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="Introduction">
5 <title>First steps</title>
6
7 <para>Welcome to @VBOX_PRODUCT@!</para>
8
9 <para>VirtualBox is a cross-platform virtualization application. What does
10 that mean? For one thing, it installs on your existing Intel or AMD-based
11 computers, whether they are running Windows, Mac, Linux or Solaris operating
12 systems. Secondly, it extends the capabilities of your existing computer so
13 that it can run multiple operating systems (inside multiple virtual
14 machines) at the same time. So, for example, you can run Windows and Linux
15 on your Mac, run Windows Server 2008 on your Linux server, run Linux on your
16 Windows PC, and so on, all alongside your existing applications. You can
17 install and run as many virtual machines as you like -- the only practical
18 limits are disk space and memory.</para>
19
20 <para>VirtualBox is deceptively simple yet also very powerful. It can run
21 everywhere from small embedded systems or desktop class machines all the way
22 up to datacenter deployments and even Cloud environments.</para>
23
24 <para>The following screenshot shows you how VirtualBox, installed on a Mac
25 computer, is running Windows 8 in a virtual machine window:</para>
26
27 <para><mediaobject>
28 <imageobject>
29 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/vm-vista-running.png"
30 width="14cm" />
31 </imageobject>
32 </mediaobject></para>
33
34 <para>In this User Manual, we'll begin simply with a quick introduction to
35 virtualization and how to get your first virtual machine running with the
36 easy-to-use VirtualBox graphical user interface. Subsequent chapters will go
37 into much more detail covering more powerful tools and features, but
38 fortunately, it is not necessary to read the entire User Manual before you
39 can use VirtualBox.</para>
40
41 <para>You can find a summary of VirtualBox's capabilities in <xref
42 linkend="features-overview" />. For existing VirtualBox users who just want
43 to see what's new in this release, there is a detailed list in <xref
44 linkend="ChangeLog" />.</para>
45
46 <sect1>
47 <title>Why is virtualization useful?</title>
48
49 <para>The techniques and features that VirtualBox provides are useful for
50 several scenarios:</para>
51
52 <itemizedlist>
53 <listitem>
54 <para><emphasis role="bold">Running multiple operating systems
55 simultaneously.</emphasis> VirtualBox allows you to run more than one
56 operating system at a time. This way, you can run software written for
57 one operating system on another (for example, Windows software on
58 Linux or a Mac) without having to reboot to use it. Since you can
59 configure what kinds of "virtual" hardware should be presented to each
60 such operating system, you can install an old operating system such as
61 DOS or OS/2 even if your real computer's hardware is no longer
62 supported by that operating system.</para>
63 </listitem>
64
65 <listitem>
66 <para><emphasis role="bold">Easier software installations.</emphasis>
67 Software vendors can use virtual machines to ship entire software
68 configurations. For example, installing a complete mail server
69 solution on a real machine can be a tedious task. With VirtualBox,
70 such a complex setup (then often called an "appliance") can be packed
71 into a virtual machine. Installing and running a mail server becomes
72 as easy as importing such an appliance into VirtualBox.</para>
73 </listitem>
74
75 <listitem>
76 <para><emphasis role="bold">Testing and disaster recovery.</emphasis>
77 Once installed, a virtual machine and its virtual hard disks can be
78 considered a "container" that can be arbitrarily frozen, woken up,
79 copied, backed up, and transported between hosts.</para>
80
81 <para>On top of that, with the use of another VirtualBox feature
82 called "snapshots", one can save a particular state of a virtual
83 machine and revert back to that state, if necessary. This way, one can
84 freely experiment with a computing environment. If something goes
85 wrong (e.g. after installing misbehaving software or infecting the
86 guest with a virus), one can easily switch back to a previous snapshot
87 and avoid the need of frequent backups and restores.</para>
88
89 <para>Any number of snapshots can be created, allowing you to travel
90 back and forward in virtual machine time. You can delete snapshots
91 while a VM is running to reclaim disk space.</para>
92 </listitem>
93
94 <listitem>
95 <para><emphasis role="bold">Infrastructure consolidation.</emphasis>
96 Virtualization can significantly reduce hardware and electricity
97 costs. Most of the time, computers today only use a fraction of their
98 potential power and run with low average system loads. A lot of
99 hardware resources as well as electricity is thereby wasted. So,
100 instead of running many such physical computers that are only
101 partially used, one can pack many virtual machines onto a few powerful
102 hosts and balance the loads between them.</para>
103 </listitem>
104 </itemizedlist>
105 </sect1>
106
107 <sect1 id="virtintro">
108 <title>Some terminology</title>
109
110 <para>When dealing with virtualization (and also for understanding the
111 following chapters of this documentation), it helps to acquaint oneself
112 with a bit of crucial terminology, especially the following terms:</para>
113
114 <glosslist>
115 <glossentry>
116 <glossterm>Host operating system (host OS).</glossterm>
117
118 <glossdef>
119 <para>This is the operating system of the physical computer on which
120 VirtualBox was installed. There are versions of VirtualBox for
121 Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and Solaris hosts; for details, please see
122 <xref linkend="hostossupport" />.</para>
123
124 <para>Most of the time, this User Manual discusses all VirtualBox
125 versions together. There may be platform-specific differences which
126 we will point out where appropriate.</para>
127 </glossdef>
128 </glossentry>
129
130 <glossentry>
131 <glossterm>Guest operating system (guest OS).</glossterm>
132
133 <glossdef>
134 <para>This is the operating system that is running inside the
135 virtual machine. Theoretically, VirtualBox can run any x86 operating
136 system (DOS, Windows, OS/2, FreeBSD, OpenBSD), but to achieve
137 near-native performance of the guest code on your machine, we had to
138 go through a lot of optimizations that are specific to certain
139 operating systems. So while your favorite operating system
140 <emphasis>may</emphasis> run as a guest, we officially support and
141 optimize for a select few (which, however, include the most common
142 ones).</para>
143
144 <para>See <xref linkend="guestossupport" /> for details.</para>
145 </glossdef>
146 </glossentry>
147
148 <glossentry>
149 <glossterm>Virtual machine (VM).</glossterm>
150
151 <glossdef>
152 <para>This is the special environment that VirtualBox creates for
153 your guest operating system while it is running. In other words, you
154 run your guest operating system "in" a VM. Normally, a VM will be
155 shown as a window on your computer's desktop, but depending on which
156 of the various frontends of VirtualBox you use, it can be displayed
157 in full screen mode or remotely on another computer.</para>
158
159 <para>In a more abstract way, internally, VirtualBox thinks of a VM
160 as a set of parameters that determine its behavior. They include
161 hardware settings (how much memory the VM should have, what hard
162 disks VirtualBox should virtualize through which container files,
163 what CDs are mounted etc.) as well as state information (whether the
164 VM is currently running, saved, its snapshots etc.). These settings
165 are mirrored in the VirtualBox Manager window as well as the
166 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> command line program;
167 see <xref linkend="vboxmanage" />. In other words, a VM is also what
168 you can see in its settings dialog.</para>
169 </glossdef>
170 </glossentry>
171
172 <glossentry>
173 <glossterm>Guest Additions.</glossterm>
174
175 <glossdef>
176 <para>This refers to special software packages which are shipped
177 with VirtualBox but designed to be installed
178 <emphasis>inside</emphasis> a VM to improve performance of the guest
179 OS and to add extra features. This is described in detail in <xref
180 linkend="guestadditions" />.</para>
181 </glossdef>
182 </glossentry>
183 </glosslist>
184 </sect1>
185
186 <sect1 id="features-overview">
187 <title>Features overview</title>
188
189 <para>Here's a brief outline of VirtualBox's main features:</para>
190
191 <itemizedlist>
192 <listitem>
193 <para><emphasis role="bold">Portability.</emphasis> VirtualBox runs on
194 a large number of 32-bit and 64-bit host operating systems (again, see
195 <xref linkend="hostossupport" /> for details).</para>
196
197 <para>VirtualBox is a so-called "hosted" hypervisor (sometimes
198 referred to as a "type 2" hypervisor). Whereas a "bare-metal" or "type
199 1" hypervisor would run directly on the hardware, VirtualBox requires
200 an existing operating system to be installed. It can thus run
201 alongside existing applications on that host.</para>
202
203 <para>To a very large degree, VirtualBox is functionally identical on
204 all of the host platforms, and the same file and image formats are
205 used. This allows you to run virtual machines created on one host on
206 another host with a different host operating system; for example, you
207 can create a virtual machine on Windows and then run it under
208 Linux.</para>
209
210 <para>In addition, virtual machines can easily be imported and
211 exported using the Open Virtualization Format (OVF, see <xref
212 linkend="ovf" />), an industry standard created for this purpose. You
213 can even import OVFs that were created with a different virtualization
214 software.</para>
215 </listitem>
216
217 <listitem>
218 <para><emphasis role="bold">No hardware virtualization
219 required.</emphasis> For many scenarios, VirtualBox does not require
220 the processor features built into newer hardware like Intel VT-x or
221 AMD-V. As opposed to many other virtualization solutions, you can
222 therefore use VirtualBox even on older hardware where these features
223 are not present. The technical details are explained in <xref
224 linkend="hwvirt" />.</para>
225 </listitem>
226
227 <listitem>
228 <para><emphasis role="bold">Guest Additions: shared folders, seamless
229 windows, 3D virtualization.</emphasis> The VirtualBox Guest Additions
230 are software packages which can be installed
231 <emphasis>inside</emphasis> of supported guest systems to improve
232 their performance and to provide additional integration and
233 communication with the host system. After installing the Guest
234 Additions, a virtual machine will support automatic adjustment of
235 video resolutions, seamless windows, accelerated 3D graphics and more.
236 The Guest Additions are described in detail in <xref
237 linkend="guestadditions" />.</para>
238
239 <para>In particular, Guest Additions provide for "shared folders",
240 which let you access files from the host system from within a guest
241 machine. Shared folders are described in <xref
242 linkend="sharedfolders" />.</para>
243 </listitem>
244
245 <listitem>
246 <para><emphasis role="bold">Great hardware support.</emphasis> Among
247 others, VirtualBox supports:</para>
248
249 <itemizedlist>
250 <listitem>
251 <para><emphasis role="bold">Guest multiprocessing
252 (SMP).</emphasis> VirtualBox can present up to 32 virtual CPUs to
253 each virtual machine, irrespective of how many CPU cores are
254 physically present on your host.</para>
255 </listitem>
256
257 <listitem>
258 <para><emphasis role="bold">USB device support.</emphasis>
259 VirtualBox implements a virtual USB controller and allows you to
260 connect arbitrary USB devices to your virtual machines without
261 having to install device-specific drivers on the host. USB support
262 is not limited to certain device categories. For details, see
263 <xref linkend="settings-usb" />.</para>
264 </listitem>
265
266 <listitem>
267 <para><emphasis role="bold">Hardware compatibility.</emphasis>
268 VirtualBox virtualizes a vast array of virtual devices, among them
269 many devices that are typically provided by other virtualization
270 platforms. That includes IDE, SCSI and SATA hard disk controllers,
271 several virtual network cards and sound cards, virtual serial and
272 parallel ports and an Input/Output Advanced Programmable Interrupt
273 Controller (I/O APIC), which is found in many modern PC systems.
274 This eases cloning of PC images from real machines and importing
275 of third-party virtual machines into VirtualBox.</para>
276 </listitem>
277
278 <listitem>
279 <para><emphasis role="bold">Full ACPI support.</emphasis> The
280 Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) is fully
281 supported by VirtualBox. This eases cloning of PC images from real
282 machines or third-party virtual machines into VirtualBox. With its
283 unique <emphasis role="bold">ACPI power status support,</emphasis>
284 VirtualBox can even report to ACPI-aware guest operating systems
285 the power status of the host. For mobile systems running on
286 battery, the guest can thus enable energy saving and notify the
287 user of the remaining power (e.g. in full screen modes).</para>
288 </listitem>
289
290 <listitem>
291 <para><emphasis role="bold">Multiscreen resolutions.</emphasis>
292 VirtualBox virtual machines support screen resolutions many times
293 that of a physical screen, allowing them to be spread over a large
294 number of screens attached to the host system.</para>
295 </listitem>
296
297 <listitem>
298 <para><emphasis role="bold">Built-in iSCSI support.</emphasis>
299 This unique feature allows you to connect a virtual machine
300 directly to an iSCSI storage server without going through the host
301 system. The VM accesses the iSCSI target directly without the
302 extra overhead that is required for virtualizing hard disks in
303 container files. For details, see <xref
304 linkend="storage-iscsi" />.</para>
305 </listitem>
306
307 <listitem>
308 <para><emphasis role="bold">PXE Network boot.</emphasis> The
309 integrated virtual network cards of VirtualBox fully support
310 remote booting via the Preboot Execution Environment (PXE).</para>
311 </listitem>
312 </itemizedlist>
313 </listitem>
314
315 <listitem>
316 <para><emphasis role="bold">Multigeneration branched
317 snapshots.</emphasis> VirtualBox can save arbitrary snapshots of the
318 state of the virtual machine. You can go back in time and revert the
319 virtual machine to any such snapshot and start an alternative VM
320 configuration from there, effectively creating a whole snapshot tree.
321 For details, see <xref linkend="snapshots" />. You can create and
322 delete snapshots while the virtual machine is running.</para>
323 </listitem>
324
325 <listitem>
326 <para><emphasis role="bold">VM groups.</emphasis> VirtualBox provides a
327 groups feature that enables the user to organize and control virtual machines
328 collectively, as well as individually. In addition to basic groups, it
329 is also possible for any VM to be in more than one group, and for
330 groups to be nested in a hierarchy -- i.e. groups of groups. In
331 general, the operations that can be performed on groups are the same as
332 those that can be applied to individual VMs i.e. Start, Pause, Reset,
333 Close (Save state, Send Shutdown, Poweroff), Discard Saved State, Show
334 in fileSystem, Sort.</para>
335 </listitem>
336
337 <listitem>
338 <para><emphasis role="bold">Clean architecture; unprecedented
339 modularity.</emphasis> VirtualBox has an extremely modular design with
340 well-defined internal programming interfaces and a clean separation of
341 client and server code. This makes it easy to control it from several
342 interfaces at once: for example, you can start a VM simply by clicking
343 on a button in the VirtualBox graphical user interface and then
344 control that machine from the command line, or even remotely. See
345 <xref linkend="frontends" /> for details.</para>
346
347 <para>Due to its modular architecture, VirtualBox can also expose its
348 full functionality and configurability through a comprehensive
349 <emphasis role="bold">software development kit (SDK),</emphasis> which
350 allows for integrating every aspect of VirtualBox with other software
351 systems. Please see <xref linkend="VirtualBoxAPI" /> for
352 details.</para>
353 </listitem>
354
355 <listitem>
356 <para><emphasis role="bold">Remote machine display.</emphasis> The
357 VirtualBox Remote Desktop Extension (VRDE) allows for high-performance
358 remote access to any running virtual machine. This extension supports
359 the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) originally built into Microsoft
360 Windows, with special additions for full client USB support.</para>
361
362 <para>The VRDE does not rely on the RDP server that is built into
363 Microsoft Windows; instead, it is plugged directly into the
364 virtualization layer. As a result, it works with guest operating
365 systems other than Windows (even in text mode) and does not require
366 application support in the virtual machine either. The VRDE is
367 described in detail in <xref linkend="vrde" />.</para>
368
369 <para>On top of this special capacity, VirtualBox offers you more
370 unique features:<itemizedlist>
371 <listitem>
372 <para><emphasis role="bold">Extensible RDP
373 authentication.</emphasis> VirtualBox already supports Winlogon
374 on Windows and PAM on Linux for RDP authentication. In addition,
375 it includes an easy-to-use SDK which allows you to create
376 arbitrary interfaces for other methods of authentication; see
377 <xref linkend="vbox-auth" /> for details.</para>
378 </listitem>
379
380 <listitem>
381 <para><emphasis role="bold">USB over RDP.</emphasis> Via RDP
382 virtual channel support, VirtualBox also allows you to connect
383 arbitrary USB devices locally to a virtual machine which is
384 running remotely on a VirtualBox RDP server; see <xref
385 linkend="usb-over-rdp" /> for details.</para>
386 </listitem>
387 </itemizedlist></para>
388 </listitem>
389 </itemizedlist>
390 </sect1>
391
392 <sect1 id="hostossupport">
393 <title>Supported host operating systems</title>
394
395 <para>Currently, VirtualBox runs on the following host operating
396 systems:</para>
397
398 <itemizedlist>
399 <listitem>
400 <para><emphasis role="bold">Windows</emphasis> hosts:<footnote>
401 <para>Support for 64-bit Windows was added with VirtualBox
402 1.5. Support for Windows XP was removed with VirtualBox 5.0.</para>
403 </footnote>
404
405 <itemizedlist>
406 <listitem>
407 <para>Windows Vista SP1 and later (32-bit and 64-bit)</para>
408 </listitem>
409
410 <listitem>
411 <para>Windows Server 2008 (64-bit)</para>
412 </listitem>
413
414 <listitem>
415 <para>Windows Server 2008 R2 (64-bit)</para>
416 </listitem>
417
418 <listitem>
419 <para>Windows 7 (32-bit and 64-bit)</para>
420 </listitem>
421
422 <listitem>
423 <para>Windows 8 (32-bit and 64-bit)</para>
424 </listitem>
425
426 <listitem>
427 <para>Windows 8.1 (32-bit and 64-bit)</para>
428 </listitem>
429
430 <listitem>
431 <para>Windows 10 RTM build 10240 (32-bit and 64-bit)</para>
432 </listitem>
433
434 <listitem>
435 <para>Windows Server 2012 (64-bit)</para>
436 </listitem>
437
438 <listitem>
439 <para>Windows Server 2012 R2 (64-bit)</para>
440 </listitem>
441
442 </itemizedlist></para>
443 </listitem>
444
445 <listitem>
446 <para><emphasis role="bold">Mac OS X</emphasis> hosts (64-bit):<footnote>
447 <para>Preliminary Mac OS X support (beta stage) was added with
448 VirtualBox 1.4, full support with 1.6. Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger)
449 support was removed with VirtualBox 3.1. Support for Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion)
450 and earlier was removed with VirtualBox 5.0. Support for Mac OS X 10.8
451 (Mountain Lion) was removed with VirtualBox 5.1.</para>
452 </footnote></para>
453
454 <itemizedlist>
455
456 <listitem>
457 <para>10.9 (Mavericks)</para>
458 </listitem>
459
460 <listitem>
461 <para>10.10 (Yosemite)</para>
462 </listitem>
463
464 <listitem>
465 <para>10.11 (El Capitan)</para>
466 </listitem>
467
468 <listitem>
469 <para>10.12 (Sierra)</para>
470 </listitem>
471
472 </itemizedlist>
473
474 <para>Intel hardware is required; please see <xref
475 linkend="KnownIssues" /> also.</para>
476 </listitem>
477
478 <listitem>
479 <para><emphasis role="bold">Linux</emphasis> hosts (32-bit and
480 64-bit<footnote>
481 <para>Support for 64-bit Linux was added with VirtualBox
482 1.4.</para>
483 </footnote>). Among others, this includes:<itemizedlist>
484 <listitem>
485 <para>Ubuntu 12.04 to 16.10</para>
486 </listitem>
487
488 <listitem>
489 <para>Debian GNU/Linux 7 ("Wheezy") and 8 ("Jessie")</para>
490 </listitem>
491
492 <listitem>
493 <para>Oracle Enterprise Linux 5, Oracle Linux 6 and 7</para>
494 </listitem>
495
496 <listitem>
497 <para>Redhat Enterprise Linux 5, 6 and 7</para>
498 </listitem>
499
500 <listitem>
501 <para>Fedora Core / Fedora 6 to 25</para>
502 </listitem>
503
504 <listitem>
505 <para>Gentoo Linux</para>
506 </listitem>
507
508 <listitem>
509 <para>openSUSE 11.4 to 13.2</para>
510 </listitem>
511
512 </itemizedlist></para>
513
514 <para>It should be possible to use VirtualBox on most systems based on
515 Linux kernel 2.6 or 3.x using either the VirtualBox installer or by doing a
516 manual installation; see <xref linkend="install-linux-host" />. However,
517 the formally tested and supported Linux distributions are those for
518 which we offer a dedicated package.</para>
519
520 <para>Note that starting with VirtualBox 2.1, Linux 2.4-based host
521 operating systems are no longer supported.</para>
522 </listitem>
523
524 <listitem>
525 <para><emphasis role="bold">Solaris</emphasis> hosts (64-bit only) are
526 supported with the restrictions listed in <xref
527 linkend="KnownIssues" />:<itemizedlist>
528 <listitem>
529 <para>Solaris 11</para>
530 </listitem>
531
532 <listitem>
533 <para>Solaris 10 (U10 and higher)</para>
534 </listitem>
535 </itemizedlist></para>
536 </listitem>
537 </itemizedlist>
538 <para>Note that the above list is informal. Oracle support for customers
539 who have a support contract is limited to a subset of the listed host
540 operating systems. Also, any feature which is marked as <emphasis
541 role="bold">experimental</emphasis> is not supported. Feedback and
542 suggestions about such features are welcome.</para>
543 </sect1>
544
545 <sect1 id="intro-installing">
546 <title>Installing VirtualBox and extension packs</title>
547
548 <para>VirtualBox comes in many different packages, and installation
549 depends on your host operating system. If you have installed software
550 before, installation should be straightforward: on each host platform,
551 VirtualBox uses the installation method that is most common and easy to
552 use. If you run into trouble or have special requirements, please refer to
553 <xref linkend="installation" /> for details about the various installation
554 methods.</para>
555
556 <para>Starting with version 4.0, VirtualBox is split into several
557 components.<orderedlist>
558 <listitem>
559 <para>The base package consists of all open-source components and is
560 licensed under the GNU General Public License V2.</para>
561 </listitem>
562
563 <listitem>
564 <para>Additional extension packs can be downloaded which extend the
565 functionality of the VirtualBox base package. Currently, Oracle
566 provides the one extension pack, which can be found at <ulink
567 url="http://www.virtualbox.org">http://www.virtualbox.org</ulink>
568 and provides the following added functionality:<orderedlist>
569 <listitem>
570 <para>The virtual USB 2.0 (EHCI) device; see <xref
571 linkend="settings-usb" />.</para>
572 </listitem>
573
574 <listitem>
575 <para>The virtual USB 3.0 (xHCI) device; see <xref
576 linkend="settings-usb" />.</para>
577 </listitem>
578
579 <listitem>
580 <para>VirtualBox Remote Desktop Protocol (VRDP) support; see
581 <xref linkend="vrde" />.</para>
582 </listitem>
583
584 <listitem>
585 <para>Host webcam passthrough; see chapter <xref
586 linkend="webcam-passthrough" />.</para>
587 </listitem>
588
589 <listitem>
590 <para>Intel PXE boot ROM.</para>
591 </listitem>
592
593 <listitem>
594 <para>Experimental support for PCI passthrough on Linux hosts;
595 see <xref linkend="pcipassthrough" />.</para>
596 </listitem>
597
598 <listitem>
599 <para>Disk image encryption with AES algorithm;
600 see <xref linkend="diskencryption" />.</para>
601 </listitem>
602 </orderedlist></para>
603
604 <para>VirtualBox extension packages have a
605 <computeroutput>.vbox-extpack</computeroutput> file name extension.
606 To install an extension, simply double-click on the package file
607 and a Network Operations Manager window will appear, guiding you
608 through the required steps.</para>
609
610 <para>To view the extension packs that are currently installed,
611 please start the VirtualBox Manager (see the next section). From the
612 "File" menu, please select "Preferences". In the window that shows
613 up, go to the "Extensions" category which shows you the extensions
614 which are currently installed and allows you to remove a package or
615 add a new one.</para>
616
617 <para>Alternatively you can use VBoxManage on the command line: see
618 <xref linkend="vboxmanage-extpack" /> for details.</para>
619 </listitem>
620 </orderedlist></para>
621 </sect1>
622
623 <sect1>
624 <title>Starting VirtualBox</title>
625
626 <para>After installation, you can start VirtualBox as
627 follows:<itemizedlist>
628 <listitem>
629 <para>On a Windows host, in the standard "Programs" menu, click on
630 the item in the "VirtualBox" group. On Vista or Windows 7, you can
631 also type "VirtualBox" in the search box of the "Start" menu.</para>
632 </listitem>
633
634 <listitem>
635 <para>On a Mac OS X host, in the Finder, double-click on the
636 "VirtualBox" item in the "Applications" folder. (You may want to
637 drag this item onto your Dock.)</para>
638 </listitem>
639
640 <listitem>
641 <para>On a Linux or Solaris host, depending on your desktop
642 environment, a "VirtualBox" item may have been placed in either the
643 "System" or "System Tools" group of your "Applications" menu.
644 Alternatively, you can type
645 <computeroutput>VirtualBox</computeroutput> in a terminal.</para>
646 </listitem>
647 </itemizedlist></para>
648
649 <para>When you start VirtualBox for the first time, a window like the
650 following should come up:</para>
651
652 <para><mediaobject>
653 <imageobject>
654 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/virtualbox-main-empty.png"
655 width="10cm" />
656 </imageobject>
657 </mediaobject>This window is called the <emphasis
658 role="bold">"VirtualBox Manager".</emphasis> On the left, you can see a
659 pane that will later list all your virtual machines. Since you have not
660 created any, the list is empty. A row of buttons above it allows you to
661 create new VMs and work on existing VMs, once you have some. The pane on
662 the right displays the properties of the virtual machine currently
663 selected, if any. Again, since you don't have any machines yet, the pane
664 displays a welcome message.</para>
665
666 <para>To give you an idea what VirtualBox might look like later, after you
667 have created many machines, here's another example:</para>
668
669 <para><mediaobject>
670 <imageobject>
671 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/virtualbox-main.png"
672 width="10cm" />
673 </imageobject>
674 </mediaobject></para>
675 </sect1>
676
677 <sect1 id="gui-createvm">
678 <title>Creating your first virtual machine</title>
679
680 <para>Click on the "New" button at the top of the VirtualBox Manager
681 window. A wizard will pop up to guide you through setting up a new virtual
682 machine (VM):</para>
683
684 <para><mediaobject>
685 <imageobject>
686 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/create-vm-1.png"
687 width="10cm" />
688 </imageobject>
689 </mediaobject>On the following pages, the wizard will ask you for the
690 bare minimum of information that is needed to create a VM, in
691 particular:<orderedlist>
692 <listitem>
693 <para>The <emphasis role="bold">VM name</emphasis> will later be
694 shown in the VM list of the VirtualBox Manager window, and it will
695 be used for the VM's files on disk. Even though any name could be
696 used, keep in mind that once you have created a few VMs, you will
697 appreciate if you have given your VMs rather informative names; "My
698 VM" would thus be less useful than "Windows XP SP2 with
699 OpenOffice".</para>
700 </listitem>
701
702 <listitem>
703 <para>For <emphasis role="bold">"Operating System Type",</emphasis>
704 select the operating system that you want to install later. The
705 supported operating systems are grouped; if you want to install
706 something very unusual that is not listed, select "Other". Depending
707 on your selection, VirtualBox will enable or disable certain VM
708 settings that your guest operating system may require. This is
709 particularly important for 64-bit guests (see <xref
710 linkend="intro-64bitguests" />). It is therefore recommended to
711 always set it to the correct value.</para>
712 </listitem>
713
714 <listitem>
715 <para>On the next page, select the <emphasis role="bold">memory
716 (RAM)</emphasis> that VirtualBox should allocate every time the
717 virtual machine is started. The amount of memory given here will be
718 taken away from your host machine and presented to the guest
719 operating system, which will report this size as the (virtual)
720 computer's installed RAM.</para>
721
722 <para><note>
723 <para>Choose this setting carefully! The memory you give to the
724 VM will not be available to your host OS while the VM is
725 running, so do not specify more than you can spare. For example,
726 if your host machine has 1 GB of RAM and you enter 512 MB as the
727 amount of RAM for a particular virtual machine, while that VM is
728 running, you will only have 512 MB left for all the other
729 software on your host. If you run two VMs at the same time, even
730 more memory will be allocated for the second VM (which may not
731 even be able to start if that memory is not available). On the
732 other hand, you should specify as much as your guest OS (and
733 your applications) will require to run properly.</para>
734 </note></para>
735
736 <para>A Windows XP guest will require at least a few hundred MB RAM
737 to run properly, and Windows Vista will even refuse to install with
738 less than 512 MB. Of course, if you want to run graphics-intensive
739 applications in your VM, you may require even more RAM.</para>
740
741 <para>So, as a rule of thumb, if you have 1 GB of RAM or more in
742 your host computer, it is usually safe to allocate 512 MB to each
743 VM. But, in any case, make sure you always have at least 256 to 512
744 MB of RAM left on your host operating system. Otherwise you may
745 cause your host OS to excessively swap out memory to your hard disk,
746 effectively bringing your host system to a standstill.</para>
747
748 <para>As with the other settings, you can change this setting later,
749 after you have created the VM.</para>
750 </listitem>
751
752 <listitem>
753 <para>Next, you must specify a <emphasis role="bold">virtual hard
754 disk</emphasis> for your VM.</para>
755
756 <para>There are many and potentially complicated ways in which
757 VirtualBox can provide hard disk space to a VM (see <xref
758 linkend="storage" /> for details), but the most common way is to use
759 a large image file on your "real" hard disk, whose contents
760 VirtualBox presents to your VM as if it were a complete hard disk.
761 This file represents an entire hard disk then, so you can even copy
762 it to another host and use it with another VirtualBox
763 installation.</para>
764
765 <para>The wizard shows you the following window:</para>
766
767 <para><mediaobject>
768 <imageobject>
769 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/create-vm-2.png"
770 width="10cm" />
771 </imageobject>
772 </mediaobject></para>
773
774 <para>Here you have the following options:</para>
775
776 <para><itemizedlist>
777 <listitem>
778 <para>To create a new, empty virtual hard disk, press the
779 <emphasis role="bold">"New"</emphasis> button.</para>
780 </listitem>
781
782 <listitem>
783 <para>You can pick an <emphasis
784 role="bold">existing</emphasis> disk image file.</para>
785
786 <para>The <emphasis role="bold">drop-down list</emphasis>
787 presented in the window contains all disk images which are
788 currently remembered by VirtualBox, probably because they are
789 currently attached to a virtual machine (or have been in the
790 past).</para>
791
792 <para>Alternatively, you can click on the small <emphasis
793 role="bold">folder button</emphasis> next to the drop-down
794 list to bring up a standard file dialog, which allows you to
795 pick any disk image file on your host disk.</para>
796 </listitem>
797 </itemizedlist>Most probably, if you are using VirtualBox for the
798 first time, you will want to create a new disk image. Hence, press
799 the "New" button.</para>
800
801 <para>This brings up another window, the <emphasis
802 role="bold">"Create New Virtual Disk Wizard",</emphasis> which helps
803 you create a new disk image file in the new virtual machine's
804 folder.</para>
805
806 <para>VirtualBox supports two types of image files:<itemizedlist>
807 <listitem>
808 <para>A <emphasis role="bold">dynamically allocated
809 file</emphasis> will only grow in size when the guest actually
810 stores data on its virtual hard disk. It will therefore
811 initially be small on the host hard drive and only later grow
812 to the size specified as it is filled with data.</para>
813 </listitem>
814
815 <listitem>
816 <para>A <emphasis role="bold">fixed-size file</emphasis> will
817 immediately occupy the file specified, even if only a fraction
818 of the virtual hard disk space is actually in use. While
819 occupying much more space, a fixed-size file incurs less
820 overhead and is therefore slightly faster than a dynamically
821 allocated file.</para>
822 </listitem>
823 </itemizedlist></para>
824
825 <para>For details about the differences, please refer to <xref
826 linkend="vdidetails" />.</para>
827
828 <para>To prevent your physical hard disk from running full,
829 VirtualBox limits the size of the image file. Still, it needs to be
830 large enough to hold the contents of your operating system and the
831 applications you want to install -- for a modern Windows or Linux
832 guest, you will probably need several gigabytes for any serious
833 use. The limit of the image file size can be changed later (see <xref
834 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvdi"/> for details).</para>
835
836 <mediaobject>
837 <imageobject>
838 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/create-vdi-1.png"
839 width="10cm" />
840 </imageobject>
841 </mediaobject>
842
843 <para>After having selected or created your image file, again press
844 <emphasis role="bold">"Next"</emphasis> to go to the next
845 page.</para>
846 </listitem>
847
848 <listitem>
849 <para>After clicking on <emphasis role="bold">"Finish"</emphasis>,
850 your new virtual machine will be created. You will then see it in
851 the list on the left side of the Manager window, with the name you
852 entered initially.</para>
853 </listitem>
854 </orderedlist></para>
855
856 <note><para>After becoming familiar with the use of wizards, consider using
857 the Expert Mode available in some wizards. Where available, this is
858 selectable using a button, and speeds up user processes using
859 wizards.</para></note>
860 </sect1>
861
862 <sect1>
863 <title>Running your virtual machine</title>
864
865 <para>To start a virtual machine, you have several options:<itemizedlist>
866 <listitem>
867 <para>Double-click on its entry in the list within the Manager
868 window or</para>
869 </listitem>
870
871 <listitem>
872 <para>select its entry in the list in the Manager window it and
873 press the "Start" button at the top or</para>
874 </listitem>
875
876 <listitem>
877 <para>for virtual machines created with VirtualBox 4.0 or later,
878 navigate to the "VirtualBox VMs" folder in your system user's home
879 directory, find the subdirectory of the machine you want to start
880 and double-click on the machine settings file (with a
881 <computeroutput>.vbox</computeroutput> file extension).</para>
882 </listitem>
883 </itemizedlist></para>
884
885 <para>This opens up a new window, and the virtual machine which you
886 selected will boot up. Everything which would normally be seen on the
887 virtual system's monitor is shown in the window, as can be seen with the
888 image in <xref linkend="virtintro" />.</para>
889
890 <para>In general, you can use the virtual machine much like you would use
891 a real computer. There are couple of points worth mentioning
892 however.</para>
893
894 <sect2>
895 <title>Starting a new VM for the first time</title>
896
897 <para>When a VM gets started for the first time, another wizard -- the
898 <emphasis role="bold">"First Start Wizard"</emphasis> -- will pop up to
899 help you select an <emphasis role="bold">installation medium</emphasis>.
900 Since the VM is created empty, it would otherwise behave just like a
901 real computer with no operating system installed: it will do nothing and
902 display an error message that no bootable operating system was
903 found.</para>
904
905 <para>For this reason, the wizard helps you select a medium to install
906 an operating system from.</para>
907
908 <itemizedlist>
909 <listitem>
910 <para>If you have physical CD or DVD media from which you want to
911 install your guest operating system (e.g. in the case of a Windows
912 installation CD or DVD), put the media into your host's CD or DVD
913 drive.</para>
914
915 <para>Then, in the wizard's drop-down list of installation media,
916 select <emphasis role="bold">"Host drive"</emphasis> with the
917 correct drive letter (or, in the case of a Linux host, device file).
918 This will allow your VM to access the media in your host drive, and
919 you can proceed to install from there.</para>
920 </listitem>
921
922 <listitem>
923 <para>If you have downloaded installation media from the Internet in
924 the form of an ISO image file (most probably in the case of a Linux
925 distribution), you would normally burn this file to an empty CD or
926 DVD and proceed as just described. With VirtualBox however, you can
927 skip this step and mount the ISO file directly. VirtualBox will then
928 present this file as a CD or DVD-ROM drive to the virtual machine,
929 much like it does with virtual hard disk images.</para>
930
931 <para>For this case, the wizard's drop-down list contains a list of
932 installation media that were previously used with VirtualBox.</para>
933
934 <para>If your medium is not in the list (especially if you are using
935 VirtualBox for the first time), select the small folder icon next to
936 the drop-down list to bring up a standard file dialog, with which
937 you can pick the image file on your host disks.</para>
938 </listitem>
939 </itemizedlist>
940
941 <para>In both cases, after making the choices in the wizard, you will be
942 able to install your operating system.</para>
943 </sect2>
944
945 <sect2 id="keyb_mouse_normal">
946 <title>Capturing and releasing keyboard and mouse</title>
947
948 <para>As of version 3.2, VirtualBox provides a virtual USB tablet device
949 to new virtual machines through which mouse events are communicated to
950 the guest operating system. As a result, if you are running a modern
951 guest operating system that can handle such devices, mouse support may
952 work out of the box without the mouse being "captured" as described
953 below; see <xref linkend="settings-motherboard" /> for more
954 information.</para>
955
956 <para>Otherwise, if the virtual machine only sees standard PS/2 mouse
957 and keyboard devices, since the operating system in the virtual machine
958 does not "know" that it is not running on a real computer, it expects to
959 have exclusive control over your keyboard and mouse. This is, however,
960 not the case since, unless you are running the VM in full screen mode,
961 your VM needs to share keyboard and mouse with other applications and
962 possibly other VMs on your host.</para>
963
964 <para>As a result, initially after installing a guest operating system
965 and before you install the Guest Additions (we will explain this in a
966 minute), only one of the two -- your VM or the rest of your computer --
967 can "own" the keyboard and the mouse. You will see a
968 <emphasis>second</emphasis> mouse pointer which will always be confined
969 to the limits of the VM window. Basically, you activate the VM by
970 clicking inside it.</para>
971
972 <para>To return ownership of keyboard and mouse to your host operating
973 system, VirtualBox reserves a special key on your keyboard for itself:
974 the <emphasis role="bold">"host key".</emphasis> By default, this is the
975 <emphasis>right Control key</emphasis> on your keyboard; on a Mac host,
976 the default host key is the left Command key. You can change this
977 default in the VirtualBox Global Settings, see <xref
978 linkend="globalsettings" />. In any case, the current
979 setting for the host key is always displayed <emphasis>at the bottom
980 right of your VM window,</emphasis> should you have forgotten about
981 it:</para>
982
983 <para><mediaobject>
984 <imageobject>
985 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/vm-hostkey.png"
986 width="7cm" />
987 </imageobject>
988 </mediaobject>In detail, all this translates into the
989 following:</para>
990
991 <para><itemizedlist>
992 <listitem>
993 <para>Your <emphasis role="bold">keyboard</emphasis> is owned by
994 the VM if the VM window on your host desktop has the keyboard
995 focus (and then, if you have many windows open in your guest
996 operating system as well, the window that has the focus in your
997 VM). This means that if you want to type within your VM, click on
998 the title bar of your VM window first.</para>
999
1000 <para>To release keyboard ownership, press the Host key (as
1001 explained above, typically the right Control key).</para>
1002
1003 <para>Note that while the VM owns the keyboard, some key sequences
1004 (like Alt-Tab for example) will no longer be seen by the host, but
1005 will go to the guest instead. After you press the host key to
1006 re-enable the host keyboard, all key presses will go through the
1007 host again, so that sequences like Alt-Tab will no longer reach
1008 the guest. For technical reasons it may not be possible for the
1009 VM to get all keyboard input even when it does own the keyboard.
1010 Examples of this are the Ctrl-Alt-Del sequence on Windows hosts
1011 or single keys grabbed by other applications on X11 hosts like
1012 the GNOME desktop's "Control key highlights mouse pointer"
1013 functionality.</para>
1014 </listitem>
1015
1016 <listitem>
1017 <para>Your <emphasis role="bold">mouse</emphasis> is owned by the
1018 VM only after you have clicked in the VM window. The host mouse
1019 pointer will disappear, and your mouse will drive the guest's
1020 pointer instead of your normal mouse pointer.</para>
1021
1022 <para>Note that mouse ownership is independent of that of the
1023 keyboard: even after you have clicked on a titlebar to be able to
1024 type into the VM window, your mouse is not necessarily owned by
1025 the VM yet.</para>
1026
1027 <para>To release ownership of your mouse by the VM, also press the
1028 Host key.</para>
1029 </listitem>
1030 </itemizedlist></para>
1031
1032 <para>As this behavior can be inconvenient, VirtualBox provides a set of
1033 tools and device drivers for guest systems called the "VirtualBox Guest
1034 Additions" which make VM keyboard and mouse operation a lot more
1035 seamless. Most importantly, the Additions will get rid of the second
1036 "guest" mouse pointer and make your host mouse pointer work directly in
1037 the guest.</para>
1038
1039 <para>This will be described later in <xref
1040 linkend="guestadditions" />.</para>
1041 </sect2>
1042
1043 <sect2 id="specialcharacters">
1044 <title>Typing special characters</title>
1045
1046 <para>Operating systems expect certain key combinations to initiate
1047 certain procedures. Some of these key combinations may be difficult to
1048 enter into a virtual machine, as there are three candidates as to who
1049 receives keyboard input: the host operating system, VirtualBox, or the
1050 guest operating system. Who of these three receives keypresses depends
1051 on a number of factors, including the key itself.</para>
1052
1053 <itemizedlist>
1054 <listitem>
1055 <para>Host operating systems reserve certain key combinations for
1056 themselves. For example, it is impossible to enter the <emphasis
1057 role="bold">Ctrl+Alt+Delete</emphasis> combination if you want to
1058 reboot the guest operating system in your virtual machine, because
1059 this key combination is usually hard-wired into the host OS (both
1060 Windows and Linux intercept this), and pressing this key combination
1061 will therefore reboot your <emphasis>host</emphasis>.</para>
1062
1063 <para>Also, on Linux and Solaris hosts, which use the X Window
1064 System, the key combination <emphasis
1065 role="bold">Ctrl+Alt+Backspace</emphasis> normally resets the X
1066 server (to restart the entire graphical user interface in case it
1067 got stuck). As the X server intercepts this combination, pressing it
1068 will usually restart your <emphasis>host</emphasis> graphical user
1069 interface (and kill all running programs, including VirtualBox, in
1070 the process).</para>
1071
1072 <para>Third, on Linux hosts supporting virtual terminals, the key
1073 combination <emphasis role="bold">Ctrl+Alt+Fx</emphasis> (where Fx
1074 is one of the function keys from F1 to F12) normally allows to
1075 switch between virtual terminals. As with Ctrl+Alt+Delete, these
1076 combinations are intercepted by the host operating system and
1077 therefore always switch terminals on the
1078 <emphasis>host</emphasis>.</para>
1079
1080 <para>If, instead, you want to send these key combinations to the
1081 <emphasis>guest</emphasis> operating system in the virtual machine,
1082 you will need to use one of the following methods:</para>
1083
1084 <itemizedlist>
1085 <listitem>
1086 <para>Use the items in the "Input" &rarr; "Keyboard" menu of the
1087 virtual machine window. There you will find "Insert Ctrl+Alt+Delete"
1088 and "Ctrl+Alt+Backspace"; the latter will only have an effect with
1089 Linux or Solaris guests, however.</para>
1090 </listitem>
1091
1092 <listitem>
1093 <para>Press special key combinations with the Host key (normally
1094 the right Control key), which VirtualBox will then translate for
1095 the virtual machine:<itemizedlist>
1096 <listitem>
1097 <para><emphasis role="bold">Host key + Del</emphasis> to
1098 send Ctrl+Alt+Del (to reboot the guest);</para>
1099 </listitem>
1100
1101 <listitem>
1102 <para><emphasis role="bold">Host key +
1103 Backspace</emphasis> to send Ctrl+Alt+Backspace (to
1104 restart the graphical user interface of a Linux or Solaris
1105 guest);</para>
1106 </listitem>
1107
1108 <listitem>
1109 <para><emphasis role="bold">Host key + F1</emphasis> (or
1110 other function keys) to simulate Ctrl+Alt+F1 (or other
1111 function keys, i.e. to switch between virtual terminals in
1112 a Linux guest).</para>
1113 </listitem>
1114 </itemizedlist></para>
1115 </listitem>
1116 </itemizedlist>
1117 </listitem>
1118
1119 <listitem>
1120 <para>For some other keyboard combinations such as <emphasis
1121 role="bold">Alt-Tab</emphasis> (to switch between open windows),
1122 VirtualBox allows you to configure whether these combinations will
1123 affect the host or the guest, if a virtual machine currently has the
1124 focus. This is a global setting for all virtual machines and can be
1125 found under "File" &rarr; "Preferences" &rarr; "Input" &rarr;
1126 "Auto-capture keyboard".</para>
1127 </listitem>
1128 </itemizedlist>
1129 </sect2>
1130
1131 <sect2>
1132 <title>Changing removable media</title>
1133
1134 <para>While a virtual machine is running, you can change removable media
1135 in the "Devices" menu of the VM's window. Here you can select in detail
1136 what VirtualBox presents to your VM as a CD, DVD, or floppy.</para>
1137
1138 <para>The settings are the same as would be available for the VM in the
1139 "Settings" dialog of the VirtualBox main window, but since that dialog
1140 is disabled while the VM is in the "running" or "saved" state, this
1141 extra menu saves you from having to shut down and restart the VM every
1142 time you want to change media.</para>
1143
1144 <para>Hence, in the "Devices" menu, VirtualBox allows you to attach the
1145 host drive to the guest or select a floppy or DVD image using the Disk
1146 Image Manager, all as described in <xref
1147 linkend="configbasics" />.</para>
1148 </sect2>
1149
1150 <sect2 id="intro-resize-window">
1151 <title>Resizing the machine's window</title>
1152
1153 <para>You can resize the virtual machine's window when it is running. In
1154 that case, one of three things will happen:<orderedlist>
1155 <listitem>
1156 <para>If you have <emphasis role="bold">"scale mode"</emphasis>
1157 enabled, then the virtual machine's screen will be scaled to the
1158 size of the window. This can be useful if you have many machines
1159 running and want to have a look at one of them while it is running
1160 in the background. Alternatively, it might be useful to enlarge a
1161 window if the VM's output screen is very small, for example
1162 because you are running an old operating system in it.</para>
1163
1164 <para>To enable scale mode, press the <emphasis role="bold">host
1165 key + C</emphasis>, or select "Scale mode" from the "Machine" menu
1166 in the VM window. To leave scale mode, press the host key + C
1167 again.</para>
1168
1169 <para>The aspect ratio of the guest screen is preserved when
1170 resizing the window. To ignore the aspect ratio, press Shift
1171 during the resize operation.</para>
1172
1173 <para>Please see <xref linkend="KnownIssues" /> for additional
1174 remarks.</para>
1175 </listitem>
1176
1177 <listitem>
1178 <para>If you have the Guest Additions installed and they support
1179 automatic <emphasis role="bold">resizing</emphasis>, the Guest
1180 Additions will automatically adjust the screen resolution of the
1181 guest operating system. For example, if you are running a Windows
1182 guest with a resolution of 1024x768 pixels and you then resize the
1183 VM window to make it 100 pixels wider, the Guest Additions will
1184 change the Windows display resolution to 1124x768.</para>
1185
1186 <para>Please see <xref linkend="guestadditions" /> for more
1187 information about the Guest Additions.</para>
1188 </listitem>
1189
1190 <listitem>
1191 <para>Otherwise, if the window is bigger than the VM's screen, the
1192 screen will be centered. If it is smaller, then scroll bars will
1193 be added to the machine window.</para>
1194 </listitem>
1195 </orderedlist></para>
1196 </sect2>
1197
1198 <sect2>
1199 <title>Saving the state of the machine</title>
1200
1201 <para>When you click on the "Close" button of your virtual machine
1202 window (at the top right of the window, just like you would close any
1203 other window on your system), VirtualBox asks you whether you want to
1204 "save" or "power off" the VM. (As a shortcut, you can also press the
1205 Host key together with "Q".)</para>
1206
1207 <para><mediaobject>
1208 <imageobject>
1209 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/vm-close.png"
1210 width="11cm" />
1211 </imageobject>
1212 </mediaobject>The difference between these three options is crucial.
1213 They mean:</para>
1214
1215 <itemizedlist>
1216 <listitem>
1217 <para><emphasis role="bold">Save the machine state:</emphasis> With
1218 this option, VirtualBox "freezes" the virtual machine by completely
1219 saving its state to your local disk.</para>
1220
1221 <para>When you start the VM again later, you will find that the VM
1222 continues exactly where it was left off. All your programs will
1223 still be open, and your computer resumes operation. Saving the state
1224 of a virtual machine is thus in some ways similar to suspending a
1225 laptop computer (e.g. by closing its lid).</para>
1226 </listitem>
1227
1228 <listitem>
1229 <para><emphasis role="bold">Send the shutdown signal.</emphasis>
1230 This will send an ACPI shutdown signal to the virtual machine, which
1231 has the same effect as if you had pressed the power button on a real
1232 computer. So long as the VM is running a fairly modern operating
1233 system, this should trigger a proper shutdown mechanism from within
1234 the VM.</para>
1235 </listitem>
1236
1237 <listitem>
1238 <para><emphasis role="bold">Power off the machine:</emphasis> With
1239 this option, VirtualBox also stops running the virtual machine, but
1240 <emphasis>without</emphasis> saving its state.<warning>
1241 <para>This is equivalent to pulling the power plug on a real
1242 computer without shutting it down properly. If you start the
1243 machine again after powering it off, your operating system will
1244 have to reboot completely and may begin a lengthy check of its
1245 (virtual) system disks. As a result, this should not normally be
1246 done, since it can potentially cause data loss or an
1247 inconsistent state of the guest system on disk.</para>
1248 </warning></para>
1249
1250 <para>As an exception, if your virtual machine has any snapshots
1251 (see the next chapter), you can use this option to quickly <emphasis
1252 role="bold">restore the current snapshot</emphasis> of the virtual
1253 machine. In that case, powering off the machine will not disrupt its
1254 state, but any changes made since that snapshot was taken will be
1255 lost.</para>
1256 </listitem>
1257 </itemizedlist>
1258
1259 <para>The <emphasis role="bold">"Discard"</emphasis> button in the
1260 VirtualBox Manager window discards a virtual machine's saved state. This
1261 has the same effect as powering it off, and the same warnings
1262 apply.</para>
1263 </sect2>
1264 </sect1>
1265
1266 <sect1 id="gui-vmgroups">
1267 <title>Using VM groups</title>
1268
1269 <para>VM groups enable the user to create ad hoc groups of VMs, and to
1270 manage and perform functions on them collectively, as well as individually.
1271 There are a number of features relating to groups:</para>
1272
1273 <orderedlist>
1274 <listitem>
1275 <para>
1276 Create a group using GUI option 1) Drag one VM on top of another
1277 VM.
1278 </para>
1279 <para>
1280 Create a group using GUI option 2) Select multiple VMs and select
1281 "Group" on the right click menu, as follows:
1282 </para>
1283
1284 <para><mediaobject>
1285 <imageobject>
1286 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/vm-groups.png"
1287 width="10cm" />
1288 </imageobject>
1289 </mediaobject></para>
1290
1291 </listitem>
1292 <listitem>
1293 <para>
1294 Command line option 1) Create a group and assign a VM:
1295 <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "Fred" --groups "/TestGroup"</screen>
1296 creates a group "TestGroup" and attaches the VM "Fred" to that group.
1297 </para>
1298 <para>
1299 Command line option 2) Detach a VM from the group, and delete the group
1300 if empty: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "Fred" --groups ""</screen>
1301 It detaches all groups from the VM "Fred" and deletes the empty group.
1302 </para>
1303 </listitem>
1304 <listitem>
1305 <para>
1306 Multiple groups e.g.:
1307 <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "Fred" --groups "/TestGroup,/TestGroup2"</screen>
1308 It creates the groups "TestGroup" and "TestGroup2" (if they don't exist yet)
1309 and attaches the VM "Fred" to both of them.
1310 </para>
1311 </listitem>
1312 <listitem>
1313 <para>
1314 Nested groups -- hierarchy of groups e.g.:
1315 <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "Fred" --groups "/TestGroup/TestGroup2"</screen>
1316 It attaches the VM "Fred" to the subgroup "TestGroup2" of the "TestGroup"
1317 group.
1318 </para>
1319 </listitem>
1320 <listitem>
1321 <para>
1322 Summary of group commands: Start, Pause, Reset, Close (save state,
1323 send shutdown signal, poweroff), Discard Saved State, Show in File
1324 System, Sort.
1325 </para>
1326 </listitem>
1327 </orderedlist>
1328 </sect1>
1329
1330 <sect1 id="snapshots">
1331 <title>Snapshots</title>
1332
1333 <para>With snapshots, you can save a particular state of a virtual machine
1334 for later use. At any later time, you can revert to that state, even
1335 though you may have changed the VM considerably since then. A snapshot of
1336 a virtual machine is thus similar to a machine in "saved" state, as
1337 described above, but there can be many of them, and these saved states are
1338 preserved.</para>
1339
1340 <para>You can see the snapshots of a virtual machine by first selecting a
1341 machine in the VirtualBox Manager and then clicking on the "Snapshots"
1342 button at the top right. Until you take a snapshot of the machine, the
1343 list of snapshots will be empty except for the "Current state" item, which
1344 represents the "Now" point in the lifetime of the virtual machine.</para>
1345
1346 <sect2>
1347 <title>Taking, restoring and deleting snapshots</title>
1348
1349 <para>There are three operations related to snapshots:<orderedlist>
1350 <listitem>
1351 <para>You can <emphasis role="bold">take a snapshot</emphasis>.
1352 This makes a copy of the machine's current state, to which you can
1353 go back at any given time later.<itemizedlist>
1354 <listitem>
1355 <para>If your VM is currently running, select "Take
1356 snapshot" from the "Machine" pull-down menu of the VM
1357 window.</para>
1358 </listitem>
1359
1360 <listitem>
1361 <para>If your VM is currently in either the "saved" or the
1362 "powered off" state (as displayed next to the VM in the
1363 VirtualBox main window), click on the "Snapshots" tab on the
1364 top right of the main window, and then<itemizedlist>
1365 <listitem>
1366 <para>either on the small camera icon (for "Take
1367 snapshot") or</para>
1368 </listitem>
1369
1370 <listitem>
1371 <para>right-click on the "Current State" item in the
1372 list and select "Take snapshot" from the menu.</para>
1373 </listitem>
1374 </itemizedlist></para>
1375 </listitem>
1376 </itemizedlist></para>
1377
1378 <para>In any case, a window will pop up and ask you for a snapshot
1379 name. This name is purely for reference purposes to help you
1380 remember the state of the snapshot. For example, a useful name
1381 would be "Fresh installation from scratch, no Guest Additions", or
1382 "Service Pack 3 just installed". You can also add a longer text in
1383 the "Description" field if you want.</para>
1384
1385 <para>Your new snapshot will then appear in the snapshots list.
1386 Underneath your new snapshot, you will see an item called "Current
1387 state", signifying that the current state of your VM is a
1388 variation based on the snapshot you took earlier. If you later
1389 take another snapshot, you will see that they will be displayed in
1390 sequence, and each subsequent snapshot is derived from an earlier
1391 one:<mediaobject>
1392 <imageobject>
1393 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/snapshots-1.png"
1394 width="12cm" />
1395 </imageobject>
1396 </mediaobject></para>
1397
1398 <para>VirtualBox imposes no limits on the number of snapshots you
1399 can take. The only practical limitation is disk space on your
1400 host: each snapshot stores the state of the virtual machine and
1401 thus occupies some disk space. (See the next section for details
1402 on what exactly is stored in a snapshot.)</para>
1403 </listitem>
1404
1405 <listitem>
1406 <para>You can <emphasis role="bold">restore a snapshot</emphasis>
1407 by right-clicking on any snapshot you have taken in the list of
1408 snapshots. By restoring a snapshot, you go back (or forward) in
1409 time: the current state of the machine is lost, and the machine is
1410 restored to the exact state it was in when the snapshot was
1411 taken.<footnote>
1412 <para>Both the terminology and the functionality of restoring
1413 snapshots has changed with VirtualBox 3.1. Before that
1414 version, it was only possible to go back to the very last
1415 snapshot taken -- not earlier ones, and the operation was
1416 called "Discard current state" instead of "Restore last
1417 snapshot". The limitation has been lifted with version 3.1. It
1418 is now possible to restore <emphasis>any</emphasis> snapshot,
1419 going backward and forward in time.</para>
1420 </footnote></para>
1421
1422 <note>
1423 <para>Restoring a snapshot will affect the virtual hard drives
1424 that are connected to your VM, as the entire state of the
1425 virtual hard drive will be reverted as well. This means also
1426 that all files that have been created since the snapshot and all
1427 other file changes <emphasis>will be lost. </emphasis>In order
1428 to prevent such data loss while still making use of the snapshot
1429 feature, it is possible to add a second hard drive in
1430 "write-through" mode using the
1431 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> interface and use it
1432 to store your data. As write-through hard drives are
1433 <emphasis>not</emphasis> included in snapshots, they remain
1434 unaltered when a machine is reverted. See <xref
1435 linkend="hdimagewrites" os="" /> for details.</para>
1436 </note>
1437
1438 <para>To avoid losing the current state when restoring a snapshot,
1439 you can create a new snapshot before the restore.</para>
1440
1441 <para>By restoring an earlier snapshot and taking more snapshots
1442 from there, it is even possible to create a kind of alternate
1443 reality and to switch between these different histories of the
1444 virtual machine. This can result in a whole tree of virtual
1445 machine snapshots, as shown in the screenshot above.</para>
1446 </listitem>
1447
1448 <listitem>
1449 <para>You can also <emphasis role="bold">delete a
1450 snapshot</emphasis>, which will not affect the state of the
1451 virtual machine, but only release the files on disk that
1452 VirtualBox used to store the snapshot data, thus freeing disk
1453 space. To delete a snapshot, right-click on it in the snapshots
1454 tree and select "Delete". As of VirtualBox 3.2, snapshots can be
1455 deleted even while a machine is running.<note>
1456 <para>Whereas taking and restoring snapshots are fairly quick
1457 operations, deleting a snapshot can take a considerable amount
1458 of time since large amounts of data may need to be copied
1459 between several disk image files. Temporary disk files may
1460 also need large amounts of disk space while the operation is
1461 in progress.</para>
1462 </note></para>
1463
1464 <para>There are some situations which cannot be handled while a VM
1465 is running, and you will get an appropriate message that you need
1466 to perform this snapshot deletion when the VM is shut down.</para>
1467 </listitem>
1468 </orderedlist></para>
1469 </sect2>
1470
1471 <sect2>
1472 <title>Snapshot contents</title>
1473
1474 <para>Think of a snapshot as a point in time that you have preserved.
1475 More formally, a snapshot consists of three things:<itemizedlist>
1476 <listitem>
1477 <para>It contains a complete copy of the VM settings, including
1478 the hardware configuration, so that when you restore a snapshot,
1479 the VM settings are restored as well. (For example, if you changed
1480 the hard disk configuration or the VM's system settings, that
1481 change is undone when you restore the snapshot.)</para>
1482
1483 <para>The copy of the settings is stored in the machine
1484 configuration, an XML text file, and thus occupies very little
1485 space.</para>
1486 </listitem>
1487
1488 <listitem>
1489 <para>The complete state of all the virtual disks attached to the
1490 machine is preserved. Going back to a snapshot means that all
1491 changes that had been made to the machine's disks -- file by file,
1492 bit by bit -- will be undone as well. Files that were since
1493 created will disappear, files that were deleted will be restored,
1494 changes to files will be reverted.</para>
1495
1496 <para>(Strictly speaking, this is only true for virtual hard disks
1497 in "normal" mode. As mentioned above, you can configure disks to
1498 behave differently with snapshots; see <xref
1499 linkend="hdimagewrites" />. Even more formally and technically
1500 correct, it is not the virtual disk itself that is restored when a
1501 snapshot is restored. Instead, when a snapshot is taken,
1502 VirtualBox creates differencing images which contain only the
1503 changes since the snapshot were taken, and when the snapshot is
1504 restored, VirtualBox throws away that differencing image, thus
1505 going back to the previous state. This is both faster and uses
1506 less disk space. For the details, which can be complex, please see
1507 <xref linkend="diffimages" />.)</para>
1508
1509 <para>Creating the differencing image as such does not occupy much
1510 space on the host disk initially, since the differencing image
1511 will initially be empty (and grow dynamically later with each
1512 write operation to the disk). The longer you use the machine after
1513 having created the snapshot, however, the more the differencing
1514 image will grow in size.</para>
1515 </listitem>
1516
1517 <listitem>
1518 <para>Finally, if you took a snapshot while the machine was
1519 running, the memory state of the machine is also saved in the
1520 snapshot (the same way the memory can be saved when you close the
1521 VM window). When you restore such a snapshot, execution resumes at
1522 exactly the point when the snapshot was taken.</para>
1523
1524 <para>The memory state file can be as large as the memory size of
1525 the virtual machine and will therefore occupy quite some disk
1526 space as well.</para>
1527 </listitem>
1528 </itemizedlist></para>
1529 </sect2>
1530 </sect1>
1531
1532 <sect1 id="configbasics">
1533 <title>Virtual machine configuration</title>
1534
1535 <para>When you select a virtual machine from the list in the Manager
1536 window, you will see a summary of that machine's settings on the
1537 right.</para>
1538
1539 <para>Clicking on the "Settings" button in the toolbar at the top brings
1540 up a detailed window where you can configure many of the properties of the
1541 selected VM. But be careful: even though it is possible to change all VM
1542 settings after installing a guest operating system, certain changes might
1543 prevent a guest operating system from functioning correctly if done after
1544 installation.</para>
1545
1546 <note>
1547 <para>The "Settings" button is disabled while a VM is either in the
1548 "running" or "saved" state. This is simply because the settings dialog
1549 allows you to change fundamental characteristics of the virtual computer
1550 that is created for your guest operating system, and this operating
1551 system may not take it well when, for example, half of its memory is
1552 taken away from under its feet. As a result, if the "Settings" button is
1553 disabled, shut down the current VM first.</para>
1554 </note>
1555
1556 <para>VirtualBox provides a plethora of parameters that can be changed for
1557 a virtual machine. The various settings that can be changed in the
1558 "Settings" window are described in detail in <xref
1559 linkend="BasicConcepts" />. Even more parameters are available with the
1560 VirtualBox command line interface; see <xref
1561 linkend="vboxmanage" />.</para>
1562 </sect1>
1563
1564 <sect1>
1565 <title>Removing virtual machines</title>
1566
1567 <para>To remove a virtual machine which you no longer need, right-click on
1568 it in the Manager's VM list select "Remove" from the context menu that
1569 comes up.</para>
1570
1571 <para>A confirmation window will come up that allows you to select whether
1572 the machine should only be removed from the list of machines or whether
1573 the files associated with it should also be deleted.</para>
1574
1575 <para>The "Remove" menu item is disabled while a machine is
1576 running.</para>
1577 </sect1>
1578
1579 <sect1 id="clone">
1580 <title>Cloning virtual machines</title>
1581
1582 <para>To experiment with a VM configuration, test different guest OS levels
1583 or to simply backup a VM, VirtualBox can create a full or a linked copy of
1584 an existing VM.<footnote><para>Cloning support was introduced with VirtualBox
1585 4.1.</para></footnote></para>
1586
1587 <para>A wizard will guide you through the clone process:</para>
1588
1589 <mediaobject>
1590 <imageobject>
1591 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/clone-vm.png"
1592 width="10cm" />
1593 </imageobject>
1594 </mediaobject>
1595
1596 <para>This wizard can be invoked from the context menu of the Manager's VM
1597 list (select "Clone") or the "Snapshots" view of the selected VM. First
1598 choose a new name for the clone. When you select <emphasis
1599 role="bold">Reinitialize the MAC address of all network cards</emphasis>
1600 every network card get a new MAC address assigned. This is useful when
1601 both, the source VM and the cloned VM, have to operate on the same network.
1602 If you leave this unchanged, all network cards have the same MAC address
1603 like the one in the source VM. Depending on how you invoke the wizard you
1604 have different choices for the cloning operation. First you need to decide
1605 if the clone should be linked to the source VM or a fully independent clone
1606 should be created:</para>
1607 <itemizedlist>
1608 <listitem>
1609 <para><emphasis role="bold">Full clone:</emphasis> In this mode all
1610 depending disk images are copied to the new VM folder. The clone
1611 can fully operate without the source VM.
1612 </para>
1613 </listitem>
1614
1615 <listitem>
1616 <para><emphasis role="bold">Linked clone:</emphasis> In this mode new
1617 differencing disk images are created where the parent disk images
1618 are the source disk images. If you selected the current state of
1619 the source VM as clone point, a new snapshot will be created
1620 implicitly.
1621 </para>
1622 </listitem>
1623 </itemizedlist>
1624
1625 <para>After selecting the clone mode, you need to decide about what exactly
1626 should be cloned. You can always create a clone of the <emphasis
1627 role="italic">current state</emphasis> only or <emphasis
1628 role="italic">all</emphasis>. When you select <emphasis
1629 role="italic">all</emphasis>, the current state and in addition all
1630 snapshots are cloned. Have you started from a snapshot which has additional
1631 children, you can also clone the <emphasis role="italic">current state and
1632 all children</emphasis>. This creates a clone starting with this
1633 snapshot and includes all child snapshots.</para>
1634
1635 <para>The clone operation itself can be a lengthy operation depending on
1636 the size and count of the attached disk images. Also keep in mind that
1637 every snapshot has differencing disk images attached, which need to be
1638 cloned as well.</para>
1639
1640 <para>The "Clone" menu item is disabled while a machine is running.</para>
1641
1642 <para>For how to clone a VM at the command line, please see <xref
1643 linkend="vboxmanage-clonevm" />.</para>
1644 </sect1>
1645
1646 <sect1 id="ovf">
1647 <title>Importing and exporting virtual machines</title>
1648
1649 <para>VirtualBox can import and export virtual machines in the
1650 industry-standard Open Virtualization Format (OVF).<footnote>
1651 <para>OVF support was originally introduced with VirtualBox 2.2 and
1652 has seen major improvements with every version since.</para>
1653 </footnote></para>
1654
1655 <para>OVF is a cross-platform standard supported by many virtualization
1656 products which allows for creating ready-made virtual machines that can
1657 then be imported into a virtualizer such as VirtualBox. VirtualBox makes
1658 OVF import and export easy to access and supports it from the Manager
1659 window as well as its command-line interface. This allows for packaging
1660 so-called <emphasis role="bold">virtual appliances</emphasis>: disk images
1661 together with configuration settings that can be distributed easily. This
1662 way one can offer complete ready-to-use software packages (operating
1663 systems with applications) that need no configuration or installation
1664 except for importing into VirtualBox.<note>
1665 <para>The OVF standard is complex, and support in VirtualBox is an
1666 ongoing process. In particular, no guarantee is made that VirtualBox
1667 supports all appliances created by other virtualization software. For
1668 a list of known limitations, please see <xref
1669 linkend="KnownIssues" />.</para>
1670 </note></para>
1671
1672 <para>Appliances in OVF format can appear in two variants:<orderedlist>
1673 <listitem>
1674 <para>They can come in several files, as one or several disk images,
1675 typically in the widely-used VMDK format (see <xref
1676 linkend="vdidetails" />) and a textual description file in an XML
1677 dialect with an <computeroutput>.ovf</computeroutput> extension.
1678 These files must then reside in the same directory for VirtualBox to
1679 be able to import them.</para>
1680 </listitem>
1681
1682 <listitem>
1683 <para>Alternatively, the above files can be packed together into a
1684 single archive file, typically with an
1685 <computeroutput>.ova</computeroutput> extension. (Such archive files
1686 use a variant of the TAR archive format and can therefore be
1687 unpacked outside of VirtualBox with any utility that can unpack
1688 standard TAR files.)</para>
1689 </listitem>
1690 </orderedlist></para>
1691
1692 <para>To <emphasis role="bold">import</emphasis> an appliance in one of
1693 the above formats, simply double-click on the OVF/OVA file.<footnote>
1694 <para>Starting with version 4.0, VirtualBox creates file type
1695 associations for OVF and OVA files on your host operating
1696 system.</para>
1697 </footnote> Alternatively, select "File" &rarr; "Import appliance" from
1698 the Manager window. In the file dialog that comes up, navigate to the file
1699 with either the <computeroutput>.ovf</computeroutput> or the
1700 <computeroutput>.ova</computeroutput> file extension.</para>
1701
1702 <para>If VirtualBox can handle the file, a dialog similar to the following
1703 will appear:</para>
1704
1705 <para><mediaobject>
1706 <imageobject>
1707 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/ovf-import.png"
1708 width="12cm" />
1709 </imageobject>
1710 </mediaobject>This presents the virtual machines described in the OVF
1711 file and allows you to change the virtual machine settings by
1712 double-clicking on the description items. Once you click on <emphasis
1713 role="bold">"Import"</emphasis>, VirtualBox will copy the disk images and
1714 create local virtual machines with the settings described in the dialog.
1715 These will then show up in the Manager's list of virtual machines.</para>
1716
1717 <para>Note that since disk images tend to be big, and VMDK images that
1718 come with virtual appliances are typically shipped in a special compressed
1719 format that is unsuitable for being used by virtual machines directly, the
1720 images will need to be unpacked and copied first, which can take a few
1721 minutes.</para>
1722
1723 <para>For how to import an image at the command line, please see <xref
1724 linkend="vboxmanage-import" />.</para>
1725
1726 <para>Conversely, to <emphasis role="bold">export</emphasis> virtual
1727 machines that you already have in VirtualBox, select "File" &rarr; "Export
1728 appliance". A different dialog window shows up that allows you to combine
1729 several virtual machines into an OVF appliance. Then, select the target
1730 location where the target files should be stored, and the conversion
1731 process begins. This can again take a while.</para>
1732
1733 <para>For how to export an image at the command line, please see <xref
1734 linkend="vboxmanage-export" />.<note>
1735 <para>OVF cannot describe snapshots that were taken for a virtual
1736 machine. As a result, when you export a virtual machine that has
1737 snapshots, only the current state of the machine will be exported, and
1738 the disk images in the export will have a "flattened" state identical
1739 to the current state of the virtual machine.</para>
1740 </note></para>
1741 </sect1>
1742
1743 <sect1 id="globalsettings">
1744 <title>Global Settings</title>
1745 <para>The global settings dialog can be reached through the
1746 <emphasis role="bold">File</emphasis> menu, selecting the
1747 <emphasis role="bold">Preferences...</emphasis> item. It offers a selection
1748 of settings which apply to all virtual machines of the current user or in
1749 the case of <emphasis role="bold">Extensions</emphasis> to the entire
1750 system:
1751 <orderedlist>
1752 <listitem>
1753 <para><emphasis role="bold">General</emphasis> Enables the user to
1754 specify the default folder/directory for VM files, and the VRDP
1755 Authentication Library.</para>
1756 </listitem>
1757 <listitem>
1758 <para><emphasis role="bold">Input</emphasis> Enables the user to
1759 specify the Host Key. It identifies the key that toggles whether the
1760 cursor is in the focus of the VM or the Host operating system
1761 windows (see <xref linkend="keyb_mouse_normal"/>) and which is also
1762 used to trigger certain VM actions (see <xref
1763 linkend="specialcharacters"/>)</para>
1764 </listitem>
1765 <listitem>
1766 <para><emphasis role="bold">Update</emphasis> Enables the user
1767 to specify various settings for Automatic Updates.</para>
1768 </listitem>
1769 <listitem>
1770 <para><emphasis role="bold">Language</emphasis> Enables the user to
1771 specify the GUI language.</para>
1772 </listitem>
1773 <listitem>
1774 <para><emphasis role="bold">Display</emphasis> Enables the user to
1775 specify the screen resolution, and its width and height.</para>
1776 </listitem>
1777 <listitem>
1778 <para><emphasis role="bold">Network</emphasis> Enables the user to
1779 configure the details of Host Only Networks.</para>
1780 </listitem>
1781 <listitem>
1782 <para><emphasis role="bold">Extensions</emphasis> Enables the user
1783 to list and manage the installed extension packages.</para>
1784 </listitem>
1785 <listitem>
1786 <para><emphasis role="bold">Proxy</emphasis> Enables the user to
1787 configure a HTTP Proxy Server.</para>
1788 </listitem>
1789 </orderedlist></para>
1790 </sect1>
1791
1792 <sect1 id="frontends">
1793 <title>Alternative front-ends</title>
1794
1795 <para>As briefly mentioned in <xref linkend="features-overview" />,
1796 VirtualBox has a very flexible internal design that allows for using
1797 multiple interfaces to control the same virtual machines. To illustrate,
1798 you can, for example, start a virtual machine with the VirtualBox Manager
1799 window and then stop it from the command line. With VirtualBox's support
1800 for the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP), you can even run virtual machines
1801 remotely on a headless server and have all the graphical output redirected
1802 over the network.</para>
1803
1804 <para>In detail, the following front-ends are shipped in the standard
1805 VirtualBox package:</para>
1806
1807 <para><orderedlist>
1808 <listitem>
1809 <para><computeroutput>VirtualBox</computeroutput> is the VirtualBox
1810 Manager. This graphical user interface uses the Qt toolkit; most of
1811 this User Manual is dedicated to describing it. While this is the
1812 easiest to use, some of the more advanced VirtualBox features are
1813 kept away from it to keep it simple.</para>
1814 </listitem>
1815
1816 <listitem>
1817 <para><computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> is our
1818 command-line interface for automated and very detailed control of
1819 every aspect of VirtualBox. It is described in <xref
1820 linkend="vboxmanage" />.</para>
1821 </listitem>
1822
1823 <listitem>
1824 <para><computeroutput>VBoxSDL</computeroutput> is an alternative,
1825 simple graphical front-end with an intentionally limited feature
1826 set, designed to only display virtual machines that are controlled
1827 in detail with <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>. This is
1828 interesting for business environments where displaying all the bells
1829 and whistles of the full GUI is not feasible.
1830 <computeroutput>VBoxSDL</computeroutput> is described in <xref
1831 linkend="vboxsdl" />.</para>
1832 </listitem>
1833
1834 <listitem>
1835 <para>Finally, <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput> is yet
1836 another front-end that produces no visible output on the host at
1837 all, but can act as a RDP server if the VirtualBox Remote
1838 Desktop Extension (VRDE) is installed and enabled for the VM.
1839 As opposed to the other
1840 graphical interfaces, the headless front-end requires no graphics
1841 support. This is useful, for example, if you want to host your
1842 virtual machines on a headless Linux server that has no X Window
1843 system installed. For details, see <xref
1844 linkend="vboxheadless" />.</para>
1845 </listitem>
1846 </orderedlist>If the above front-ends still do not satisfy your
1847 particular needs, it is possible to create yet another front-end to the
1848 complex virtualization engine that is the core of VirtualBox, as the
1849 VirtualBox core neatly exposes all of its features in a clean API; please
1850 refer to <xref linkend="VirtualBoxAPI" />.</para>
1851 </sect1>
1852</chapter>
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