 * Parameters:
3285 *
3286 * szCaller The name of the component which calls the library (UTF8).
3287 * pUuid Pointer to the UUID of the accessed virtual machine. Can be NULL.
3288 * guestJudgement Result of the guest authentication.
3289 * szUser User name passed in by the client (UTF8).
3290 * szPassword Password passed in by the client (UTF8).
3291 * szDomain Domain passed in by the client (UTF8).
3292 * fLogon Boolean flag. Indicates whether the entry point is called
3293 * for a client logon or the client disconnect.
3294 * clientId Server side unique identifier of the client.
3295 *
3296 * Return code:
3297 *
3298 * AuthResultAccessDenied Client access has been denied.
3299 * AuthResultAccessGranted Client has the right to use the
3300 * virtual machine.
3301 * AuthResultDelegateToGuest Guest operating system must
3302 * authenticate the client and the
3303 * library must be called again with
3304 * the result of the guest
3305 * authentication.
3306 *
3307 * Note: When 'fLogon' is 0, only pszCaller, pUuid and clientId are valid and the return
3308 * code is ignored.
3309 */
3310AuthResult AUTHCALL AuthEntry(
3311 const char *szCaller,
3312 PAUTHUUID pUuid,
3313 AuthGuestJudgement guestJudgement,
3314 const char *szUser,
3315 const char *szPassword
3316 const char *szDomain
3317 int fLogon,
3318 unsigned clientId)
3319{
3320 /* Process request against your authentication source of choice. */
3321 // if (authSucceeded(...))
3322 // return AuthResultAccessGranted;
3323 return AuthResultAccessDenied;
3324}</screen>
3325
3326 <para>A note regarding the UUID implementation of the
3327 <computeroutput>pUuid</computeroutput> argument: VirtualBox uses a
3328 consistent binary representation of UUIDs on all platforms. For this
3329 reason the integer fields comprising the UUID are stored as little endian
3330 values. If you want to pass such UUIDs to code which assumes that the
3331 integer fields are big endian (often also called network byte order), you
3332 need to adjust the contents of the UUID to e.g. achieve the same string
3333 representation. The required changes are:<itemizedlist>
3334 <listitem>
3335 <para>reverse the order of byte 0, 1, 2 and 3</para>
3336 </listitem>
3337
3338 <listitem>
3339 <para>reverse the order of byte 4 and 5</para>
3340 </listitem>
3341
3342 <listitem>
3343 <para>reverse the order of byte 6 and 7.</para>
3344 </listitem>
3345 </itemizedlist>Using this conversion you will get identical results when
3346 converting the binary UUID to the string representation.</para>
3347
3348 <para>The <computeroutput>guestJudgement</computeroutput> argument
3349 contains information about the guest authentication status. For the first
3350 call, it is always set to
3351 <computeroutput>AuthGuestNotAsked</computeroutput>. In case the
3352 <computeroutput>AuthEntry</computeroutput> function returns
3353 <computeroutput>AuthResultDelegateToGuest</computeroutput>, a guest
3354 authentication will be attempted and another call to the
3355 <computeroutput>AuthEntry</computeroutput> is made with its result. This
3356 can be either granted / denied or no judgement (the guest component chose
3357 for whatever reason to not make a decision). In case there is a problem
3358 with the guest authentication module (e.g. the Additions are not installed
3359 or not running or the guest did not respond within a timeout), the "not
3360 reacted" status will be returned.</para>
3361 </chapter>
3362
3363 <chapter id="javaapi">
3364 <title>Using Java API</title>
3365
3366 <sect1>
3367 <title>Introduction</title>
3368
3369 <para>VirtualBox can be controlled by a Java API, both locally
3370 (COM/XPCOM) and from remote (SOAP) clients. As with the Python bindings,
3371 a generic glue layer tries to hide all platform differences, allowing
3372 for source and binary compatibility on different platforms.</para>
3373 </sect1>
3374
3375 <sect1>
3376 <title>Requirements</title>
3377
3378 <para>To use the Java bindings, there are certain requirements depending
3379 on the platform. First of all, you need JDK 1.5 (Java 5) or later. Also
3380 please make sure that the version of the VirtualBox API .jar file
3381 exactly matches the version of VirtualBox you use. To avoid confusion,
3382 the VirtualBox API provides versioning in the Java package name, e.g.
3383 the package is named <computeroutput>org.virtualbox_3_2</computeroutput>
3384 for VirtualBox version 3.2. <itemizedlist>
3385 <listitem>
3386 <para><emphasis role="bold">XPCOM:</emphasis> - for all platforms,
3387 but Microsoft Windows. A Java bridge based on JavaXPCOM is shipped
3388 with VirtualBox. The classpath must contain
3389 <computeroutput>vboxjxpcom.jar</computeroutput> and the
3390 <computeroutput>vbox.home</computeroutput> property must be set to
3391 location where the VirtualBox binaries are. Please make sure that
3392 the JVM bitness matches bitness of VirtualBox you use as the XPCOM
3393 bridge relies on native libraries.</para>
3394
3395 <para>Start your application like this: <programlisting>
3396 java -cp vboxjxpcom.jar -Dvbox.home=/opt/virtualbox MyProgram
3397 </programlisting></para>
3398 </listitem>
3399
3400 <listitem>
3401 <para><emphasis role="bold">COM:</emphasis> - for Microsoft
3402 Windows. We rely on <computeroutput>Jacob</computeroutput> - a
3403 generic Java to COM bridge - which has to be installed seperately.
3404 See <ulink
3405 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/jacob-project/">http://sourceforge.net/projects/jacob-project/</ulink>
3406 for installation instructions. Also, the VirtualBox provided
3407 <computeroutput>vboxjmscom.jar</computeroutput> must be in the
3408 class path.</para>
3409
3410 <para>Start your application like this: <programlisting>
3411 java -cp vboxjmscom.jar;c:\jacob\jacob.jar -Djava.library.path=c:\jacob MyProgram
3412 </programlisting></para>
3413 </listitem>
3414
3415 <listitem>
3416 <para><emphasis role="bold">SOAP</emphasis> - all platforms. Java
3417 6 is required, as it comes with builtin support for SOAP via the
3418 JAX-WS library. Also, the VirtualBox provided
3419 <computeroutput>vbojws.jar</computeroutput> must be in the class
3420 path. In the SOAP case it's possible to create several
3421 VirtualBoxManager instances to communicate with multiple
3422 VirtualBox hosts.</para>
3423
3424 <para>Start your application like this: <programlisting>
3425 java -cp vboxjws.jar MyProgram
3426 </programlisting></para>
3427 </listitem>
3428 </itemizedlist></para>
3429
3430 <para>Exception handling is also generalized by the generic glue layer,
3431 so that all methods could throw
3432 <computeroutput>VBoxException</computeroutput> containing human-readable
3433 text message (see <computeroutput>getMessage()</computeroutput> method)
3434 along with wrapped original exception (see
3435 <computeroutput>getWrapped()</computeroutput> method).</para>
3436 </sect1>
3437
3438 <sect1>
3439 <title>Example</title>
3440
3441 <para>This example shows a simple use case of the Java API. Differences
3442 for SOAP vs. local version are minimal, and limited to the connection
3443 setup phase (see <computeroutput>ws</computeroutput> variable). In the
3444 SOAP case it's possible to create several VirtualBoxManager instances to
3445 communicate with multiple VirtualBox hosts. <programlisting>
3446 import org.virtualbox_4_3.*;
3447 ....
3448 VirtualBoxManager mgr = VirtualBoxManager.createInstance(null);
3449 boolean ws = false; // or true, if we need the SOAP version
3450 if (ws)
3451 {
3452 String url = "http://myhost:18034";
3453 String user = "test";
3454 String passwd = "test";
3455 mgr.connect(url, user, passwd);
3456 }
3457 IVirtualBox vbox = mgr.getVBox();
3458 System.out.println("VirtualBox version: " + vbox.getVersion() + "\n");
3459 // get first VM name
3460 String m = vbox.getMachines().get(0).getName();
3461 System.out.println("\nAttempting to start VM '" + m + "'");
3462 // start it
3463 mgr.startVm(m, null, 7000);
3464
3465 if (ws)
3466 mgr.disconnect();
3467
3468 mgr.cleanup();
3469 </programlisting> For more a complete example, see
3470 <computeroutput>TestVBox.java</computeroutput>, shipped with the
3471 SDK. It contains exception handling and error printing code, which
3472 is important for reliable larger scale projects.</para>
3473 </sect1>
3474 </chapter>
3475
3476 <chapter>
3477 <title>License information</title>
3478
3479 <para>The sample code files shipped with the SDK are generally licensed
3480 liberally to make it easy for anyone to use this code for their own
3481 application code.</para>
3482
3483 <para>The Java files under
3484 <computeroutput>bindings/webservice/java/jax-ws/</computeroutput> (library
3485 files for the object-oriented web service) are, by contrast, licensed
3486 under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) V2.1.</para>
3487
3488 <para>See
3489 <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/webservice/java/jax-ws/src/COPYING.LIB</computeroutput>
3490 for the full text of the LGPL 2.1.</para>
3491
3492 <para>When in doubt, please refer to the individual source code files
3493 shipped with this SDK.</para>
3494 </chapter>
3495
3496 <chapter>
3497 <title>Main API change log</title>
3498
3499 <para>Generally, VirtualBox will maintain API compatibility within a major
3500 release; a major release occurs when the first or the second of the three
3501 version components of VirtualBox change (that is, in the x.y.z scheme, a
3502 major release is one where x or y change, but not when only z
3503 changes).</para>
3504
3505 <para>In other words, updates like those from 2.0.0 to 2.0.2 will not come
3506 with API breakages.</para>
3507
3508 <para>Migration between major releases most likely will lead to API
3509 breakage, so please make sure you updated code accordingly. The OOWS Java
3510 wrappers enforce that mechanism by putting VirtualBox classes into
3511 version-specific packages such as
3512 <computeroutput>org.virtualbox_2_2</computeroutput>. This approach allows
3513 for connecting to multiple VirtualBox versions simultaneously from the
3514 same Java application.</para>
3515
3516 <para>The following sections list incompatible changes that the Main API
3517 underwent since the original release of this SDK Reference with VirtualBox
3518 2.0. A change is deemed "incompatible" only if it breaks existing client
3519 code (e.g. changes in method parameter lists, renamed or removed
3520 interfaces and similar). In other words, the list does not contain new
3521 interfaces, methods or attributes or other changes that do not affect
3522 existing client code.</para>
3523
3524 <sect1>
3525 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 4.3</title>
3526
3527 <itemizedlist>
3528 <listitem>
3529 <para>The explicit medium locking methods
3530 <xref linkend="IMedium__lockRead" xreflabel="IMedium::lockRead()" />
3531 and <xref linkend="IMedium__lockWrite" xreflabel="IMedium::lockWrite()" />
3532 have been redesigned. They return a lock token object reference
3533 now, and calling the <xref linkend="IToken__abandon"
3534 xreflabel="IToken::abandon()" /> method (or letting the reference
3535 count to this object drop to 0) will unlock it. This eliminates
3536 the rather common problem that an API client crash left behind
3537 locks, and also improves the safety (API clients can't release
3538 locks they didn't obtain).</para>
3539 </listitem>
3540
3541 <listitem>
3542 <para>The parameter list of <xref linkend="IAppliance__write"
3543 xreflabel="IAppliance::write()" /> has been changed slightly, to
3544 allow multiple flags to be passed.</para>
3545 </listitem>
3546
3547 <listitem>
3548 <para><computeroutput>IMachine::delete</computeroutput>
3549 has been renamed to <xref linkend="IMachine__deleteConfig"
3550 xreflabel="IMachine::deleteConfig()" />, to improve API client
3551 binding compatibility.</para>
3552 </listitem>
3553
3554 <listitem>
3555 <para><computeroutput>IMachine::export</computeroutput>
3556 has been renamed to <xref linkend="IMachine__exportTo"
3557 xreflabel="IMachine::exportTo()" />, to improve API client binding
3558 compatibility.</para>
3559 </listitem>
3560
3561 <listitem>
3562 <para>For <xref linkend="IMachine__launchVMProcess"
3563 xreflabel="IMachine::launchVMProcess()"/> the meaning of the
3564 <computeroutput>type</computeroutput> parameter has changed slightly.
3565 Empty string now means that the per-VM or global default frontend
3566 is launched. Most callers of this method should use the empty string
3567 now, unless they really want to override the default and launch a
3568 particular frontend.</para>
3569 </listitem>
3570
3571 <listitem>
3572 <para>Medium management APIs were changed as follows:<itemizedlist>
3573
3574 <listitem>
3575 <para>The type of attribute
3576 <xref linkend="IMedium__variant" xreflabel="IMedium::variant()"/>
3577 changed from <computeroutput>unsigned long</computeroutput>
3578 to <computeroutput>safe-array MediumVariant</computeroutput>.
3579 It is an array of flags instead of a set of flags which were stored inside one variable.
3580 </para>
3581 </listitem>
3582
3583 <listitem>
3584 <para>The parameter list for <xref
3585 linkend="IMedium__cloneTo"
3586 xreflabel="IMedium::cloneTo()" /> was modified.</para>
3587 The type of parameter variant was changed from unsigned long to safe-array MediumVariant.
3588 </listitem>
3589
3590 <listitem>
3591 <para>The parameter list for <xref
3592 linkend="IMedium__createBaseStorage"
3593 xreflabel="IMedium::createBaseStorage()" /> was modified.</para>
3594 The type of parameter variant was changed from unsigned long to safe-array MediumVariant.
3595 </listitem>
3596
3597 <listitem>
3598 <para>The parameter list for <xref
3599 linkend="IMedium__createDiffStorage"
3600 xreflabel="IMedium::createDiffStorage()" /> was modified.</para>
3601 The type of parameter variant was changed from unsigned long to safe-array MediumVariant.
3602 </listitem>
3603
3604 <listitem>
3605 <para>The parameter list for <xref
3606 linkend="IMedium__cloneToBase"
3607 xreflabel="IMedium::cloneToBase()" /> was modified.</para>
3608 The type of parameter variant was changed from unsigned long to safe-array MediumVariant.
3609 </listitem>
3610 </itemizedlist></para>
3611 </listitem>
3612
3613 <listitem>
3614 <para>The type of attribute
3615 <xref linkend="IMediumFormat__capabilities"
3616 xreflabel="IMediumFormat::capabilities()"/>
3617 changed from <computeroutput>unsigned long</computeroutput>
3618 to <computeroutput>safe-array MediumFormatCapabilities</computeroutput>.
3619 It is an array of flags instead of a set of flags which were stored inside one variable.
3620 </para>
3621 </listitem>
3622
3623 <listitem>
3624 <para>The attribute <xref linkend="IMedium__logicalSize"
3625 xreflabel="IMedium::logicalSize()" /> now returns the logical
3626 size of exactly this medium object (whether it is a base or diff
3627 image). The old behavior was no longer acceptable, as each image
3628 can have a different capacity.</para>
3629 </listitem>
3630
3631 <listitem>
3632 <para>Guest control APIs - such as <xref linkend="IGuest"
3633 xreflabel="IGuest" />, <xref linkend="IGuestSession"
3634 xreflabel="IGuestSession" />, <xref linkend="IGuestProcess"
3635 xreflabel="IGuestProcess" /> and so on - now emit own events to provide
3636 clients much finer control and the ability to write own frontends for
3637 guest operations. The event <xref linkend="IGuestSessionEvent"
3638 xreflabel="IGuestSessionEvent" /> acts as an abstract base class
3639 for all guest control events. Certain guest events contain a
3640 <xref linkend="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" xreflabel="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" /> member
3641 to provide more information in case of an error happened on the
3642 guest side.</para>
3643 </listitem>
3644
3645 <listitem>
3646 <para>Guest control sessions on the guest started by <xref
3647 linkend="IGuest__createSession" xreflabel="IGuest::createSession()" />
3648 now are dedicated guest processes to provide more safety and performance
3649 for certain operations. Also, the <xref linkend="IGuest__createSession"
3650 xreflabel="IGuest::createSession()" /> call does not wait for the
3651 guest session being created anymore due to the dedicated guest session
3652 processes just mentioned. This also will enable webservice clients to
3653 handle guest session creation more gracefully. To wait for a guest
3654 session being started, use the newly added attribute <xref
3655 linkend="IGuestSession__status" xreflabel="IGuestSession::status()" />
3656 to query the current guest session status.</para>
3657 </listitem>
3658
3659 <listitem>
3660 <para>The <xref linkend="IGuestFile" xreflabel="IGuestFile" />
3661 APIs are now implemented to provide native guest file access from
3662 the host.</para>
3663 </listitem>
3664
3665 <listitem>
3666 <para>The parameter list for <xref
3667 linkend="IGuest__updateGuestAdditions"
3668 xreflabel="IMedium::updateGuestAdditions()" /> was modified.</para>
3669 It now supports specifying optional command line arguments for the
3670 Guest Additions installer performing the actual update on the guest.
3671 </listitem>
3672
3673 <listitem>
3674 <para>A new event <xref linkend="IGuestUserStateChangedEvent"
3675 xreflabel="IGuestUserStateChangedEvent" /> was introduced to provide
3676 guest user status updates to the host via event listeners. To use this
3677 event there needs to be at least the 4.3 Guest Additions installed on
3678 the guest. At the moment only the states "Idle" and "InUse" of the
3679 <xref linkend="GuestUserState"
3680 xreflabel="GuestUserState" /> enum are supported on
3681 Windows guests, starting at Windows 2000 SP2.</para>
3682 </listitem>
3683
3684 <listitem>
3685 <para>
3686 The attribute <xref linkend="IGuestSession__protocolVersion"
3687 xreflabel="IGuestSession::protocolVersion"/> was added to provide a
3688 convenient way to lookup the guest session's protocol version it
3689 uses to communicate with the installed Guest Additions on the guest.
3690 Older Guest Additions will set the protocol version to 1, whereas
3691 Guest Additions 4.3 will set the protocol version to 2. This might
3692 change in the future as new features arise.</para>
3693 </listitem>
3694
3695 <listitem>
3696 <para><computeroutput>IDisplay::getScreenResolution</computeroutput>
3697 has been extended to return the display position in the guest.</para>
3698 </listitem>
3699
3700 <listitem>
3701 <para>
3702 The <xref linkend="IUSBController" xreflabel="IUSBController"/>
3703 class is not a singleton of <xref linkend="IMachine" xreflabel="IMachine"/>
3704 anymore but <xref linkend="IMachine" xreflabel="IMachine"/> contains
3705 a list of USB controllers present in the VM. The USB device filter
3706 handling was moved to <xref linkend="IUSBDeviceFilters" xreflabel="IUSBDeviceFilters"/>.
3707 </para>
3708 </listitem>
3709 </itemizedlist>
3710 </sect1>
3711
3712 <sect1>
3713 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 4.2</title>
3714
3715 <itemizedlist>
3716 <listitem>
3717 <para>Guest control APIs for executing guest processes, working with
3718 guest files or directories have been moved to the newly introduced
3719 <xref linkend="IGuestSession" xreflabel="IGuestSession" /> interface which
3720 can be created by calling <xref linkend="IGuest__createSession"
3721 xreflabel="IGuest::createSession()" />.</para>
3722
3723 <para>A guest session will act as a
3724 guest user's impersonation so that the guest credentials only have to
3725 be provided when creating a new guest session. There can be up to 32
3726 guest sessions at once per VM, each session serving up to 2048 guest
3727 processes running or files opened.</para>
3728
3729 <para>Instead of working with process or directory handles before
3730 version 4.2, there now are the dedicated interfaces
3731 <xref linkend="IGuestProcess" xreflabel="IGuestProcess" />,
3732 <xref linkend="IGuestDirectory" xreflabel="IGuestDirectory" /> and
3733 <xref linkend="IGuestFile" xreflabel="IGuestFile" />. To retrieve more
3734 information of a file system object the new interface
3735 <xref linkend="IGuestFsObjInfo" xreflabel="IGuestFsObjInfo" /> has been
3736 introduced.</para>
3737
3738 <para>Even though the guest control API was changed it is backwards
3739 compatible so that it can be used with older installed Guest
3740 Additions. However, to use upcoming features like process termination
3741 or waiting for input / output new Guest Additions must be installed when
3742 these features got implemented.</para>
3743
3744 <para>The following limitations apply:
3745 <itemizedlist>
3746 <listitem><para>The <xref linkend="IGuestFile" xreflabel="IGuestFile" />
3747 interface is not fully implemented yet.</para>
3748 </listitem>
3749 <listitem><para>The symbolic link APIs
3750 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__symlinkCreate"
3751 xreflabel="IGuestSession::symlinkCreate()" />,
3752 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__symlinkExists"
3753 xreflabel="IGuestSession::symlinkExists()" />,
3754 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__symlinkRead"
3755 xreflabel="IGuestSession::symlinkRead()" />,
3756 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__symlinkRemoveDirectory"
3757 xreflabel="IGuestSession::symlinkRemoveDirectory()" /> and
3758 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__symlinkRemoveFile"
3759 xreflabel="IGuestSession::symlinkRemoveFile()" /> are not
3760 implemented yet.</para>
3761 </listitem>
3762 <listitem><para>The directory APIs
3763 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__directoryRemove"
3764 xreflabel="IGuestSession::directoryRemove()" />,
3765 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__directoryRemoveRecursive"
3766 xreflabel="IGuestSession::directoryRemoveRecursive()" />,
3767 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__directoryRename"
3768 xreflabel="IGuestSession::directoryRename()" /> and
3769 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__directorySetACL"
3770 xreflabel="IGuestSession::directorySetACL()" /> are not
3771 implemented yet.</para>
3772 </listitem>
3773 <listitem><para>The temporary file creation API
3774 <xref linkend="IGuestSession__fileCreateTemp"
3775 xreflabel="IGuestSession::fileCreateTemp()" /> is not
3776 implemented yet.</para>
3777 </listitem>
3778 <listitem><para>Guest process termination via
3779 <xref linkend="IProcess__terminate"
3780 xreflabel="IProcess::terminate()" /> is not
3781 implemented yet.</para>
3782 </listitem>
3783 <listitem><para>Waiting for guest process output via
3784 <xref linkend="ProcessWaitForFlag__StdOut" xreflabel="ProcessWaitForFlag::StdOut" />
3785 and <xref linkend="ProcessWaitForFlag__StdErr" xreflabel="ProcessWaitForFlag::StdErr" />
3786 is not implemented yet.</para><para>To wait for process output, <xref linkend="IProcess__read"
3787 xreflabel="IProcess::read()" /> with appropriate flags still can be used to periodically
3788 check for new output data to arrive. Note that <xref linkend="ProcessCreateFlag__WaitForStdOut"
3789 xreflabel="ProcessCreateFlag::WaitForStdOut" /> and / or
3790 <xref linkend="ProcessCreateFlag__WaitForStdErr" xreflabel="ProcessCreateFlag::WaitForStdErr" />
3791 need to be specified when creating a guest process via <xref linkend="IGuestSession__processCreate"
3792 xreflabel="IGuestSession::processCreate()" /> or <xref linkend="IGuestSession__processCreateEx"
3793 xreflabel="IGuestSession::processCreateEx()" />.</para>
3794 </listitem>
3795 <listitem>
3796 <para>ACL (Access Control List) handling in general is not implemented yet.</para>
3797 </listitem>
3798 </itemizedlist>
3799 </para>
3800 </listitem>
3801
3802 <listitem>
3803 <para>The <xref linkend="LockType" xreflabel="LockType" />
3804 enumeration now has an additional value <computeroutput>VM</computeroutput>
3805 which tells <xref linkend="IMachine__lockMachine"
3806 xreflabel="IMachine::lockMachine()" /> to create a full-blown
3807 object structure for running a VM. This was the previous behavior
3808 with <computeroutput>Write</computeroutput>, which now only creates
3809 the minimal object structure to save time and resources (at the
3810 moment the Console object is still created, but all sub-objects
3811 such as Display, Keyboard, Mouse, Guest are not.</para>
3812 </listitem>
3813
3814 <listitem>
3815 <para>Machines can be put in groups (actually an array of groups).
3816 The primary group affects the default placement of files belonging
3817 to a VM. <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine"
3818 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::createMachine()"/> and
3819 <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__composeMachineFilename"
3820 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::composeMachineFilename()"/> have been
3821 adjusted accordingly, the former taking an array of groups as an
3822 additional parameter and the latter taking a group as an additional
3823 parameter. The create option handling has been changed for those two
3824 methods, too.</para>
3825 </listitem>
3826
3827 <listitem>
3828 <para>The method IVirtualBox::findMedium() has been removed, since
3829 it provides a subset of the functionality of <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__openMedium"
3830 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::openMedium()" />.</para>
3831 </listitem>
3832
3833 <listitem>
3834 <para>The use of acronyms in API enumeration, interface, attribute
3835 and method names has been made much more consistent, previously they
3836 sometimes were lowercase and sometimes mixed case. They are now
3837 consistently all caps:<table>
3838 <title>Renamed identifiers in VirtualBox 4.2</title>
3839
3840 <tgroup cols="2" style="verywide">
3841 <tbody>
3842 <row>
3843 <entry><emphasis role="bold">Old name</emphasis></entry>
3844
3845 <entry><emphasis role="bold">New name</emphasis></entry>
3846 </row>
3847 <row>
3848 <entry>PointingHidType</entry>
3849 <entry><xref linkend="PointingHIDType" xreflabel="PointingHIDType"/></entry>
3850 </row>
3851 <row>
3852 <entry>KeyboardHidType</entry>
3853 <entry><xref linkend="KeyboardHIDType" xreflabel="KeyboardHIDType"/></entry>
3854 </row>
3855 <row>
3856 <entry>IPciAddress</entry>
3857 <entry><xref linkend="IPCIAddress" xreflabel="IPCIAddress"/></entry>
3858 </row>
3859 <row>
3860 <entry>IPciDeviceAttachment</entry>
3861 <entry><xref linkend="IPCIDeviceAttachment" xreflabel="IPCIDeviceAttachment"/></entry>
3862 </row>
3863 <row>
3864 <entry>IMachine::pointingHidType</entry>
3865 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__pointingHIDType" xreflabel="IMachine::pointingHIDType"/></entry>
3866 </row>
3867 <row>
3868 <entry>IMachine::keyboardHidType</entry>
3869 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__keyboardHIDType" xreflabel="IMachine::keyboardHIDType"/></entry>
3870 </row>
3871 <row>
3872 <entry>IMachine::hpetEnabled</entry>
3873 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__HPETEnabled" xreflabel="IMachine::HPETEnabled"/></entry>
3874 </row>
3875 <row>
3876 <entry>IMachine::sessionPid</entry>
3877 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__sessionPID" xreflabel="IMachine::sessionPID"/></entry>
3878 </row>
3879 <row>
3880 <entry>IMachine::ioCacheEnabled</entry>
3881 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__IOCacheEnabled" xreflabel="IMachine::IOCacheEnabled"/></entry>
3882 </row>
3883 <row>
3884 <entry>IMachine::ioCacheSize</entry>
3885 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__IOCacheSize" xreflabel="IMachine::IOCacheSize"/></entry>
3886 </row>
3887 <row>
3888 <entry>IMachine::pciDeviceAssignments</entry>
3889 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__PCIDeviceAssignments" xreflabel="IMachine::PCIDeviceAssignments"/></entry>
3890 </row>
3891 <row>
3892 <entry>IMachine::attachHostPciDevice()</entry>
3893 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__attachHostPCIDevice" xreflabel="IMachine::attachHostPCIDevice"/></entry>
3894 </row>
3895 <row>
3896 <entry>IMachine::detachHostPciDevice()</entry>
3897 <entry><xref linkend="IMachine__detachHostPCIDevice" xreflabel="IMachine::detachHostPCIDevice()"/></entry>
3898 </row>
3899 <row>
3900 <entry>IConsole::attachedPciDevices</entry>
3901 <entry><xref linkend="IConsole__attachedPCIDevices" xreflabel="IConsole::attachedPCIDevices"/></entry>
3902 </row>
3903 <row>
3904 <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::dhcpEnabled</entry>
3905 <entry><xref linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__DHCPEnabled" xreflabel="IHostNetworkInterface::DHCPEnabled"/></entry>
3906 </row>
3907 <row>
3908 <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::enableStaticIpConfig()</entry>
3909 <entry><xref linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__enableStaticIPConfig" xreflabel="IHostNetworkInterface::enableStaticIPConfig()"/></entry>
3910 </row>
3911 <row>
3912 <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::enableStaticIpConfigV6()</entry>
3913 <entry><xref linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__enableStaticIPConfigV6" xreflabel="IHostNetworkInterface::enableStaticIPConfigV6()"/></entry>
3914 </row>
3915 <row>
3916 <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::enableDynamicIpConfig()</entry>
3917 <entry><xref linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__enableDynamicIPConfig" xreflabel="IHostNetworkInterface::enableDynamicIPConfig()"/></entry>
3918 </row>
3919 <row>
3920 <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::dhcpRediscover()</entry>
3921 <entry><xref linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__DHCPRediscover" xreflabel="IHostNetworkInterface::DHCPRediscover()"/></entry>
3922 </row>
3923 <row>
3924 <entry>IHost::Acceleration3DAvailable</entry>
3925 <entry><xref linkend="IHost__acceleration3DAvailable" xreflabel="IHost::acceleration3DAvailable"/></entry>
3926 </row>
3927 <row>
3928 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedPae</entry>
3929 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedPAE" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedPAE"/></entry>
3930 </row>
3931 <row>
3932 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedDvdStorageController</entry>
3933 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedDVDStorageController" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedDVDStorageController"/></entry>
3934 </row>
3935 <row>
3936 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedDvdStorageBus</entry>
3937 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedDVDStorageBus" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedDVDStorageBus"/></entry>
3938 </row>
3939 <row>
3940 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedHdStorageController</entry>
3941 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedHDStorageController" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedHDStorageController"/></entry>
3942 </row>
3943 <row>
3944 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedHdStorageBus</entry>
3945 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedHDStorageBus" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedHDStorageBus"/></entry>
3946 </row>
3947 <row>
3948 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedUsbHid</entry>
3949 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedUSBHID" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedUSBHID"/></entry>
3950 </row>
3951 <row>
3952 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedHpet</entry>
3953 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedHPET" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedHPET"/></entry>
3954 </row>
3955 <row>
3956 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedUsbTablet</entry>
3957 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedUSBTablet" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedUSBTablet"/></entry>
3958 </row>
3959 <row>
3960 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedRtcUseUtc</entry>
3961 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedRTCUseUTC" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedRTCUseUTC"/></entry>
3962 </row>
3963 <row>
3964 <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedUsb</entry>
3965 <entry><xref linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedUSB" xreflabel="IGuestOSType::recommendedUSB"/></entry>
3966 </row>
3967 <row>
3968 <entry>INetworkAdapter::natDriver</entry>
3969 <entry><xref linkend="INetworkAdapter__NATEngine" xreflabel="INetworkAdapter::NATEngine"/></entry>
3970 </row>
3971 <row>
3972 <entry>IUSBController::enabledEhci</entry>
3973 <entry>IUSBController::enabledEHCI"</entry>
3974 </row>
3975 <row>
3976 <entry>INATEngine::tftpPrefix</entry>
3977 <entry><xref linkend="INATEngine__TFTPPrefix" xreflabel="INATEngine::TFTPPrefix"/></entry>
3978 </row>
3979 <row>
3980 <entry>INATEngine::tftpBootFile</entry>
3981 <entry><xref linkend="INATEngine__TFTPBootFile" xreflabel="INATEngine::TFTPBootFile"/></entry>
3982 </row>
3983 <row>
3984 <entry>INATEngine::tftpNextServer</entry>
3985 <entry><xref linkend="INATEngine__TFTPNextServer" xreflabel="INATEngine::TFTPNextServer"/></entry>
3986 </row>
3987 <row>
3988 <entry>INATEngine::dnsPassDomain</entry>
3989 <entry><xref linkend="INATEngine__DNSPassDomain" xreflabel="INATEngine::DNSPassDomain"/></entry>
3990 </row>
3991 <row>
3992 <entry>INATEngine::dnsProxy</entry>
3993 <entry><xref linkend="INATEngine__DNSProxy" xreflabel="INATEngine::DNSProxy"/></entry>
3994 </row>
3995 <row>
3996 <entry>INATEngine::dnsUseHostResolver</entry>
3997 <entry><xref linkend="INATEngine__DNSUseHostResolver" xreflabel="INATEngine::DNSUseHostResolver"/></entry>
3998 </row>
3999 <row>
4000 <entry>VBoxEventType::OnHostPciDevicePlug</entry>
4001 <entry><xref linkend="VBoxEventType__OnHostPCIDevicePlug" xreflabel="VBoxEventType::OnHostPCIDevicePlug"/></entry>
4002 </row>
4003 <row>
4004 <entry>ICPUChangedEvent::cpu</entry>
4005 <entry><xref linkend="ICPUChangedEvent__CPU" xreflabel="ICPUChangedEvent::CPU"/></entry>
4006 </row>
4007 <row>
4008 <entry>INATRedirectEvent::hostIp</entry>
4009 <entry><xref linkend="INATRedirectEvent__hostIP" xreflabel="INATRedirectEvent::hostIP"/></entry>
4010 </row>
4011 <row>
4012 <entry>INATRedirectEvent::guestIp</entry>
4013 <entry><xref linkend="INATRedirectEvent__guestIP" xreflabel="INATRedirectEvent::guestIP"/></entry>
4014 </row>
4015 <row>
4016 <entry>IHostPciDevicePlugEvent</entry>
4017 <entry><xref linkend="IHostPCIDevicePlugEvent" xreflabel="IHostPCIDevicePlugEvent"/></entry>
4018 </row>
4019 </tbody>
4020 </tgroup></table></para>
4021 </listitem>
4022 </itemizedlist>
4023 </sect1>
4024
4025 <sect1>
4026 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 4.1</title>
4027
4028 <itemizedlist>
4029 <listitem>
4030 <para>The method <xref linkend="IAppliance__importMachines"
4031 xreflabel="IAppliance::importMachines()" /> has one more parameter
4032 now, which allows to configure the import process in more detail.
4033 </para>
4034 </listitem>
4035
4036 <listitem>
4037 <para>The method <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__openMedium"
4038 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::openMedium()" /> has one more parameter
4039 now, which allows resolving duplicate medium UUIDs without the need
4040 for external tools.</para>
4041 </listitem>
4042
4043 <listitem>
4044 <para>The <xref linkend="INetworkAdapter" xreflabel="INetworkAdapter"/>
4045 interface has been cleaned up. The various methods to activate an
4046 attachment type have been replaced by the
4047 <xref linkend="INetworkAdapter__attachmentType" xreflabel="INetworkAdapter::attachmentType"/> setter.</para>
4048 <para>Additionally each attachment mode now has its own attribute,
4049 which means that host only networks no longer share the settings with
4050 bridged interfaces.</para>
4051 <para>To allow introducing new network attachment implementations
4052 without making API changes, the concept of a generic network
4053 attachment driver has been introduced, which is configurable through
4054 key/value properties.</para>
4055 </listitem>
4056
4057 <listitem>
4058 <para>This version introduces the guest facilities concept. A guest
4059 facility either represents a module or feature the guest is running or
4060 offering, which is defined by <xref linkend="AdditionsFacilityType"
4061 xreflabel="AdditionsFacilityType"/>. Each facility is member of a
4062 <xref linkend="AdditionsFacilityClass" xreflabel="AdditionsFacilityClass"/>
4063 and has a current status indicated by <xref linkend="AdditionsFacilityStatus"
4064 xreflabel="AdditionsFacilityStatus"/>, together with a timestamp (in ms) of
4065 the last status update.</para>
4066 <para>To address the above concept, the following changes were made:
4067 <itemizedlist>
4068 <listitem>
4069 <para>
4070 In the <xref linkend="IGuest" xreflabel="IGuest"/> interface, the following were removed:
4071 <itemizedlist>
4072 <listitem>
4073 <para>the <computeroutput>supportsSeamless</computeroutput> attribute;</para>
4074 </listitem>
4075 <listitem>
4076 <para>the <computeroutput>supportsGraphics</computeroutput> attribute;</para>
4077 </listitem>
4078 </itemizedlist>
4079 </para>
4080 </listitem>
4081 <listitem>
4082 <para>
4083 The function <xref linkend="IGuest__getFacilityStatus" xreflabel="IGuest::getFacilityStatus()"/>
4084 was added. It quickly provides a facility's status without the need to get the facility
4085 collection with <xref linkend="IGuest__facilities" xreflabel="IGuest::facilities"/>.
4086 </para>
4087 </listitem>
4088 <listitem>
4089 <para>
4090 The attribute <xref linkend="IGuest__facilities" xreflabel="IGuest::facilities"/>
4091 was added to provide an easy to access collection of all currently known guest
4092 facilities, that is, it contains all facilies where at least one status update was
4093 made since the guest was started.
4094 </para>
4095 </listitem>
4096 <listitem>
4097 <para>
4098 The interface <xref linkend="IAdditionsFacility" xreflabel="IAdditionsFacility"/>
4099 was added to represent a single facility returned by
4100 <xref linkend="IGuest__facilities" xreflabel="IGuest::facilities"/>.
4101 </para>
4102 </listitem>
4103 <listitem>
4104 <para>
4105 <xref linkend="AdditionsFacilityStatus" xreflabel="AdditionsFacilityStatus"/>
4106 was added to represent a facility's overall status.
4107 </para>
4108 </listitem>
4109 <listitem>
4110 <para>
4111 <xref linkend="AdditionsFacilityType" xreflabel="AdditionsFacilityType"/> and
4112 <xref linkend="AdditionsFacilityClass" xreflabel="AdditionsFacilityClass"/> were
4113 added to represent the facility's type and class.
4114 </para>
4115 </listitem>
4116 </itemizedlist>
4117 </para>
4118 </listitem>
4119 </itemizedlist>
4120 </sect1>
4121
4122 <sect1>
4123 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 4.0</title>
4124
4125 <itemizedlist>
4126 <listitem>
4127 <para>A new Java glue layer replacing the previous OOWS JAX-WS
4128 bindings was introduced. The new library allows for uniform code
4129 targeting both local (COM/XPCOM) and remote (SOAP) transports. Now,
4130 instead of <computeroutput>IWebsessionManager</computeroutput>, the
4131 new class <computeroutput>VirtualBoxManager</computeroutput> must be
4132 used. See <xref linkend="javaapi" xreflabel="Java API chapter" />
4133 for details.</para>
4134 </listitem>
4135
4136 <listitem>
4137 <para>The confusingly named and impractical session APIs were
4138 changed. In existing client code, the following changes need to be
4139 made:<itemizedlist>
4140 <listitem>
4141 <para>Replace any
4142 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::openSession(uuidMachine,
4143 ...)</computeroutput> API call with the machine's <xref
4144 linkend="IMachine__lockMachine"
4145 xreflabel="IMachine::lockMachine()" /> call and a
4146 <computeroutput>LockType.Write</computeroutput> argument. The
4147 functionality is unchanged, but instead of "opening a direct
4148 session on a machine" all documentation now refers to
4149 "obtaining a write lock on a machine for the client
4150 session".</para>
4151 </listitem>
4152
4153 <listitem>
4154 <para>Similarly, replace any
4155 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::openExistingSession(uuidMachine,
4156 ...)</computeroutput> call with the machine's <xref
4157 linkend="IMachine__lockMachine"
4158 xreflabel="IMachine::lockMachine()" /> call and a
4159 <computeroutput>LockType.Shared</computeroutput> argument.
4160 Whereas it was previously impossible to connect a client
4161 session to a running VM process in a race-free manner, the new
4162 API will atomically either write-lock the machine for the
4163 current session or establish a remote link to an existing
4164 session. Existing client code which tried calling both
4165 <computeroutput>openSession()</computeroutput> and
4166 <computeroutput>openExistingSession()</computeroutput> can now
4167 use this one call instead.</para>
4168 </listitem>
4169
4170 <listitem>
4171 <para>Third, replace any
4172 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession(uuidMachine,
4173 ...)</computeroutput> call with the machine's <xref
4174 linkend="IMachine__launchVMProcess"
4175 xreflabel="IMachine::launchVMProcess()" /> call. The
4176 functionality is unchanged.</para>
4177 </listitem>
4178
4179 <listitem>
4180 <para>The <xref linkend="SessionState"
4181 xreflabel="SessionState" /> enum was adjusted accordingly:
4182 "Open" is now "Locked", "Closed" is now "Unlocked", "Closing"
4183 is now "Unlocking".</para>
4184 </listitem>
4185 </itemizedlist></para>
4186 </listitem>
4187
4188 <listitem>
4189 <para>Virtual machines created with VirtualBox 4.0 or later no
4190 longer register their media in the global media registry in the
4191 <computeroutput>VirtualBox.xml</computeroutput> file. Instead, such
4192 machines list all their media in their own machine XML files. As a
4193 result, a number of media-related APIs had to be modified again.
4194 <itemizedlist>
4195 <listitem>
4196 <para>Neither <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__createHardDisk"
4197 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk()" /> nor <xref
4198 linkend="IVirtualBox__openMedium"
4199 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::openMedium()" /> register media
4200 automatically any more.</para>
4201 </listitem>
4202
4203 <listitem>
4204 <para><xref linkend="IMachine__attachDevice"
4205 xreflabel="IMachine::attachDevice()" /> and <xref
4206 linkend="IMachine__mountMedium"
4207 xreflabel="IMachine::mountMedium()" /> now take an IMedium
4208 object instead of a UUID as an argument. It is these two calls
4209 which add media to a registry now (either a machine registry
4210 for machines created with VirtualBox 4.0 or later or the
4211 global registry otherwise). As a consequence, if a medium is
4212 opened but never attached to a machine, it is no longer added
4213 to any registry any more.</para>
4214 </listitem>
4215
4216 <listitem>
4217 <para>To reduce code duplication, the APIs
4218 IVirtualBox::findHardDisk(), getHardDisk(), findDVDImage(),
4219 getDVDImage(), findFloppyImage() and getFloppyImage() have all
4220 been merged into IVirtualBox::findMedium(), and
4221 IVirtualBox::openHardDisk(), openDVDImage() and
4222 openFloppyImage() have all been merged into <xref
4223 linkend="IVirtualBox__openMedium"
4224 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::openMedium()" />.</para>
4225 </listitem>
4226
4227 <listitem>
4228 <para>The rare use case of changing the UUID and parent UUID
4229 of a medium previously handled by
4230 <computeroutput>openHardDisk()</computeroutput> is now in a
4231 separate IMedium::setIDs method.</para>
4232 </listitem>
4233
4234 <listitem>
4235 <para><computeroutput>ISystemProperties::get/setDefaultHardDiskFolder()</computeroutput>
4236 have been removed since disk images are now by default placed
4237 in each machine's folder.</para>
4238 </listitem>
4239
4240 <listitem>
4241 <para>The <xref linkend="ISystemProperties__infoVDSize"
4242 xreflabel="ISystemProperties::infoVDSize" /> attribute
4243 replaces the <computeroutput>getMaxVDISize()</computeroutput>
4244 API call; this now uses bytes instead of megabytes.</para>
4245 </listitem>
4246 </itemizedlist></para>
4247 </listitem>
4248
4249 <listitem>
4250 <para>Machine management APIs were enhanced as follows:<itemizedlist>
4251 <listitem>
4252 <para><xref linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine"
4253 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::createMachine()" /> is no longer
4254 restricted to creating machines in the default "Machines"
4255 folder, but can now create machines at arbitrary locations.
4256 For this to work, the parameter list had to be changed.</para>
4257 </listitem>
4258
4259 <listitem>
4260 <para>The long-deprecated
4261 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::createLegacyMachine()</computeroutput>
4262 API has been removed.</para>
4263 </listitem>
4264
4265 <listitem>
4266 <para>To reduce code duplication and for consistency with the
4267 aforementioned media APIs,
4268 <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::getMachine()</computeroutput> has
4269 been merged with <xref linkend="IVirtualBox__findMachine"
4270 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::findMachine()" />, and
4271 <computeroutput>IMachine::getSnapshot()</computeroutput> has
4272 been merged with <xref linkend="IMachine__findSnapshot"
4273 xreflabel="IMachine::findSnapshot()" />.</para>
4274 </listitem>
4275
4276 <listitem>
4277 <para><computeroutput>IVirtualBox::unregisterMachine()</computeroutput>
4278 was replaced with <xref linkend="IMachine__unregister"
4279 xreflabel="IMachine::unregister()" /> with additional
4280 functionality for cleaning up machine files.</para>
4281 </listitem>
4282
4283 <listitem>
4284 <para><computeroutput>IConsole::forgetSavedState</computeroutput>
4285 has been renamed to <xref
4286 linkend="IConsole__discardSavedState"
4287 xreflabel="IConsole::discardSavedState()" />.</para>
4288 </listitem>
4289 </itemizedlist></para>
4290 </listitem>
4291
4292 <listitem>
4293 <para>All event callbacks APIs were replaced with a new, generic
4294 event mechanism that can be used both locally (COM, XPCOM) and
4295 remotely (web services). Also, the new mechanism is usable from
4296 scripting languages and a local Java. See <xref linkend="IEvent"
4297 xreflabel="events" /> for details. The new concept will require
4298 changes to all clients that used event callbacks.</para>
4299 </listitem>
4300
4301 <listitem>
4302 <para><computeroutput>additionsActive()</computeroutput> was
4303 replaced with <xref linkend="IGuest__additionsRunLevel"
4304 xreflabel="additionsRunLevel()" /> and <xref
4305 linkend="IGuest__getAdditionsStatus"
4306 xreflabel="getAdditionsStatus()" /> in order to support a more
4307 detailed status of the current Guest Additions loading/readiness
4308 state. <xref linkend="IGuest__additionsVersion"
4309 xreflabel="IGuest::additionsVersion()" /> no longer returns the
4310 Guest Additions interface version but the installed Guest Additions
4311 version and revision in form of
4312 <computeroutput>3.3.0r12345</computeroutput>.</para>
4313 </listitem>
4314
4315 <listitem>
4316 <para>To address shared folders auto-mounting support, the following
4317 APIs were extended to require an additional
4318 <computeroutput>automount</computeroutput> parameter: <itemizedlist>
4319 <listitem>
4320 <para><xref linkend="IVirtualBox__createSharedFolder"
4321 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::createSharedFolder()" /></para>
4322 </listitem>
4323
4324 <listitem>
4325 <para><xref linkend="IMachine__createSharedFolder"
4326 xreflabel="IMachine::createSharedFolder()" /></para>
4327 </listitem>
4328
4329 <listitem>
4330 <para><xref linkend="IConsole__createSharedFolder"
4331 xreflabel="IConsole::createSharedFolder()" /></para>
4332 </listitem>
4333 </itemizedlist> Also, a new property named
4334 <computeroutput>autoMount</computeroutput> was added to the <xref
4335 linkend="ISharedFolder" xreflabel="ISharedFolder" />
4336 interface.</para>
4337 </listitem>
4338
4339 <listitem>
4340 <para>The appliance (OVF) APIs were enhanced as
4341 follows:<itemizedlist>
4342 <listitem>
4343 <para><computeroutput>IMachine::export</computeroutput>
4344 received an extra parameter
4345 <computeroutput>location</computeroutput>, which is used to
4346 decide for the disk naming.</para>
4347 </listitem>
4348
4349 <listitem>
4350 <para><xref linkend="IAppliance__write"
4351 xreflabel="IAppliance::write()" /> received an extra parameter
4352 <computeroutput>manifest</computeroutput>, which can suppress
4353 creating the manifest file on export.</para>
4354 </listitem>
4355
4356 <listitem>
4357 <para><xref linkend="IVFSExplorer__entryList"
4358 xreflabel="IVFSExplorer::entryList()" /> received two extra
4359 parameters <computeroutput>sizes</computeroutput> and
4360 <computeroutput>modes</computeroutput>, which contains the
4361 sizes (in bytes) and the file access modes (in octal form) of
4362 the returned files.</para>
4363 </listitem>
4364 </itemizedlist></para>
4365 </listitem>
4366
4367 <listitem>
4368 <para>Support for remote desktop access to virtual machines has been
4369 cleaned up to allow third party implementations of the remote
4370 desktop server. This is called the VirtualBox Remote Desktop
4371 Extension (VRDE) and can be added to VirtualBox by installing the
4372 corresponding extension package; see the VirtualBox User Manual for
4373 details.</para>
4374
4375 <para>The following API changes were made to support the VRDE
4376 interface: <itemizedlist>
4377 <listitem>
4378 <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer</computeroutput> has been
4379 renamed to <xref linkend="IVRDEServer"
4380 xreflabel="IVRDEServer" />.</para>
4381 </listitem>
4382
4383 <listitem>
4384 <para><computeroutput>IRemoteDisplayInfo</computeroutput> has
4385 been renamed to <xref linkend="IVRDEServerInfo"
4386 xreflabel="IVRDEServerInfo" />.</para>
4387 </listitem>
4388
4389 <listitem>
4390 <para><xref linkend="IMachine__VRDEServer"
4391 xreflabel="IMachine::VRDEServer" /> replaces
4392 <computeroutput>VRDPServer.</computeroutput></para>
4393 </listitem>
4394
4395 <listitem>
4396 <para><xref linkend="IConsole__VRDEServerInfo"
4397 xreflabel="IConsole::VRDEServerInfo" /> replaces
4398 <computeroutput>RemoteDisplayInfo</computeroutput>.</para>
4399 </listitem>
4400
4401 <listitem>
4402 <para><xref linkend="ISystemProperties__VRDEAuthLibrary"
4403 xreflabel="ISystemProperties::VRDEAuthLibrary" /> replaces
4404 <computeroutput>RemoteDisplayAuthLibrary</computeroutput>.</para>
4405 </listitem>
4406
4407 <listitem>
4408 <para>The following methods have been implemented in
4409 <computeroutput>IVRDEServer</computeroutput> to support
4410 generic VRDE properties: <itemizedlist>
4411 <listitem>
4412 <para><xref linkend="IVRDEServer__setVRDEProperty"
4413 xreflabel="IVRDEServer::setVRDEProperty" /></para>
4414 </listitem>
4415
4416 <listitem>
4417 <para><xref linkend="IVRDEServer__getVRDEProperty"
4418 xreflabel="IVRDEServer::getVRDEProperty" /></para>
4419 </listitem>
4420
4421 <listitem>
4422 <para><xref linkend="IVRDEServer__VRDEProperties"
4423 xreflabel="IVRDEServer::VRDEProperties" /></para>
4424 </listitem>
4425 </itemizedlist></para>
4426
4427 <para>A few implementation-specific attributes of the old
4428 <computeroutput>IVRDPServer</computeroutput> interface have
4429 been removed and replaced with properties: <itemizedlist>
4430 <listitem>
4431 <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer::Ports</computeroutput>
4432 has been replaced with the
4433 <computeroutput>"TCP/Ports"</computeroutput> property.
4434 The property value is a string, which contains a
4435 comma-separated list of ports or ranges of ports. Use a
4436 dash between two port numbers to specify a range.
4437 Example:
4438 <computeroutput>"5000,5010-5012"</computeroutput></para>
4439 </listitem>
4440
4441 <listitem>
4442 <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer::NetAddress</computeroutput>
4443 has been replaced with the
4444 <computeroutput>"TCP/Address"</computeroutput> property.
4445 The property value is an IP address string. Example:
4446 <computeroutput>"127.0.0.1"</computeroutput></para>
4447 </listitem>
4448
4449 <listitem>
4450 <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer::VideoChannel</computeroutput>
4451 has been replaced with the
4452 <computeroutput>"VideoChannel/Enabled"</computeroutput>
4453 property. The property value is either
4454 <computeroutput>"true"</computeroutput> or
4455 <computeroutput>"false"</computeroutput></para>
4456 </listitem>
4457
4458 <listitem>
4459 <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer::VideoChannelQuality</computeroutput>
4460 has been replaced with the
4461 <computeroutput>"VideoChannel/Quality"</computeroutput>
4462 property. The property value is a string which contain a
4463 decimal number in range 10..100. Invalid values are
4464 ignored and the quality is set to the default value 75.
4465 Example: <computeroutput>"50"</computeroutput></para>
4466 </listitem>
4467 </itemizedlist></para>
4468 </listitem>
4469 </itemizedlist></para>
4470 </listitem>
4471
4472 <listitem>
4473 <para>The VirtualBox external authentication module interface has
4474 been updated and made more generic. Because of that,
4475 <computeroutput>VRDPAuthType</computeroutput> enumeration has been
4476 renamed to <xref linkend="AuthType" xreflabel="AuthType" />.</para>
4477 </listitem>
4478 </itemizedlist>
4479 </sect1>
4480
4481 <sect1>
4482 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 3.2</title>
4483
4484 <itemizedlist>
4485 <listitem>
4486 <para>The following interfaces were renamed for consistency:
4487 <itemizedlist>
4488 <listitem>
4489 <para>IMachine::getCpuProperty() is now <xref
4490 linkend="IMachine__getCPUProperty"
4491 xreflabel="IMachine::getCPUProperty()" />;</para>
4492 </listitem>
4493
4494 <listitem>
4495 <para>IMachine::setCpuProperty() is now <xref
4496 linkend="IMachine__setCPUProperty"
4497 xreflabel="IMachine::setCPUProperty()" />;</para>
4498 </listitem>
4499
4500 <listitem>
4501 <para>IMachine::getCpuIdLeaf() is now <xref
4502 linkend="IMachine__getCPUIDLeaf"
4503 xreflabel="IMachine::getCPUIDLeaf()" />;</para>
4504 </listitem>
4505
4506 <listitem>
4507 <para>IMachine::setCpuIdLeaf() is now <xref
4508 linkend="IMachine__setCPUIDLeaf"
4509 xreflabel="IMachine::setCPUIDLeaf()" />;</para>
4510 </listitem>
4511
4512 <listitem>
4513 <para>IMachine::removeCpuIdLeaf() is now <xref
4514 linkend="IMachine__removeCPUIDLeaf"
4515 xreflabel="IMachine::removeCPUIDLeaf()" />;</para>
4516 </listitem>
4517
4518 <listitem>
4519 <para>IMachine::removeAllCpuIdLeafs() is now <xref
4520 linkend="IMachine__removeAllCPUIDLeaves"
4521 xreflabel="IMachine::removeAllCPUIDLeaves()" />;</para>
4522 </listitem>
4523
4524 <listitem>
4525 <para>the CpuPropertyType enum is now <xref
4526 linkend="CPUPropertyType"
4527 xreflabel="CPUPropertyType" />.</para>
4528 </listitem>
4529
4530 <listitem>
4531 <para>IVirtualBoxCallback::onSnapshotDiscarded() is now
4532 IVirtualBoxCallback::onSnapshotDeleted.</para>
4533 </listitem>
4534 </itemizedlist></para>
4535 </listitem>
4536
4537 <listitem>
4538 <para>When creating a VM configuration with <xref
4539 linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine"
4540 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::createMachine" />) it is now possible to
4541 ignore existing configuration files which would previously have
4542 caused a failure. For this the
4543 <computeroutput>override</computeroutput> parameter was
4544 added.</para>
4545 </listitem>
4546
4547 <listitem>
4548 <para>Deleting snapshots via <xref
4549 linkend="IConsole__deleteSnapshot"
4550 xreflabel="IConsole::deleteSnapshot()" /> is now possible while the
4551 associated VM is running in almost all cases. The API is unchanged,
4552 but client code that verifies machine states to determine whether
4553 snapshots can be deleted may need to be adjusted.</para>
4554 </listitem>
4555
4556 <listitem>
4557 <para>The IoBackendType enumeration was replaced with a boolean flag
4558 (see <xref linkend="IStorageController__useHostIOCache"
4559 xreflabel="IStorageController::useHostIOCache" />).</para>
4560 </listitem>
4561
4562 <listitem>
4563 <para>To address multi-monitor support, the following APIs were
4564 extended to require an additional
4565 <computeroutput>screenId</computeroutput> parameter: <itemizedlist>
4566 <listitem>
4567 <para><xref linkend="IMachine__querySavedThumbnailSize"
4568 xreflabel="IMachine::querySavedThumbnailSize()" /></para>
4569 </listitem>
4570
4571 <listitem>
4572 <para><xref linkend="IMachine__readSavedThumbnailToArray"
4573 xreflabel="IMachine::readSavedThumbnailToArray()" /></para>
4574 </listitem>
4575
4576 <listitem>
4577 <para><xref linkend="IMachine__querySavedScreenshotPNGSize"
4578 xreflabel="IMachine::querySavedScreenshotPNGSize()" /></para>
4579 </listitem>
4580
4581 <listitem>
4582 <para><xref linkend="IMachine__readSavedScreenshotPNGToArray"
4583 xreflabel="IMachine::readSavedScreenshotPNGToArray()" /></para>
4584 </listitem>
4585 </itemizedlist></para>
4586 </listitem>
4587
4588 <listitem>
4589 <para>The <computeroutput>shape</computeroutput> parameter of
4590 IConsoleCallback::onMousePointerShapeChange was changed from a
4591 implementation-specific pointer to a safearray, enabling scripting
4592 languages to process pointer shapes.</para>
4593 </listitem>
4594 </itemizedlist>
4595 </sect1>
4596
4597 <sect1>
4598 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 3.1</title>
4599
4600 <itemizedlist>
4601 <listitem>
4602 <para>Due to the new flexibility in medium attachments that was
4603 introduced with version 3.1 (in particular, full flexibility with
4604 attaching CD/DVD drives to arbitrary controllers), we seized the
4605 opportunity to rework all interfaces dealing with storage media to
4606 make the API more flexible as well as logical. The <xref
4607 linkend="IStorageController" xreflabel="IStorageController" />,
4608 <xref linkend="IMedium" xreflabel="IMedium" />, <xref
4609 linkend="IMediumAttachment" xreflabel="IMediumAttachment" /> and,
4610 <xref linkend="IMachine" xreflabel="IMachine" /> interfaces were
4611 affected the most. Existing code using them to configure storage and
4612 media needs to be carefully checked.</para>
4613
4614 <para>All media (hard disks, floppies and CDs/DVDs) are now
4615 uniformly handled through the <xref linkend="IMedium"
4616 xreflabel="IMedium" /> interface. The device-specific interfaces
4617 (<code>IHardDisk</code>, <code>IDVDImage</code>,
4618 <code>IHostDVDDrive</code>, <code>IFloppyImage</code> and
4619 <code>IHostFloppyDrive</code>) have been merged into IMedium; CD/DVD
4620 and floppy media no longer need special treatment. The device type
4621 of a medium determines in which context it can be used. Some
4622 functionality was moved to the other storage-related
4623 interfaces.</para>
4624
4625 <para><code>IMachine::attachHardDisk</code> and similar methods have
4626 been renamed and generalized to deal with any type of drive and
4627 medium. <xref linkend="IMachine__attachDevice"
4628 xreflabel="IMachine::attachDevice()" /> is the API method for adding
4629 any drive to a storage controller. The floppy and DVD/CD drives are
4630 no longer handled specially, and that means you can have more than
4631 one of them. As before, drives can only be changed while the VM is
4632 powered off. Mounting (or unmounting) removable media at runtime is
4633 possible with <xref linkend="IMachine__mountMedium"
4634 xreflabel="IMachine::mountMedium()" />.</para>
4635
4636 <para>Newly created virtual machines have no storage controllers
4637 associated with them. Even the IDE Controller needs to be created
4638 explicitly. The floppy controller is now visible as a separate
4639 controller, with a new storage bus type. For each storage bus type
4640 you can query the device types which can be attached, so that it is
4641 not necessary to hardcode any attachment rules.</para>
4642
4643 <para>This required matching changes e.g. in the callback interfaces
4644 (the medium specific change notification was replaced by a generic
4645 medium change notification) and removing associated enums (e.g.
4646 <code>DriveState</code>). In many places the incorrect use of the
4647 plural form "media" was replaced by "medium", to improve
4648 consistency.</para>
4649 </listitem>
4650
4651 <listitem>
4652 <para>Reading the <xref linkend="IMedium__state"
4653 xreflabel="IMedium::state" /> attribute no longer
4654 automatically performs an accessibility check; a new method <xref
4655 linkend="IMedium__refreshState"
4656 xreflabel="IMedium::refreshState()" /> does this. The attribute only
4657 returns the state any more.</para>
4658 </listitem>
4659
4660 <listitem>
4661 <para>There were substantial changes related to snapshots, triggered
4662 by the "branched snapshots" functionality introduced with version
4663 3.1. IConsole::discardSnapshot was renamed to <xref
4664 linkend="IConsole__deleteSnapshot"
4665 xreflabel="IConsole::deleteSnapshot()" />.
4666 IConsole::discardCurrentState and
4667 IConsole::discardCurrentSnapshotAndState were removed; corresponding
4668 new functionality is in <xref linkend="IConsole__restoreSnapshot"
4669 xreflabel="IConsole::restoreSnapshot()" />. Also, when <xref
4670 linkend="IConsole__takeSnapshot"
4671 xreflabel="IConsole::takeSnapshot()" /> is called on a running
4672 virtual machine, a live snapshot will be created. The old behavior
4673 was to temporarily pause the virtual machine while creating an
4674 online snapshot.</para>
4675 </listitem>
4676
4677 <listitem>
4678 <para>The <computeroutput>IVRDPServer</computeroutput>,
4679 <computeroutput>IRemoteDisplayInfo"</computeroutput> and
4680 <computeroutput>IConsoleCallback</computeroutput> interfaces were
4681 changed to reflect VRDP server ability to bind to one of available
4682 ports from a list of ports.</para>
4683
4684 <para>The <computeroutput>IVRDPServer::port</computeroutput>
4685 attribute has been replaced with
4686 <computeroutput>IVRDPServer::ports</computeroutput>, which is a
4687 comma-separated list of ports or ranges of ports.</para>
4688
4689 <para>An <computeroutput>IRemoteDisplayInfo::port"</computeroutput>
4690 attribute has been added for querying the actual port VRDP server
4691 listens on.</para>
4692
4693 <para>An IConsoleCallback::onRemoteDisplayInfoChange() notification
4694 callback has been added.</para>
4695 </listitem>
4696
4697 <listitem>
4698 <para>The parameter lists for the following functions were
4699 modified:<itemizedlist>
4700 <listitem>
4701 <para><xref linkend="IHost__removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface"
4702 xreflabel="IHost::removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface()" /></para>
4703 </listitem>
4704
4705 <listitem>
4706 <para><xref linkend="IHost__removeUSBDeviceFilter"
4707 xreflabel="IHost::removeUSBDeviceFilter()" /></para>
4708 </listitem>
4709 </itemizedlist></para>
4710 </listitem>
4711
4712 <listitem>
4713 <para>In the OOWS bindings for JAX-WS, the behavior of structures
4714 changed: for one, we implemented natural structures field access so
4715 you can just call a "get" method to obtain a field. Secondly,
4716 setters in structures were disabled as they have no expected effect
4717 and were at best misleading.</para>
4718 </listitem>
4719 </itemizedlist>
4720 </sect1>
4721
4722 <sect1>
4723 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 3.0</title>
4724
4725 <itemizedlist>
4726 <listitem>
4727 <para>In the object-oriented web service bindings for JAX-WS, proper
4728 inheritance has been introduced for some classes, so explicit
4729 casting is no longer needed to call methods from a parent class. In
4730 particular, IHardDisk and other classes now properly derive from
4731 <xref linkend="IMedium" xreflabel="IMedium" />.</para>
4732 </listitem>
4733
4734 <listitem>
4735 <para>All object identifiers (machines, snapshots, disks, etc)
4736 switched from GUIDs to strings (now still having string
4737 representation of GUIDs inside). As a result, no particular internal
4738 structure can be assumed for object identifiers; instead, they
4739 should be treated as opaque unique handles. This change mostly
4740 affects Java and C++ programs; for other languages, GUIDs are
4741 transparently converted to strings.</para>
4742 </listitem>
4743
4744 <listitem>
4745 <para>The uses of NULL strings have been changed greatly. All out
4746 parameters now use empty strings to signal a null value. For in
4747 parameters both the old NULL and empty string is allowed. This
4748 change was necessary to support more client bindings, especially
4749 using the web service API. Many of them either have no special NULL
4750 value or have trouble dealing with it correctly in the respective
4751 library code.</para>
4752 </listitem>
4753
4754 <listitem>
4755 <para>Accidentally, the <code>TSBool</code> interface still appeared
4756 in 3.0.0, and was removed in 3.0.2. This is an SDK bug, do not use
4757 the SDK for VirtualBox 3.0.0 for developing clients.</para>
4758 </listitem>
4759
4760 <listitem>
4761 <para>The type of <xref linkend="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo__resultCode"
4762 xreflabel="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo::resultCode" /> changed from
4763 <computeroutput>result</computeroutput> to
4764 <computeroutput>long</computeroutput>.</para>
4765 </listitem>
4766
4767 <listitem>
4768 <para>The parameter list of IVirtualBox::openHardDisk was
4769 changed.</para>
4770 </listitem>
4771
4772 <listitem>
4773 <para>The method IConsole::discardSavedState was renamed to
4774 IConsole::forgetSavedState, and a parameter was added.</para>
4775 </listitem>
4776
4777 <listitem>
4778 <para>The method IConsole::powerDownAsync was renamed to <xref
4779 linkend="IConsole__powerDown" xreflabel="IConsole::powerDown" />,
4780 and the previous method with that name was deleted. So effectively a
4781 parameter was added.</para>
4782 </listitem>
4783
4784 <listitem>
4785 <para>In the <xref linkend="IFramebuffer"
4786 xreflabel="IFramebuffer" /> interface, the following were
4787 removed:<itemizedlist>
4788 <listitem>
4789 <para>the <computeroutput>operationSupported</computeroutput>
4790 attribute;</para>
4791
4792 <para>(as a result, the
4793 <computeroutput>FramebufferAccelerationOperation</computeroutput>
4794 enum was no longer needed and removed as well);</para>
4795 </listitem>
4796
4797 <listitem>
4798 <para>the <computeroutput>solidFill()</computeroutput>
4799 method;</para>
4800 </listitem>
4801
4802 <listitem>
4803 <para>the <computeroutput>copyScreenBits()</computeroutput>
4804 method.</para>
4805 </listitem>
4806 </itemizedlist></para>
4807 </listitem>
4808
4809 <listitem>
4810 <para>In the <xref linkend="IDisplay" xreflabel="IDisplay" />
4811 interface, the following were removed:<itemizedlist>
4812 <listitem>
4813 <para>the
4814 <computeroutput>setupInternalFramebuffer()</computeroutput>
4815 method;</para>
4816 </listitem>
4817
4818 <listitem>
4819 <para>the <computeroutput>lockFramebuffer()</computeroutput>
4820 method;</para>
4821 </listitem>
4822
4823 <listitem>
4824 <para>the <computeroutput>unlockFramebuffer()</computeroutput>
4825 method;</para>
4826 </listitem>
4827
4828 <listitem>
4829 <para>the
4830 <computeroutput>registerExternalFramebuffer()</computeroutput>
4831 method.</para>
4832 </listitem>
4833 </itemizedlist></para>
4834 </listitem>
4835 </itemizedlist>
4836 </sect1>
4837
4838 <sect1>
4839 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 2.2</title>
4840
4841 <itemizedlist>
4842 <listitem>
4843 <para>Added explicit version number into JAX-WS Java package names,
4844 such as <computeroutput>org.virtualbox_2_2</computeroutput>,
4845 allowing connect to multiple VirtualBox clients from single Java
4846 application.</para>
4847 </listitem>
4848
4849 <listitem>
4850 <para>The interfaces having a "2" suffix attached to them with
4851 version 2.1 were renamed again to have that suffix removed. This
4852 time around, this change involves only the name, there are no
4853 functional differences.</para>
4854
4855 <para>As a result, IDVDImage2 is now IDVDImage; IHardDisk2 is now
4856 IHardDisk; IHardDisk2Attachment is now IHardDiskAttachment.</para>
4857
4858 <para>Consequentially, all related methods and attributes that had a
4859 "2" suffix have been renamed; for example, IMachine::attachHardDisk2
4860 now becomes IMachine::attachHardDisk().</para>
4861 </listitem>
4862
4863 <listitem>
4864 <para>IVirtualBox::openHardDisk has an extra parameter for opening a
4865 disk read/write or read-only.</para>
4866 </listitem>
4867
4868 <listitem>
4869 <para>The remaining collections were replaced by more performant
4870 safe-arrays. This affects the following collections:</para>
4871
4872 <itemizedlist>
4873 <listitem>
4874 <para>IGuestOSTypeCollection</para>
4875 </listitem>
4876
4877 <listitem>
4878 <para>IHostDVDDriveCollection</para>
4879 </listitem>
4880
4881 <listitem>
4882 <para>IHostFloppyDriveCollection</para>
4883 </listitem>
4884
4885 <listitem>
4886 <para>IHostUSBDeviceCollection</para>
4887 </listitem>
4888
4889 <listitem>
4890 <para>IHostUSBDeviceFilterCollection</para>
4891 </listitem>
4892
4893 <listitem>
4894 <para>IProgressCollection</para>
4895 </listitem>
4896
4897 <listitem>
4898 <para>ISharedFolderCollection</para>
4899 </listitem>
4900
4901 <listitem>
4902 <para>ISnapshotCollection</para>
4903 </listitem>
4904
4905 <listitem>
4906 <para>IUSBDeviceCollection</para>
4907 </listitem>
4908
4909 <listitem>
4910 <para>IUSBDeviceFilterCollection</para>
4911 </listitem>
4912 </itemizedlist>
4913 </listitem>
4914
4915 <listitem>
4916 <para>Since "Host Interface Networking" was renamed to "bridged
4917 networking" and host-only networking was introduced, all associated
4918 interfaces needed renaming as well. In detail:</para>
4919
4920 <itemizedlist>
4921 <listitem>
4922 <para>The HostNetworkInterfaceType enum has been renamed to
4923 <xref linkend="HostNetworkInterfaceMediumType"
4924 xreflabel="HostNetworkInterfaceMediumType" /></para>
4925 </listitem>
4926
4927 <listitem>
4928 <para>The IHostNetworkInterface::type attribute has been renamed
4929 to <xref linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__mediumType"
4930 xreflabel="IHostNetworkInterface::mediumType" /></para>
4931 </listitem>
4932
4933 <listitem>
4934 <para>INetworkAdapter::attachToHostInterface() has been renamed
4935 to INetworkAdapter::attachToBridgedInterface</para>
4936 </listitem>
4937
4938 <listitem>
4939 <para>In the IHost interface, createHostNetworkInterface() has
4940 been renamed to <xref
4941 linkend="IHost__createHostOnlyNetworkInterface"
4942 xreflabel="createHostOnlyNetworkInterface()" /></para>
4943 </listitem>
4944
4945 <listitem>
4946 <para>Similarly, removeHostNetworkInterface() has been renamed
4947 to <xref linkend="IHost__removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface"
4948 xreflabel="removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface()" /></para>
4949 </listitem>
4950 </itemizedlist>
4951 </listitem>
4952 </itemizedlist>
4953 </sect1>
4954
4955 <sect1>
4956 <title>Incompatible API changes with version 2.1</title>
4957
4958 <itemizedlist>
4959 <listitem>
4960 <para>With VirtualBox 2.1, error codes were added to many error
4961 infos that give the caller a machine-readable (numeric) feedback in
4962 addition to the error string that has always been available. This is
4963 an ongoing process, and future versions of this SDK reference will
4964 document the error codes for each method call.</para>
4965 </listitem>
4966
4967 <listitem>
4968 <para>The hard disk and other media interfaces were completely
4969 redesigned. This was necessary to account for the support of VMDK,
4970 VHD and other image types; since backwards compatibility had to be
4971 broken anyway, we seized the moment to redesign the interfaces in a
4972 more logical way.</para>
4973
4974 <itemizedlist>
4975 <listitem>
4976 <para>Previously, the old IHardDisk interface had several
4977 derivatives called IVirtualDiskImage, IVMDKImage, IVHDImage,
4978 IISCSIHardDisk and ICustomHardDisk for the various disk formats
4979 supported by VirtualBox. The new IHardDisk2 interface that comes
4980 with version 2.1 now supports all hard disk image formats
4981 itself.</para>
4982 </listitem>
4983
4984 <listitem>
4985 <para>IHardDiskFormat is a new interface to describe the
4986 available back-ends for hard disk images (e.g. VDI, VMDK, VHD or
4987 iSCSI). The IHardDisk2::format attribute can be used to find out
4988 the back-end that is in use for a particular hard disk image.
4989 ISystemProperties::hardDiskFormats[] contains a list of all
4990 back-ends supported by the system. <xref
4991 linkend="ISystemProperties__defaultHardDiskFormat"
4992 xreflabel="ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFormat" /> contains
4993 the default system format.</para>
4994 </listitem>
4995
4996 <listitem>
4997 <para>In addition, the new <xref linkend="IMedium"
4998 xreflabel="IMedium" /> interface is a generic interface for hard
4999 disk, DVD and floppy images that contains the attributes and
5000 methods shared between them. It can be considered a parent class
5001 of the more specific interfaces for those images, which are now
5002 IHardDisk2, IDVDImage2 and IFloppyImage2.</para>
5003
5004 <para>In each case, the "2" versions of these interfaces replace
5005 the earlier versions that did not have the "2" suffix.
5006 Previously, the IDVDImage and IFloppyImage interfaces were
5007 entirely unrelated to IHardDisk.</para>
5008 </listitem>
5009
5010 <listitem>
5011 <para>As a result, all parts of the API that previously
5012 referenced IHardDisk, IDVDImage or IFloppyImage or any of the
5013 old subclasses are gone and will have replacements that use
5014 IHardDisk2, IDVDImage2 and IFloppyImage2; see, for example,
5015 IMachine::attachHardDisk2.</para>
5016 </listitem>
5017
5018 <listitem>
5019 <para>In particular, the IVirtualBox::hardDisks2 array replaces
5020 the earlier IVirtualBox::hardDisks collection.</para>
5021 </listitem>
5022 </itemizedlist>
5023 </listitem>
5024
5025 <listitem>
5026 <para><xref linkend="IGuestOSType" xreflabel="IGuestOSType" /> was
5027 extended to group operating systems into families and for 64-bit
5028 support.</para>
5029 </listitem>
5030
5031 <listitem>
5032 <para>The <xref linkend="IHostNetworkInterface"
5033 xreflabel="IHostNetworkInterface" /> interface was completely
5034 rewritten to account for the changes in how Host Interface
5035 Networking is now implemented in VirtualBox 2.1.</para>
5036 </listitem>
5037
5038 <listitem>
5039 <para>The IVirtualBox::machines2[] array replaces the former
5040 IVirtualBox::machines collection.</para>
5041 </listitem>
5042
5043 <listitem>
5044 <para>Added <xref linkend="IHost__getProcessorFeature"
5045 xreflabel="IHost::getProcessorFeature()" /> and <xref
5046 linkend="ProcessorFeature" xreflabel="ProcessorFeature" />
5047 enumeration.</para>
5048 </listitem>
5049
5050 <listitem>
5051 <para>The parameter list for <xref
5052 linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine"
5053 xreflabel="IVirtualBox::createMachine()" /> was modified.</para>
5054 </listitem>
5055
5056 <listitem>
5057 <para>Added IMachine::pushGuestProperty.</para>
5058 </listitem>
5059
5060 <listitem>
5061 <para>New attributes in IMachine: <xref
5062 linkend="IMachine__accelerate3DEnabled"
5063 xreflabel="accelerate3DEnabled" />, HWVirtExVPIDEnabled, <xref
5064 linkend="IMachine__guestPropertyNotificationPatterns"
5065 xreflabel="guestPropertyNotificationPatterns" />, <xref
5066 linkend="IMachine__CPUCount" xreflabel="CPUCount" />.</para>
5067 </listitem>
5068
5069 <listitem>
5070 <para>Added <xref linkend="IConsole__powerUpPaused"
5071 xreflabel="IConsole::powerUpPaused()" /> and <xref
5072 linkend="IConsole__getGuestEnteredACPIMode"
5073 xreflabel="IConsole::getGuestEnteredACPIMode()" />.</para>
5074 </listitem>
5075
5076 <listitem>
5077 <para>Removed ResourceUsage enumeration.</para>
5078 </listitem>
5079 </itemizedlist>
5080 </sect1>
5081 </chapter>
5082</book>
5083<!-- vim: set shiftwidth=2 tabstop=2 expandtab: -->
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