VirtualBox

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN"
3"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd">
4<chapter id="BasicConcepts">
5 <title>Configuring virtual machines</title>
6
7 <para>Whereas <xref linkend="Introduction" /> gave you a quick introduction
8 to VirtualBox and how to get your first virtual machine running, the
9 following chapter describes in detail how to configure virtual
10 machines.</para>
11
12 <para>You have considerable latitude in deciding what virtual hardware will
13 be provided to the guest. The virtual hardware can be used for communicating
14 with the host system or with other guests. For instance, if you provide
15 VirtualBox with the image of a CD-ROM in an ISO file, VirtualBox can present
16 this image to a guest system as if it were a physical CD-ROM. Similarly, you
17 can give a guest system access to the real network via its virtual network
18 card, and, if you so choose, give the host system, other guests, or
19 computers on the Internet access to the guest system.</para>
20
21 <sect1 id="guestossupport">
22 <title>Supported guest operating systems</title>
23
24 <para>Since VirtualBox is designed to provide a generic virtualization
25 environment for x86 systems, it may run operating systems of any kind,
26 even those not listed here. However, the focus is to optimize VirtualBox
27 for the following guest systems:</para>
28
29 <para><glosslist>
30 <glossentry>
31 <glossterm>Windows NT 4.0</glossterm>
32
33 <glossdef>
34 <para>All versions, editions and service packs are fully
35 supported; however, there are some issues with older service
36 packs. We recommend to install service pack 6a. Guest Additions
37 are available with a limited feature set.</para>
38 </glossdef>
39 </glossentry>
40
41 <glossentry>
42 <glossterm>Windows 2000 / XP / Server 2003 / Vista / Server 2008 /
43 Windows 7 / Windows 8 / Server 2012</glossterm>
44
45 <glossdef>
46 <para>All versions, editions and service packs are fully supported
47 (including 64-bit versions, under the preconditions listed below).
48 Guest Additions are available.</para>
49 </glossdef>
50 </glossentry>
51
52 <glossentry>
53 <glossterm>DOS / Windows 3.x / 95 / 98 / ME</glossterm>
54
55 <glossdef>
56 <para>Limited testing has been performed. Use beyond legacy
57 installation mechanisms not recommended. No Guest Additions
58 available.</para>
59 </glossdef>
60 </glossentry>
61
62 <glossentry>
63 <glossterm>Linux 2.4</glossterm>
64
65 <glossdef>
66 <para>Limited support.</para>
67 </glossdef>
68 </glossentry>
69
70 <glossentry>
71 <glossterm>Linux 2.6</glossterm>
72
73 <glossdef>
74 <para>All versions/editions are fully supported (32 bits and 64
75 bits). Guest Additions are available.</para>
76
77 <para>We strongly recommend using a Linux kernel version 2.6.13 or
78 higher for better performance.<note>
79 <para>Certain Linux kernel releases have bugs that prevent
80 them from executing in a virtual environment; please see <xref
81 linkend="ts_linux-buggy" /> for details.</para>
82 </note></para>
83 </glossdef>
84 </glossentry>
85
86 <glossentry>
87 <glossterm>Linux 3.x</glossterm>
88
89 <glossdef>
90 <para>All versions/editions are fully supported (32 bits and 64
91 bits). Guest Additions are available.</para>
92 </glossdef>
93 </glossentry>
94
95 <glossentry>
96 <glossterm>Solaris 10 (u6 and higher), Solaris 11 (including Solaris
97 11 Express)</glossterm>
98
99 <glossdef>
100 <para>Fully supported (32 bits and 64 bits). Guest Additions are
101 available.</para>
102 </glossdef>
103 </glossentry>
104
105 <glossentry>
106 <glossterm>FreeBSD</glossterm>
107
108 <glossdef>
109 <para>Requires hardware virtualization to be enabled. Limited
110 support. Guest Additions are not available yet.</para>
111 </glossdef>
112 </glossentry>
113
114 <glossentry>
115 <glossterm>OpenBSD</glossterm>
116
117 <glossdef>
118 <para>Requires hardware virtualization to be enabled. Versions 3.7
119 and later are supported. Guest Additions are not available
120 yet.</para>
121 </glossdef>
122 </glossentry>
123
124 <glossentry>
125 <glossterm>OS/2 Warp 4.5</glossterm>
126
127 <glossdef>
128 <para>Requires hardware virtualization to be enabled. We
129 officially support MCP2 only; other OS/2 versions may or may not
130 work. Guest Additions are available with a limited feature
131 set.<footnote>
132 <para>See <xref linkend="KnownIssues" />.</para>
133 </footnote></para>
134 </glossdef>
135 </glossentry>
136
137 <glossentry>
138 <glossterm>Mac OS X</glossterm>
139
140 <glossdef>
141 <para>VirtualBox 3.2 added experimental support for Mac OS X
142 guests, but this comes with restrictions. Please see the following
143 section as well as <xref linkend="KnownIssues" />.</para>
144 </glossdef>
145 </glossentry>
146 </glosslist></para>
147
148 <sect2 id="intro-macosxguests">
149 <title>Mac OS X guests</title>
150
151 <para>Starting with version 3.2, VirtualBox has experimental support for
152 Mac OS X guests. This allows you to install and execute unmodified
153 versions of Mac OS X on supported host hardware.</para>
154
155 <para>Whereas competing solutions perform modifications to the Mac OS X
156 install DVDs (e.g. different boot loader and replaced files), VirtualBox
157 is the first product to provide the modern PC architecture expected by
158 OS X without requiring any "hacks".</para>
159
160 <para>You should be aware of a number of <emphasis role="bold">important
161 issues</emphasis> before attempting to install a Mac OS X guest:<orderedlist>
162 <listitem>
163 <para>Mac OS X is commercial, licensed software and contains
164 <emphasis role="bold">both license and technical restrictions</emphasis>
165 that limit its use to certain hardware and usage scenarios. It is
166 important that you understand and obey these restrictions.</para>
167
168 <para>In particular, for most versions of Mac OS X, Apple prohibits
169 installing them on non-Apple hardware.</para>
170
171 <para>These license restrictions are also enforced on a technical
172 level. Mac OS X verifies whether it is running on Apple hardware,
173 and most DVDs that that come with Apple hardware even check for an
174 exact model. These restrictions are <emphasis>not</emphasis>
175 circumvented by VirtualBox and continue to apply.</para>
176 </listitem>
177
178 <listitem>
179 <para>Only <emphasis role="bold">CPUs</emphasis> known and tested
180 by Apple are supported. As a result, if your Intel CPU is newer
181 than the build of Mac OS X, or if you have a non-Intel CPU, it will
182 most likely panic during bootup with an "Unsupported CPU"
183 exception. It is generally best to use the Mac OS X DVD that came
184 with your Apple hardware.</para>
185 </listitem>
186
187 <listitem>
188 <para>The Mac OS X installer expects the harddisk to be
189 <emphasis role="bold">partitioned</emphasis> so when it does not
190 offer a selection, you have to launch the Disk Utility from the
191 "Tools" menu and partition the hard disk. Then close the Disk
192 Utility and proceed with the installation.</para>
193 </listitem>
194
195 <listitem>
196 <para>In addition, as Mac OS X support in VirtualBox is currently
197 still experimental, please refer also to <xref linkend="KnownIssues" />.</para>
198 </listitem>
199 </orderedlist></para>
200 </sect2>
201
202 <sect2 id="intro-64bitguests">
203 <title>64-bit guests</title>
204
205 <para>VirtualBox supports 64-bit guest operating systems, even on 32-bit
206 host operating systems,<footnote>
207 <para>64-bit guest support was added with VirtualBox 2.0; support
208 for 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts was added with VirtualBox
209 2.1.</para>
210 </footnote> provided that the following conditions are
211 met:<orderedlist>
212 <listitem>
213 <para>You need a 64-bit processor with hardware virtualization
214 support (see <xref linkend="hwvirt" />).</para>
215 </listitem>
216
217 <listitem>
218 <para>You must enable hardware virtualization for the particular
219 VM for which you want 64-bit support; software virtualization is
220 not supported for 64-bit VMs.</para>
221 </listitem>
222
223 <listitem>
224 <para>If you want to use 64-bit guest support on a 32-bit host
225 operating system, you must also select a 64-bit operating system
226 for the particular VM. Since supporting 64 bits on 32-bit hosts
227 incurs additional overhead, VirtualBox only enables this support
228 upon explicit request.</para>
229
230 <para>On 64-bit hosts (which typically come with hardware
231 virtualization support), 64-bit guest operating systems are always
232 supported regardless of settings, so you can simply install a
233 64-bit operating system in the guest.</para>
234 </listitem>
235 </orderedlist></para>
236
237 <para><warning>
238 <para>On any host, you should enable the <emphasis role="bold">I/O
239 APIC</emphasis> for virtual machines that you intend to use in
240 64-bit mode. This is especially true for 64-bit Windows VMs. See
241 <xref linkend="settings-general-advanced" />. In addition, for
242 64-bit Windows guests, you should make sure that the VM uses the
243 <emphasis role="bold">Intel networking device</emphasis>, since
244 there is no 64-bit driver support for the AMD PCNet card; see <xref
245 linkend="nichardware" />.</para>
246 </warning></para>
247
248 <para>If you use the "Create VM" wizard of the VirtualBox graphical user
249 interface (see <xref linkend="gui-createvm" />), VirtualBox will
250 automatically use the correct settings for each selected 64-bit
251 operating system type.</para>
252 </sect2>
253 </sect1>
254
255 <sect1>
256 <title>Emulated hardware</title>
257
258 <para>VirtualBox virtualizes nearly all hardware of the host. Depending on
259 a VM's configuration, the guest will see the following virtual
260 hardware:<itemizedlist>
261 <listitem>
262 <para><emphasis role="bold">Input devices.</emphasis> By default,
263 VirtualBox emulates a standard PS/2 keyboard and mouse. These
264 devices are supported by almost all past and present operating
265 systems.</para>
266
267 <para>In addition, VirtualBox can provide virtual USB input devices
268 to avoid having to capture mouse and keyboard, as described in <xref
269 linkend="keyb_mouse_normal" />.</para>
270 </listitem>
271
272 <listitem>
273 <para><emphasis role="bold">Graphics.</emphasis> The VirtualBox
274 graphics device (sometimes referred to as VGA device) is, unlike
275 nearly all other emulated devices, not based on any physical
276 counterpart. It is a simple, synthetic device which provides
277 compatibility with standard VGA and several extended registers used
278 by the VESA BIOS Extensions (VBE).</para>
279 </listitem>
280
281 <listitem>
282 <para><emphasis role="bold">Storage.</emphasis> VirtualBox currently
283 emulates the standard ATA interface found on Intel PIIX3/PIIX4
284 chips, the SATA (AHCI) interface, and two SCSI adapters (LSI Logic
285 and BusLogic); see <xref linkend="harddiskcontrollers" /> for
286 details. Whereas providing one of these would be enough for
287 VirtualBox by itself, this multitude of storage adapters is required
288 for compatibility with other hypervisors. Windows is particularly
289 picky about its boot devices, and migrating VMs between hypervisors
290 is very difficult or impossible if the storage controllers are
291 different.</para>
292 </listitem>
293
294 <listitem>
295 <para><emphasis role="bold">Networking.</emphasis> See <xref
296 linkend="nichardware" />.</para>
297 </listitem>
298
299 <listitem>
300 <para><emphasis role="bold">USB.</emphasis> VirtualBox emulates two
301 USB host controllers, EHCI and OHCI. There is a need for two host
302 controllers because OHCI only handles USB low- and full-speed
303 devices (both USB 1.x and 2.0), while EHCI only handles high-speed
304 devices (USB 2.0 only). The emulated USB controllers do not
305 communicate directly with devices on the host but rather with a
306 virtual USB layer which abstracts the USB protocol and allows the
307 use of remote USB devices.</para>
308 </listitem>
309
310 <listitem>
311 <para><emphasis role="bold">Audio.</emphasis> See <xref
312 linkend="settings-audio" />.</para>
313 </listitem>
314 </itemizedlist></para>
315 </sect1>
316
317 <sect1 id="generalsettings">
318 <title>General settings</title>
319
320 <para>In the Settings window, under "General", you can configure the most
321 fundamental aspects of the virtual machine such as memory and essential
322 hardware. There are three tabs, "Basic", "Advanced" and
323 "Description".</para>
324
325 <sect2>
326 <title>"Basic" tab</title>
327
328 <para>Under the "Basic" tab of the "General" settings category, you can
329 find these settings:</para>
330
331 <glosslist>
332 <glossentry>
333 <glossterm>Name</glossterm>
334
335 <glossdef>
336 <para>The name under which the VM is shown in the list of VMs in
337 the main window. Under this name, VirtualBox also saves the VM's
338 configuration files. By changing the name, VirtualBox renames
339 these files as well. As a result, you can only use characters
340 which are allowed in your host operating system's file
341 names.</para>
342
343 <para>Note that internally, VirtualBox uses unique identifiers
344 (UUIDs) to identify virtual machines. You can display these with
345 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>.</para>
346 </glossdef>
347 </glossentry>
348
349 <glossentry>
350 <glossterm>Operating system / version</glossterm>
351
352 <glossdef>
353 <para>The type of the guest operating system that is (or will be)
354 installed in the VM. This is the same setting that was specified
355 in the "New Virtual Machine" wizard, as described in <xref
356 linkend="gui-createvm" />.</para>
357
358 <para>Whereas the default settings of a newly created VM depend on
359 the selected operating system type, changing the type later has no
360 effect on VM settings; this value is then purely informational and
361 decorative.</para>
362 </glossdef>
363 </glossentry>
364 </glosslist>
365 </sect2>
366
367 <sect2 id="settings-general-advanced">
368 <title>"Advanced" tab</title>
369
370 <para><glosslist>
371 <glossentry>
372 <glossterm>Snapshot folder</glossterm>
373
374 <glossdef>
375 <para>By default, VirtualBox saves snapshot data together with
376 your other VirtualBox configuration data; see <xref
377 linkend="vboxconfigdata" />. With this setting, you can specify
378 any other folder for each VM.</para>
379 </glossdef>
380 </glossentry>
381
382 <glossentry>
383 <glossterm>Shared clipboard</glossterm>
384
385 <glossdef>
386 <para>You can select here whether the clipboard of the guest
387 operating system should be shared with that of your host. If you
388 select "Bidirectional", then VirtualBox will always make sure
389 that both clipboards contain the same data. If you select "Host
390 to guest" or "Guest to host", then VirtualBox will only ever
391 copy clipboard data in one direction.</para>
392
393 <para>Clipboard sharing requires that the VirtualBox Guest
394 Additions be installed. As a result, this setting has no effect
395 otherwise; see <xref linkend="guestadditions" /> for
396 details.</para>
397
398 <para>The shared clipboard is disabled by default. See
399 <xref linkend="security_clipboard"/> for an explanation. This
400 setting can be changed at any time using the "Shared Clipboard"
401 menu item in the "Devices" menu of the virtual machine.</para>
402 </glossdef>
403 </glossentry>
404
405 <glossentry>
406 <glossterm>Removable media: remember runtime changes</glossterm>
407
408 <glossdef>
409 <para>If this is checked, VirtualBox will save the state of what
410 media has been mounted between several runs of a virtual
411 machine.</para>
412 </glossdef>
413 </glossentry>
414
415 <glossentry>
416 <glossterm>Mini toolbar</glossterm>
417
418 <glossdef>
419 <para>In full screen or seamless mode, VirtualBox can display a
420 small toolbar that contains some of the items that are normally
421 available from the virtual machine's menu bar. This toolbar
422 reduces itself to a small gray line unless you move the mouse
423 over it. With the toolbar, you can return from full screen or
424 seamless mode, control machine execution or enable certain
425 devices. If you don't want to see the toolbar, disable this
426 setting.</para>
427 </glossdef>
428 </glossentry>
429 </glosslist></para>
430 </sect2>
431
432 <sect2>
433 <title>"Description" tab</title>
434
435 <para>Here you can enter any description for your virtual machine, if
436 you want. This has no effect on the functionality of the machine, but
437 you may find this space useful to note down things like the
438 configuration of a virtual machine and the software that has been
439 installed into it.</para>
440 </sect2>
441 </sect1>
442
443 <sect1 id="settings-system">
444 <title>System settings</title>
445
446 <para>The "System" category groups various settings that are related to
447 the basic hardware that is presented to the virtual machine.<note>
448 <para>As the activation mechanism of Microsoft Windows is sensitive to
449 hardware changes, if you are changing hardware settings for a Windows
450 guest, some of these changes may trigger a request for another
451 activation with Microsoft.</para>
452 </note></para>
453
454 <sect2 id="settings-motherboard">
455 <title>"Motherboard" tab</title>
456
457 <para>On the "Motherboard" tab, you can influence virtual hardware that
458 would normally be on the motherboard of a real computer.<glosslist>
459 <glossentry>
460 <glossterm>Base memory</glossterm>
461
462 <glossdef>
463 <para>This sets the amount of RAM that is allocated and given to
464 the VM when it is running. The specified amount of memory will
465 be requested from the host operating system, so it must be
466 available or made available as free memory on the host when
467 attempting to start the VM and will not be available to the host
468 while the VM is running. This is the same setting that was
469 specified in the "New Virtual Machine" wizard, as described with
470 guidelines under <xref linkend="gui-createvm" /> above.</para>
471
472 <para>Generally, it is possible to change the memory size after
473 installing the guest operating system (provided you do not
474 reduce the memory to an amount where the operating system would
475 no longer boot).</para>
476 </glossdef>
477 </glossentry>
478
479 <glossentry>
480 <glossterm>Boot order</glossterm>
481
482 <glossdef>
483 <para>This setting determines the order in which the guest
484 operating system will attempt to boot from the various virtual
485 boot devices. Analogous to a real PC's BIOS setting, VirtualBox
486 can tell a guest OS to start from the virtual floppy, the
487 virtual CD/DVD drive, the virtual hard drive (each of these as
488 defined by the other VM settings), the network, or none of
489 these.</para>
490
491 <para>If you select "Network", the VM will attempt to boot from
492 a network via the PXE mechanism. This needs to be configured in
493 detail on the command line; please see <xref
494 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" />.</para>
495 </glossdef>
496 </glossentry>
497
498 <glossentry>
499 <glossterm>Chipset</glossterm>
500
501 <glossdef>
502 <para>Here you can select which chipset will be presented to the
503 virtual machine. Before VirtualBox 4.0, PIIX3 was the only
504 available option here. For modern guest operating systems such
505 as Mac OS X, that old chipset is no longer well supported. As a
506 result, VirtualBox 4.0 introduced an emulation of the more
507 modern ICH9 chipset, which supports PCI express, three PCI
508 buses, PCI-to-PCI bridges and Message Signalled Interrupts
509 (MSI). This allows modern operating systems to address more PCI
510 devices and no longer requires IRQ sharing. Note that the ICH9
511 support is experimental and not recommended for guest operating
512 systems which do not require it.</para>
513 </glossdef>
514 </glossentry>
515
516 <glossentry>
517 <glossterm>Enable I/O APIC</glossterm>
518
519 <glossdef>
520 <para>Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controllers (APICs) are a
521 newer x86 hardware feature that have replaced old-style
522 Programmable Interrupt Controllers (PICs) in recent years. With
523 an I/O APIC, operating systems can use more than 16 interrupt
524 requests (IRQs) and therefore avoid IRQ sharing for improved
525 reliability.<note>
526 <para>Enabling the I/O APIC is <emphasis>required</emphasis>
527 for 64-bit guest operating systems, especially Windows
528 Vista; it is also required if you want to use more than one
529 virtual CPU in a virtual machine.</para>
530 </note></para>
531
532 <para>However, software support for I/O APICs has been
533 unreliable with some operating systems other than Windows. Also,
534 the use of an I/O APIC slightly increases the overhead of
535 virtualization and therefore slows down the guest OS a
536 little.<warning>
537 <para>All Windows operating systems starting with Windows
538 2000 install different kernels depending on whether an I/O
539 APIC is available. As with ACPI, the I/O APIC therefore
540 <emphasis>must not be turned off after
541 installation</emphasis> of a Windows guest OS. Turning it on
542 after installation will have no effect however.</para>
543 </warning></para>
544 </glossdef>
545 </glossentry>
546
547 <glossentry>
548 <glossterm>Enable EFI</glossterm>
549
550 <glossdef>
551 <para>This enables Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI), which
552 replaces the legacy BIOS and may be useful for certain
553 advanced use cases. Please refer to <xref linkend="efi" /> for
554 details.</para>
555 </glossdef>
556 </glossentry>
557
558 <glossentry>
559 <glossterm>Hardware clock in UTC time</glossterm>
560
561 <glossdef>
562 <para>If checked, VirtualBox will report the system time in UTC
563 format to the guest instead of local (host) time. This affects
564 how the virtual real-time clock (RTC) operates and may be useful
565 for Unix-like guest operating systems, which typically expect
566 the hardware clock to be set to UTC.</para>
567 </glossdef>
568 </glossentry>
569
570 <glossentry>
571 <glossterm>Enable absolute pointing device</glossterm>
572
573 <glossdef>
574 <para>If enabled, VirtualBox reports to the virtual machine that
575 a USB tablet device is present and communicates mouse events to
576 the virtual machine through this device. If disabled, mouse
577 events are communicated through a traditional PS/2 virtual mouse
578 device.</para>
579
580 <para>Using the virtual USB tablet has the advantage that
581 movements are reported in absolute coordinates (instead of as
582 relative position changes), which allows VirtualBox to translate
583 mouse events over the VM window into tablet events without
584 having to "capture" the mouse in the guest as described in <xref
585 linkend="keyb_mouse_normal" />. This makes using the VM less
586 tedious even if Guest Additions are not installed.<footnote>
587 <para>The virtual USB tablet was added with VirtualBox 3.2.
588 Depending on the guest operating system selected, this is
589 now enabled by default for new virtual machines.</para>
590 </footnote></para>
591 </glossdef>
592 </glossentry>
593 </glosslist></para>
594
595 <para>In addition, you can turn off the <emphasis role="bold">Advanced
596 Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI)</emphasis> which VirtualBox
597 presents to the guest operating system by default. ACPI is the current
598 industry standard to allow operating systems to recognize hardware,
599 configure motherboards and other devices and manage power. As all modern
600 PCs contain this feature and Windows and Linux have been supporting it
601 for years, it is also enabled by default in VirtualBox. It can only be
602 turned off on the command line; see <xref
603 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" />.<warning>
604 <para>All Windows operating systems starting with Windows 2000
605 install different kernels depending on whether ACPI is available, so
606 ACPI <emphasis>must not be turned off</emphasis> after installation
607 of a Windows guest OS. Turning it on after installation will have no
608 effect however.</para>
609 </warning></para>
610 </sect2>
611
612 <sect2 id="settings-processor">
613 <title>"Processor" tab</title>
614
615 <para>On the "Processor" tab, you can set how many virtual <emphasis
616 role="bold">CPU cores</emphasis> the guest operating systems should see.
617 Starting with version 3.0, VirtualBox supports symmetrical
618 multiprocessing (SMP) and can present up to 32 virtual CPU cores to each
619 virtual machine.</para>
620
621 <para>You should not, however, configure virtual machines to use more
622 CPU cores than you have available physically.</para>
623
624 <para>On this tab you can also set the CPU execution cap. This setting
625 limits the amount of time a host CPU spents to emulate a virtual CPU.
626 The default setting is 100% meaning that there is no limitation. A setting
627 of 50% implies a single virtual CPU can use up to 50% of a single host
628 CPU. Note that limiting the execution time of the virtual CPUs may induce
629 guest timing problems.</para>
630
631 <para>In addition, the <emphasis role="bold">"Enable PAE/NX"</emphasis>
632 setting determines whether the PAE and NX capabilities of the host CPU
633 will be exposed to the virtual machine. PAE stands for "Physical Address
634 Extension". Normally, if enabled and supported by the operating system,
635 then even a 32-bit x86 CPU can access more than 4 GB of RAM. This is
636 made possible by adding another 4 bits to memory addresses, so that with
637 36 bits, up to 64 GB can be addressed. Some operating systems (such as
638 Ubuntu Server) require PAE support from the CPU and cannot be run in a
639 virtual machine without it.</para>
640
641 <para>With virtual machines running modern server operating systems,
642 VirtualBox also supports CPU hot-plugging. For details about this,
643 please refer to <xref linkend="cpuhotplug" />.</para>
644 </sect2>
645
646 <sect2>
647 <title>"Acceleration" tab</title>
648
649 <para>On this page, you can determine whether and how VirtualBox should
650 use hardware virtualization extensions that your host CPU may support.
651 This is the case with most CPUs built after 2006.</para>
652
653 <para>You can select for each virtual machine individually whether
654 VirtualBox should use software or hardware virtualization.<footnote>
655 <para>Prior to VirtualBox version 2.2, software virtualization was
656 the default; starting with version 2.2, VirtualBox will enable
657 hardware virtualization by default for new virtual machines that you
658 create. (Existing virtual machines are not automatically changed for
659 compatibility reasons, and the default can of course be changed for
660 each virtual machine.)</para>
661 </footnote></para>
662
663 <para>In most cases, the default settings will be fine; VirtualBox will
664 have picked sensible defaults depending on the operating system that you
665 selected when you created the virtual machine. In certain situations,
666 however, you may want to change these preconfigured defaults.</para>
667
668 <para>Advanced users may be interested in technical details about
669 software vs. hardware virtualization; please see <xref
670 linkend="hwvirt" />.</para>
671
672 <para>If your host's CPU supports the <emphasis role="bold">nested
673 paging</emphasis> (AMD-V) or <emphasis role="bold">EPT</emphasis> (Intel
674 VT-x) features, then you can expect a significant performance increase
675 by enabling nested paging in addition to hardware virtualization. For
676 technical details, see <xref linkend="nestedpaging" />.</para>
677 </sect2>
678 </sect1>
679
680 <sect1 id="settings-display">
681 <title>Display settings</title>
682
683 <glosslist>
684 <glossentry>
685 <glossterm>Video memory size</glossterm>
686
687 <glossdef>
688 <para>This sets the size of the memory provided by the virtual
689 graphics card available to the guest, in MB. As with the main
690 memory, the specified amount will be allocated from the host's
691 resident memory. Based on the amount of video memory, higher
692 resolutions and color depths may be available.</para>
693 <para>The GUI will show a warning if the amount of video memory
694 is too small to be able to switch the VM into full screen mode.
695 The minimum value depends on the number of virtual monitors, the
696 screen resolution and the color depth of the host display as well
697 as of the activation of <emphasis>3D acceleration</emphasis> and
698 <emphasis>2D video acceleration</emphasis>. A rough estimate
699 is (<emphasis>color depth</emphasis> / 8) x
700 <emphasis>vertical pixels</emphasis> x
701 <emphasis>horizontal pixels</emphasis> x
702 <emphasis>number of screens</emphasis> = <emphasis>number of bytes</emphasis>.
703 Like said above, there might be extra memory required for any
704 activated display acceleration setting.</para>
705 </glossdef>
706 </glossentry>
707
708 <glossentry>
709 <glossterm>Monitor count</glossterm>
710
711 <glossdef>
712 <para>With this setting VirtualBox can provide more than one virtual
713 monitor to a virtual machine. If a guest operating system (such as
714 Windows) supports multiple attached monitors, VirtualBox can pretend
715 that multiple virtual monitors are present.<footnote>
716 <para>Multiple monitor support was added with VirtualBox
717 3.2.</para>
718 </footnote> Up to 8 such virtual monitors are supported.</para>
719
720 <para>The output of the multiple monitors will be displayed on the
721 host in multiple VM windows which are running side by side.</para>
722
723 <para>However, in full screen and seamless mode, they will use the
724 available physical monitors attached to the host. As a result, for
725 full screen and seamless modes to work with multiple monitors, you
726 will need at least as many physical monitors as you have virtual
727 monitors configured, or VirtualBox will report an error. You can
728 configure the relationship between guest and host monitors using the
729 view menu by pressing Host key + Home when you are in full screen or
730 seamless mode.</para>
731
732 <para>Please see <xref linkend="KnownIssues" /> also.</para>
733 </glossdef>
734 </glossentry>
735
736 <glossentry>
737 <glossterm>Enable 3D acceleration</glossterm>
738
739 <glossdef>
740 <para>If a virtual machine has Guest Additions installed, you can
741 select here whether the guest should support accelerated 3D
742 graphics. Please refer to <xref linkend="guestadd-3d" /> for
743 details.</para>
744 </glossdef>
745 </glossentry>
746
747 <glossentry>
748 <glossterm>Enable 2D video acceleration</glossterm>
749
750 <glossdef>
751 <para>If a virtual machine with Microsoft Windows has Guest
752 Additions installed, you can select here whether the guest should
753 support accelerated 2D video graphics. Please refer to <xref
754 linkend="guestadd-2d" /> for details.</para>
755 </glossdef>
756 </glossentry>
757
758 <glossentry>
759 <glossterm>Remote display</glossterm>
760
761 <glossdef>
762 <para>Under the "Remote display" tab, if the VirtualBox Remote
763 Display Extension (VRDE) is installed, you can enable the VRDP server
764 that is built into VirtualBox. This allows you to connect to the
765 console of the virtual machine remotely with any standard RDP viewer,
766 such as <computeroutput>mstsc.exe</computeroutput> that comes with
767 Microsoft Windows. On Linux and Solaris systems you can use the
768 standard open-source <computeroutput>rdesktop</computeroutput>
769 program. These features are described in detail in
770 <xref linkend="vrde" />.</para>
771 </glossdef>
772 </glossentry>
773 </glosslist>
774 </sect1>
775
776 <sect1 id="settings-storage">
777 <title>Storage settings</title>
778
779 <para>The "Storage" category in the VM settings allows you to connect
780 virtual hard disk, CD/DVD and floppy images and drives to your virtual
781 machine.</para>
782
783 <para>In a real PC, so-called "storage controllers" connect physical disk
784 drives to the rest of the computer. Similarly, VirtualBox presents virtual
785 storage controllers to a virtual machine. Under each controller, the
786 virtual devices (hard disks, CD/DVD or floppy drives) attached to the
787 controller are shown.<note>
788 <para>This section can only give you a quick introduction to the
789 VirtualBox storage settings. Since VirtualBox gives you an enormous
790 wealth of options in this area, we have dedicated an entire chapter of
791 this User Manual to explaining all the details: please see <xref
792 linkend="storage" />.</para>
793 </note></para>
794
795 <para>If you have used the "Create VM" wizard to create a machine, you
796 will normally see something like the following:</para>
797
798 <para><mediaobject>
799 <imageobject>
800 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/vm-settings-harddisk.png"
801 width="10cm" />
802 </imageobject>
803 </mediaobject></para>
804
805 <para>Depending on the guest operating system type that you selected when
806 you created the VM, the typical layout of storage devices in a new VM is
807 as follows:<itemizedlist>
808 <listitem>
809 <para>You will see an <emphasis role="bold">IDE
810 controller,</emphasis> to which a virtual CD/DVD drive has been
811 attached (to the "secondary master" port of the IDE
812 controller).</para>
813 </listitem>
814
815 <listitem>
816 <para>You will also see a <emphasis role="bold">SATA
817 controller,</emphasis> which is a more modern type of storage
818 controller for higher hard disk data throughput, to which the
819 virtual hard disks are attached. Initially you will normally have
820 one such virtual disk, but as you can see in the above screenshot,
821 you can have more than one, each represented by a disk image file
822 (VDI files, in this case).</para>
823 </listitem>
824 </itemizedlist></para>
825
826 <para>If you created your VM with an older version of VirtualBox, the
827 default storage layout may differ. You might then only have an IDE
828 controller to which both the CD/DVD drive and the hard disks have been
829 attached. This might also apply if you selected an older operating system
830 type when you created the VM. Since older operating systems do not support
831 SATA without additional drivers, VirtualBox will make sure that no such
832 devices are present initially. Please see <xref
833 linkend="harddiskcontrollers" /> for additional information.</para>
834
835 <para>VirtualBox also provides a <emphasis role="bold">floppy
836 controller</emphasis>, which is special: you cannot add devices other than
837 floppy drives to it. Virtual floppy drives, like virtual CD/DVD drives,
838 can be connected to either a host floppy drive (if you have one) or a disk
839 image, which in this case must be in RAW format.</para>
840
841 <para>You can modify these media attachments freely. For example, if you
842 wish to copy some files from another virtual disk that you created, you
843 can connect that disk as a second hard disk, as in the above screenshot.
844 You could also add a second virtual CD/DVD drive, or change where these
845 items are attached. The following options are available:<itemizedlist>
846 <listitem>
847 <para>To <emphasis role="bold">add another virtual hard disk, or a
848 CD/DVD or floppy drive,</emphasis> select the storage controller to
849 which it should be added (IDE, SATA, SCSI, SAS, floppy controller)
850 and then click on the "add disk" button below the tree. You can then
851 either select "Add CD/DVD device" or "Add Hard Disk". (If you
852 clicked on a floppy controller, you can add a floppy drive instead.)
853 Alternatively, right-click on the storage controller and select a
854 menu item there.</para>
855
856 <para>On the right part of the window, you can then set the
857 following:<orderedlist>
858 <listitem>
859 <para>You can then select to which <emphasis
860 role="bold">device slot</emphasis> of the controller the
861 virtual disk should be connected to. IDE controllers have four
862 slots which have traditionally been called "primary master",
863 "primary slave", "secondary master" and "secondary slave". By
864 contrast, SATA and SCSI controllers offer you up to 30 slots
865 to which virtual devices can be attached.</para>
866 </listitem>
867
868 <listitem>
869 <para>You can select which <emphasis role="bold">image
870 file</emphasis> to use.<itemizedlist>
871 <listitem>
872 <para>For virtual hard disks, a button with a drop-down
873 list appears on the right, offering you to either select
874 a <emphasis role="bold">virtual hard disk
875 file</emphasis> using a standard file dialog or to
876 <emphasis role="bold">create a new hard disk</emphasis>
877 (image file), which will bring up the "Create new disk"
878 wizard, which was described in <xref
879 linkend="gui-createvm" />.</para>
880
881 <para>For details on the image file types that are
882 supported, please see <xref
883 linkend="vdidetails" />.</para>
884 </listitem>
885
886 <listitem>
887 <para>For virtual CD/DVD drives, the image files will
888 typically be in the standard ISO format instead. Most
889 commonly, you will select this option when installing an
890 operating system from an ISO file that you have obtained
891 from the Internet. For example, most Linux distributions
892 are available in this way.</para>
893
894 <para>For virtual CD/DVD drives, the following
895 additional options are available:</para>
896
897 <para><itemizedlist>
898 <listitem>
899 <para>If you select <emphasis role="bold">"Host
900 drive"</emphasis> from the list, then the physical
901 device of the host computer is connected to the VM,
902 so that the guest operating system can read from and
903 write to your physical device. This is, for
904 instance, useful if you want to install Windows from
905 a real installation CD. In this case, select your
906 host drive from the drop-down list presented.</para>
907
908 <para>If you want to write (burn) CDs or DVDs using
909 the host drive, you need to also enable the
910 <emphasis role="bold">"Passthrough"</emphasis>
911 option; see <xref linkend="storage-cds" />.</para>
912 </listitem>
913
914 <listitem>
915 <para>If you select <emphasis role="bold">"Remove
916 disk from virtual drive",</emphasis> VirtualBox will
917 present an empty CD/DVD drive to the guest into
918 which no media has been inserted.</para>
919 </listitem>
920 </itemizedlist></para>
921 </listitem>
922 </itemizedlist></para>
923 </listitem>
924 </orderedlist></para>
925 </listitem>
926
927 <listitem>
928 <para>To <emphasis role="bold">remove an attachment,</emphasis>
929 select it and click on the "remove" icon at the bottom (or
930 right-click on it and select the menu item).</para>
931 </listitem>
932 </itemizedlist></para>
933
934 <para>Removable media (CD/DVDs and floppies) can be changed while the
935 guest is running. Since the "Settings" dialog is not available at that
936 time, you can also access these settings from the "Devices" menu of your
937 virtual machine window.</para>
938 </sect1>
939
940 <sect1 id="settings-audio">
941 <title>Audio settings</title>
942
943 <para>The "Audio" section in a virtual machine's Settings window
944 determines whether the VM will see a sound card connected, and whether the
945 audio output should be heard on the host system.</para>
946
947 <para>If audio is enabled for a guest, you can choose between the
948 emulation of an Intel AC'97 controller, an Intel HD Audio
949 controller<footnote>
950 <para>Intel HD Audio support was added with VirtualBox 4.0 because
951 Windows 7 (32-bit and 64-bit versions) as well as 64-bit Windows Vista
952 do not support the Intel AC'97 controller.</para>
953 </footnote> or a SoundBlaster 16 card. In any case, you can select what
954 audio driver VirtualBox will use on the host.</para>
955
956 <para>On a Linux host, depending on your host configuration, you can also
957 select between the OSS, ALSA or the PulseAudio subsystem. On newer Linux
958 distributions (Fedora 8 and above, Ubuntu 8.04 and above) the PulseAudio
959 subsystem should be preferred.</para>
960 </sect1>
961
962 <sect1 id="settings-network">
963 <title>Network settings</title>
964
965 <para>The "Network" section in a virtual machine's Settings window allows
966 you to configure how VirtualBox presents virtual network cards to your VM,
967 and how they operate.</para>
968
969 <para>When you first create a virtual machine, VirtualBox by default
970 enables one virtual network card and selects the "Network Address
971 Translation" (NAT) mode for it. This way the guest can connect to the
972 outside world using the host's networking and the outside world can
973 connect to services on the guest which you choose to make visible outside
974 of the virtual machine.</para>
975
976 <para>This default setup is good for probably 95% of VirtualBox users.
977 However, VirtualBox is extremely flexible in how it can virtualize
978 networking. It supports many virtual network cards per virtual machine,
979 the first four of which can be configured in detail in the Manager window.
980 Additional network cards can be configured on the command line with
981 VBoxManage. </para>
982
983 <para>Because of the vast array of options available, we have dedicated an
984 entire chapter of this manual to discussing networking configuration;
985 please see <xref linkend="networkingdetails" />.</para>
986 </sect1>
987
988 <sect1 id="serialports">
989 <title>Serial ports</title>
990
991 <para>VirtualBox fully supports virtual serial ports in a virtual machine
992 in an easy-to-use manner.<footnote>
993 <para>Serial port support was added with VirtualBox 1.5.</para>
994 </footnote></para>
995
996 <para>Ever since the original IBM PC, personal computers have been
997 equipped with one or two serial ports (also called COM ports by DOS and
998 Windows). Serial ports were commonly used with modems, and some
999 computer mice used to be connected to serial ports before USB became
1000 commonplace.
1001 </para>
1002
1003 <para>While serial ports are no longer as ubiquitous as they used to be,
1004 there are still some important uses left for them. For example, serial
1005 ports can be used to set up a primitive network over a null-modem cable,
1006 in case Ethernet is not available. Also, serial ports are indispensable
1007 for system programmers needing to do kernel debugging, since kernel
1008 debugging software usually interacts with developers over a serial port.
1009 With virtual serial ports, system programmers can do kernel debugging on a
1010 virtual machine instead of needing a real computer to connect to.</para>
1011
1012 <para>If a virtual serial port is enabled, the guest operating system sees
1013 a standard 16550A compatible UART device. Both receiving and transmitting
1014 data is supported. How this virtual serial port is then connected to the
1015 host is configurable, and the details depend on your host operating system.
1016 </para>
1017
1018 <para>You can use either the graphical user interface or the command-line
1019 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> tool to set up virtual serial
1020 ports. For the latter, please refer to <xref
1021 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" />; in that section, look for the
1022 <computeroutput>--uart</computeroutput> and
1023 <computeroutput>--uartmode</computeroutput> options.</para>
1024
1025 <para>In either case, you can configure up to two virtual serial ports per
1026 virtual machine. For each such device, you will need to
1027 determine<orderedlist>
1028 <listitem>
1029 <para>what kind of serial port the virtual machine should see by
1030 selecting an I/O base address and interrupt (IRQ). For these, we
1031 recommend to use the traditional values<footnote>
1032 <para>See, for example, <ulink
1033 url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COM_(hardware_interface)">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COM_(hardware_interface)</ulink>.</para>
1034 </footnote>, which are:</para>
1035
1036 <para><orderedlist>
1037 <listitem>
1038 <para>COM1: I/O base 0x3F8, IRQ 4</para>
1039 </listitem>
1040
1041 <listitem>
1042 <para>COM2: I/O base 0x2F8, IRQ 3</para>
1043 </listitem>
1044
1045 <listitem>
1046 <para>COM3: I/O base 0x3E8, IRQ 4</para>
1047 </listitem>
1048
1049 <listitem>
1050 <para>COM4: I/O base 0x2E8, IRQ 3</para>
1051 </listitem>
1052 </orderedlist></para>
1053 </listitem>
1054
1055 <listitem>
1056 <para>Then, you will need to determine what this virtual port should
1057 be connected to. For each virtual serial port, you have the
1058 following options:</para>
1059
1060 <para><itemizedlist>
1061 <listitem>
1062 <para>You can elect to have the virtual serial port
1063 "disconnected", which means that the guest will see the
1064 device, but it will behave as if no cable had been connected
1065 to it.</para>
1066 </listitem>
1067
1068 <listitem>
1069 <para>You can connect the virtual serial port to a physical
1070 serial port on your host. (On a Windows host, this will be a
1071 name like <computeroutput>COM1</computeroutput>; on Linux or
1072 Solaris hosts, it will be a device node like
1073 <computeroutput>/dev/ttyS0</computeroutput>). VirtualBox will
1074 then simply redirect all data received from and sent to the
1075 virtual serial port to the physical device.</para>
1076 </listitem>
1077
1078 <listitem>
1079 <para>You can tell VirtualBox to connect the virtual serial
1080 port to a software pipe on the host. This depends on your host
1081 operating system:<itemizedlist>
1082 <listitem>
1083 <para>On a Windows host, data will be sent and received
1084 through a named pipe. The pipe name must be in the format
1085 <computeroutput>\\.\pipe\&lt;name&gt;</computeroutput>
1086 where <computeroutput>&lt;name&gt;</computeroutput> should
1087 identify the virtual machine but may be freely
1088 chosen.</para>
1089 <para>For forwarding serial traffic, you can use a helper
1090 program called VMware Serial Line Gateway, available for
1091 download at
1092 <literal> <ulink
1093 url="http://www.l4ka.org/91.php">http://www.l4ka.org/91.php</ulink>
1094 </literal>. This tool provides a fixed server mode named
1095 pipe at
1096 <computeroutput>\\.\pipe\vmwaredebug</computeroutput>
1097 and connects incoming TCP connections on port 567 with
1098 the named pipe.</para>
1099 </listitem>
1100
1101 <listitem>
1102 <para>On a Mac, Linux or Solaris host, a local
1103 domain socket is used instead. The socket filename must be
1104 chosen such that the user running VirtualBox has
1105 sufficient privileges to create and write to it. The
1106 <computeroutput>/tmp</computeroutput> directory is often a
1107 good candidate.</para>
1108 <para>On Linux there are various tools which can connect
1109 to a local domain socket or create one in server mode. The
1110 most flexible tool is
1111 <computeroutput>socat</computeroutput> and is available
1112 as part of many distributions.</para>
1113 </listitem>
1114 </itemizedlist></para>
1115
1116 <para>In this case, you can configure whether VirtualBox
1117 should create the named pipe (or, on non-Windows hosts, the
1118 local domain socket) itself or whether VirtualBox should
1119 assume that the pipe (or socket) exists already. With the
1120 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> command-line
1121 options, this is referred to as "server" or "client" mode,
1122 respectively.</para>
1123
1124 <para>For a direct connection between two virtual machines
1125 (corresponding to a null-modem cable), simply configure one VM
1126 to create a pipe/socket and another to attach to it.
1127 </para>
1128 </listitem>
1129
1130 <listitem>
1131 <para>You can send the virtual serial port output to a file.
1132 This option is very useful for capturing diagnostic output from
1133 a guest. Any file may be used for this purpose, as long as the
1134 user running VirtualBox has sufficient privileges to create and
1135 write to the file.
1136 </para>
1137 </listitem>
1138 </itemizedlist></para>
1139 </listitem>
1140 </orderedlist>Up to two serial ports can be configured per virtual
1141 machine, but you can pick any port numbers out of the above. However,
1142 serial ports cannot reliably share interrupts; if both ports are to be
1143 used at the same time, they must use different interrupt levels, for
1144 example COM1 and COM2, but not COM1 and COM3.
1145 </para>
1146 </sect1>
1147
1148 <sect1>
1149 <title>USB support</title>
1150
1151 <sect2 id="settings-usb">
1152 <title>USB settings</title>
1153
1154 <para>The "USB" section in a virtual machine's Settings window allows
1155 you to configure VirtualBox's sophisticated USB support.</para>
1156
1157 <para>VirtualBox can allow virtual machines to access the USB devices on
1158 your host directly. To achieve this, VirtualBox presents the guest
1159 operating system with a virtual USB controller. As soon as the guest
1160 system starts using a USB device, it will appear as unavailable on the
1161 host.<note>
1162 <orderedlist>
1163 <listitem>
1164 <para>Be careful with USB devices that are currently in use on
1165 the host! For example, if you allow your guest to connect to
1166 your USB hard disk that is currently mounted on the host, when
1167 the guest is activated, it will be disconnected from the host
1168 without a proper shutdown. This may cause data loss.</para>
1169 </listitem>
1170
1171 <listitem>
1172 <para>Solaris hosts have a few known limitations regarding USB
1173 support; please see <xref linkend="KnownIssues" />.</para>
1174 </listitem>
1175 </orderedlist>
1176 </note></para>
1177
1178 <para>In addition to allowing a guest access to your local USB devices,
1179 VirtualBox even allows your guests to connect to remote USB devices by
1180 use of the VirtualBox Remote Desktop Extension (VRDE). For details about
1181 this, see <xref linkend="usb-over-rdp" />.</para>
1182
1183 <para>In the Settings dialog, you can first configure whether USB is
1184 available in the guest at all, and in addition also optionally enable
1185 the USB 2.0 (EHCI) controller for the guest. If so, you can determine in
1186 detail which devices are available. For this, you must create so-called
1187 "filters" by specifying certain properties of the USB device.<note>
1188 <para>The EHCI controller is shipped as a VirtualBox extension
1189 package, which must be installed separately. See <xref
1190 linkend="intro-installing" /> for more information.</para>
1191 </note></para>
1192
1193 <para>Clicking on the "+" button to the right of the "USB Device
1194 Filters" window creates a <emphasis role="bold">new filter.</emphasis>
1195 You can give the filter a name (for referencing it later) and specify
1196 the filter criteria. The more criteria you specify, the more precisely
1197 devices will be selected. For instance, if you specify only a vendor ID
1198 of 046d, all devices produced by Logitech will be available to the
1199 guest. If you fill in all fields, on the other hand, the filter will
1200 only apply to a particular device model from a particular vendor, and
1201 not even to other devices of the same type with a different revision and
1202 serial number.</para>
1203
1204 <para>In detail, the following criteria are available:</para>
1205
1206 <orderedlist>
1207 <listitem>
1208 <para><emphasis role="bold">Vendor and product ID.</emphasis> With
1209 USB, each vendor of USB products carries an identification number
1210 that is unique world-wide, the "vendor ID". Similarly, each line of
1211 products is assigned a "product ID" number. Both numbers are
1212 commonly written in hexadecimal (that is, they are composed of the
1213 numbers 0-9 and the letters A-F), and a colon separates the vendor
1214 from the product ID. For example,
1215 <computeroutput>046d:c016</computeroutput> stands for Logitech as a
1216 vendor, and the "M-UV69a Optical Wheel Mouse" product.</para>
1217
1218 <para>Alternatively, you can also specify <emphasis
1219 role="bold">"Manufacturer"</emphasis> and <emphasis
1220 role="bold">"Product"</emphasis> by name.</para>
1221
1222 <para>To list all the USB devices that are connected to your host
1223 machine with their respective vendor and product IDs, you can use
1224 the following command (see <xref linkend="vboxmanage" />): <screen>VBoxManage list usbhost</screen></para>
1225
1226 <para>On Windows, you can also see all USB devices that are attached
1227 to your system in the Device Manager. On Linux, you can use the
1228 <computeroutput>lsusb</computeroutput> command.</para>
1229 </listitem>
1230
1231 <listitem>
1232 <para><emphasis role="bold">Serial number.</emphasis> While vendor
1233 and product ID are already quite specific to identify USB devices,
1234 if you have two identical devices of the same brand and product
1235 line, you will also need their serial numbers to filter them out
1236 correctly.</para>
1237 </listitem>
1238
1239 <listitem>
1240 <para><emphasis role="bold">Remote.</emphasis> This setting
1241 specifies whether the device will be local only, or remote only
1242 (over VRDP), or either.</para>
1243 </listitem>
1244 </orderedlist>
1245
1246 <para>On a Windows host, you will need to unplug and reconnect a USB
1247 device to use it after creating a filter for it.</para>
1248
1249 <para>As an example, you could create a new USB filter and specify a
1250 vendor ID of 046d (Logitech, Inc), a manufacturer index of 1, and "not
1251 remote". Then any USB devices on the host system produced by Logitech,
1252 Inc with a manufacturer index of 1 will be visible to the guest
1253 system.</para>
1254
1255 <para>Several filters can select a single device -- for example, a
1256 filter which selects all Logitech devices, and one which selects a
1257 particular webcam.</para>
1258
1259 <para>You can <emphasis role="bold">deactivate</emphasis> filters
1260 without deleting them by clicking in the checkbox next to the filter
1261 name.</para>
1262 </sect2>
1263
1264 <sect2>
1265 <title>Implementation notes for Windows and Linux hosts</title>
1266
1267 <para>On Windows hosts, a kernel mode device driver provides USB proxy
1268 support. It implements both a USB monitor, which allows VirtualBox to
1269 capture devices when they are plugged in, and a USB device driver to
1270 claim USB devices for a particular virtual machine. As opposed to
1271 VirtualBox versions before 1.4.0, system reboots are no longer necessary
1272 after installing the driver. Also, you no longer need to replug devices
1273 for VirtualBox to claim them.</para>
1274
1275 <para>On newer Linux hosts, VirtualBox accesses USB devices through
1276 special files in the file system. When VirtualBox is installed, these
1277 are made available to all users in the
1278 <computeroutput>vboxusers</computeroutput> system group. In order to be
1279 able to access USB from guest systems, make sure that you are a member
1280 of this group.</para>
1281
1282 <para>On older Linux hosts, USB devices are accessed using the
1283 <computeroutput>usbfs</computeroutput> file system. Therefore, the user
1284 executing VirtualBox needs read and write permission to the USB file
1285 system. Most distributions provide a group (e.g.
1286 <computeroutput>usbusers</computeroutput>) which the VirtualBox user
1287 needs to be added to. Also, VirtualBox can only proxy to virtual
1288 machines USB devices which are not claimed by a Linux host USB driver.
1289 The <computeroutput>Driver=</computeroutput> entry in
1290 <computeroutput>/proc/bus/usb/devices</computeroutput> will show you
1291 which devices are currently claimed. Please refer to <xref
1292 linkend="ts_usb-linux" /> also for details about
1293 <computeroutput>usbfs</computeroutput>.</para>
1294 </sect2>
1295 </sect1>
1296
1297 <sect1>
1298 <title>Shared folders</title>
1299
1300 <para>Shared folders allow you to easily exchange data between a virtual
1301 machine and your host. This feature requires that the VirtualBox Guest
1302 Additions be installed in a virtual machine and is described in detail in
1303 <xref linkend="sharedfolders" />.</para>
1304 </sect1>
1305
1306 <sect1 id="efi">
1307 <title>Alternative firmware (EFI)</title>
1308
1309 <para>Starting with release 3.1, VirtualBox includes experimental support
1310 for the Extensible Firmware Interface (EFI), which is a new industry
1311 standard intended to eventually replace the legacy BIOS as the primary
1312 interface for bootstrapping computers and certain system services
1313 later.</para>
1314
1315 <para>By default, VirtualBox uses the BIOS firmware for virtual machines.
1316 To use EFI for a given virtual machine, you can enable EFI in the
1317 machine's "Settings" dialog (see <xref linkend="settings-motherboard" />).
1318 Alternatively, use the <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> command
1319 line interface like this: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --firmware efi</screen>
1320 To switch back to using the BIOS, use: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --firmware bios</screen>One
1321 notable user of EFI is Apple's Mac OS X, but recent Linuxes (such as Fedora
1322 11) and Windows (starting with Vista) offer special versions that can be
1323 booted using EFI as well.</para>
1324
1325 <para>Another possible use of EFI in VirtualBox is development and testing
1326 of EFI applications, without booting any OS.</para>
1327
1328 <para>Note that the VirtualBox EFI support is experimental and will be
1329 enhanced as EFI matures and becomes more widespread. While Mac OS X and
1330 Linux guests are known to work fine, Windows guests are currently unable
1331 to boot with the VirtualBox EFI implementation.</para>
1332
1333 <sect2 id="efividmode">
1334 <title>Video modes in EFI</title>
1335
1336 <para>EFI provides two distinct video interfaces: GOP (Graphics Output
1337 Protocol) and UGA (Universal Graphics Adapter). Mac OS X uses GOP, while
1338 Linux tends to use UGA. VirtualBox provides a configuration option to
1339 control the framebuffer size for both interfaces.</para>
1340
1341 <para>To control GOP, use the following
1342 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> command: <screen>VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" VBoxInternal2/EfiGopMode N</screen>
1343 Where N can be one of 0,1,2,3,4 referring to the 640x480, 800x600,
1344 1024x768, 1280x1024, 1440x900 screen resolution respectively.</para>
1345
1346 <para>To change the UGA resolution: <screen>VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" VBoxInternal2/UgaHorizontalResolution 1440
1347VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" VBoxInternal2/UgaVerticalResolution 900</screen></para>
1348
1349 <para>The video mode for both GOP and UGA can only be changed when the
1350 VM is powered off and remains persistent until changed.</para>
1351 </sect2>
1352 </sect1>
1353</chapter>
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