Troubleshooting
This chapter provides answers to commonly asked questions. In order to
improve your user experience with VirtualBox, it is recommended to read this
section to learn more about common pitfalls and get recommendations on how
to use the product.
Procedures and tools
Categorizing and isolating problems
More often than not, a virtualized guest behaves like a physical
system. Any problems that a physical machine would encounter, a virtual
machine will encounter as well. If, for example, Internet connectivity
is lost due to external issues, virtual machines will be affected just
as much as physical ones.
If a true VirtualBox problem is encountered, it helps to
categorize and isolate the problem first. Here are some of the questions
that should be answered before reporting a problem:
Is the problem specific to a certain guest OS? Specific
release of a guest OS? Especially with Linux guest related
problems, the issue may be specific to a certain distribution and
version of Linux.
Is the problem specific to a certain host OS? Problems are
usually not host OS specific (because most of the VirtualBox code
base is shared across all supported platforms), but especially in
the areas of networking and USB support, there are significant
differences between host platforms. Some GUI related issues are
also host specific.
Is the problem specific to certain host hardware? This
category of issues is typically related to the host CPU. Because
of significant differences between VT-x and AMD-V, problems may be
specific to one or the other technology. The exact CPU model may
also make a difference (even for software virtualization) because
different CPUs support different features, which may affect
certain aspects of guest CPU operation.
Is the problem specific to a certain virtualization mode?
Some problems may only occur in software virtualization mode,
others may be specific to hardware virtualization.
Is the problem specific to guest SMP? That is, is it related
to the number of virtual CPUs (VCPUs) in the guest? Using more
than one CPU usually significantly affects the internal operation
of a guest OS.
Is the problem specific to the Guest Additions? In some
cases, this is a given (e.g., a shared folders problem), in other
cases it may be less obvious (for example, display problems). And
if the problem is Guest Additions specific, is it also specific to
a certain version of the Additions?
Is the problem specific to a certain environment? Some
problems are related to a particular environment external to the
VM; this usually involves network setup. Certain configurations of
external servers such as DHCP or PXE may expose problems which do
not occur with other, similar servers.
Is the problem a regression? Knowing that an issue is a
regression usually makes it significantly easier to find the
solution. In this case, it is crucial to know which version is
affected and which is not.
Collecting debugging information
For problem determination, it is often important to collect
debugging information which can be analyzed by VirtualBox support. This
section contains information about what kind of information can be
obtained.
Every time VirtualBox starts up a VM, a so-called "release log file" is created containing lots of
information about the VM configuration and runtime events. The log file
is called VBox.log
and resides in the VM log file folder. Typically this will be a
directory like this:$HOME/VirtualBox VMs/{machinename}/Logs
When starting a VM, the configuration file of the last run will be
renamed to .1, up to
.3. Sometimes when there is a problem,
it is useful to have a look at the logs. Also when requesting support
for VirtualBox, supplying the corresponding log file is
mandatory.
For convenience, for each virtual machine, the VirtualBox main
window can show these logs in a window. To access it, select a virtual
machine from the list on the left and select "Show logs..." from the
"Machine" window.
The release log file (VBox.log) contains a wealth of diagnostic
information, such as Host OS type and version, VirtualBox version and
build (32-bit or 64-bit), a complete dump of the guest's configuration
(CFGM), detailed information about the host CPU type and supported
features, whether hardware virtualization is enabled, information about
VT-x/AMD-V setup, state transitions (creating, running, paused,
stopping, etc.), guest BIOS messages, Guest Additions messages,
device-specific log entries and, at the end of execution, final guest
state and condensed statistics.
In case of crashes, it is very important to collect crash dumps. This is true for both host and guest
crashes. For information about enabling core dumps on Linux, Solaris,
and OS X systems, refer to the core dump article on the VirtualBox
website.
http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Core_dump.
You can also use VBoxManage
debugvm to create a dump of a complete virtual machine;
see .
For network related problems, it is often helpful to capture a
trace of network traffic. If the traffic is routed through an adapter on
the host, it is possible to use Wireshark or a similar tool to capture
the traffic there. However, this often also includes a lot of traffic
unrelated to the VM.
VirtualBox provides an ability to capture network traffic only on
a specific VM's network adapter. Refer to the network tracing article on
the VirtualBox website
http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Network_tips.
for information on enabling this capture. The trace files
created by VirtualBox are in .pcap
format and can be easily analyzed with Wireshark.
The built-in VM debugger
VirtualBox includes a built-in VM debugger, which advanced users
may find useful. This debugger allows for examining and, to some extent,
controlling the VM state.
Use the VM debugger at your own risk. There is no support for
it, and the following documentation is only made available for
advanced users with a very high level of familiarity with the
x86/AMD64 machine instruction set, as well as detailed knowledge of
the PC architecture. A degree of familiarity with the internals of
the guest OS in question may also be very helpful.
The VM debugger is available in all regular production versions of
VirtualBox, but it is disabled by default because the average user will
have little use for it. There are two ways to access the
debugger:
A debugger console window displayed alongside the VM
Via the telnet protocol at
port 5000
The debugger can be enabled in three ways:
Start the VM directly using VirtualBox
--startvm, with an additional
--dbg,
--debug, or
--debug-command-line argument.
See the VirtualBox usage help for details.
Set the
VBOX_GUI_DBG_ENABLED or
VBOX_GUI_DBG_AUTO_SHOW
environment variable to true
before launching the VirtualBox process. Setting these variables
(only their presence is checked) is effective even when the first
VirtualBox process is the VM selector window. VMs subsequently
launched from the selector will have the debugger enabled.
Set the GUI/Dbg/Enabled
extra data item to true before
launching the VM. This can be set globally or on a per VM
basis.
A new 'Debug' menu entry will be added to the VirtualBox
application. This menu allows the user to open the debugger
console.
The VM debugger command syntax is loosely modeled on Microsoft and
IBM debuggers used on DOS, OS/2 and Windows. Users familiar with symdeb,
CodeView, or the OS/2 kernel debugger will find the VirtualBox VM
debugger familiar.
The most important command is
help. This will print brief usage help
for all debugger commands. The set of commands supported by the VM
debugger changes frequently and the
help command is always
up-to-date.
A brief summary of frequently used commands follows:
stop -- stops the VM
execution and enables single stepping
g -- continue VM
execution
t -- single step an
instruction
rg/rh/r -- print the
guest/hypervisor/current registers
kg/kh/k -- print the
guest/hypervisor/current call stack
da/db/dw/dd/dq -- print
memory contents as ASCII/bytes/words/dwords/qwords
u -- unassemble
memory
dg -- print the guest's
GDT
di -- print the guest's
IDT
dl -- print the guest's
LDT
dt -- print the guest's
TSS
dp* -- print the guest's
page table structures
bp/br -- set a
normal/recompiler breakpoint
bl -- list
breakpoints
bc -- clear a
breakpoint
writecore -- writes a VM
core file to disk, refer
See the built-in help for other
available commands.
The VM debugger supports symbolic debugging, although symbols for
guest code are often not available. For Solaris guests, the
detect command automatically determines
the guest OS version and locates kernel symbols in guest's memory.
Symbolic debugging is then available. For Linux guests, the
detect commands also determines the
guest OS version, but there are no symbols in the guest's memory. Kernel
symbols are available in the file
/proc/kallsyms on Linux guests. This
file must be copied to the host, for example using
scp. The
loadmap debugger command can be used to
make the symbol information available to the VM debugger. Note that the
kallsyms file contains the symbols for
the currently loaded modules; if the guest's configuration changes, the
symbols will change as well and must be updated.
For all guests, a simple way to verify that the correct symbols
are loaded is the k command. The guest
is normally idling and it should be clear from the symbolic information
that the guest operating system's idle loop is being executed.
Another group of debugger commands is the set of
info commands. Running
info help provides complete usage
information. The information commands provide ad-hoc data pertinent to
various emulated devices and aspects of the VMM. There is no general
guideline for using the info commands,
the right command to use depends entirely on the problem being
investigated. Some of the info commands are:
cfgm -- print a branch of
the configuration tree
cpuid -- display the guest
CPUID leaves
ioport -- print registered
I/O port ranges
mmio -- print registered
MMIO ranges
mode -- print the current
paging mode
pit -- print the i8254 PIT
state
pic -- print the i8259A PIC
state
ohci/ehci/xhci -- print a subset
of the OHCI/EHCI/xHCI USB controller state
pcnet0 -- print the PCnet
state
vgatext -- print the
contents of the VGA framebuffer formatted as standard text
mode
timers -- print all VM
timers
The output of the info commands
generally requires in-depth knowledge of the emulated device and/or
VirtualBox VMM internals. However, when used properly, the information
provided can be invaluable.
VM core format
VirtualBox uses the 64-bit ELF format for its VM core files
created by VBoxManage debugvm; see
. The VM core file contain the
memory and CPU dumps of the VM and can be useful for debugging your
guest OS. The 64-bit ELF object format specification can be obtained
here: http://downloads.openwatcom.org/ftp/devel/docs/elf-64-gen.pdf.
The overall layout of the VM core format is as follows:
[ ELF 64 Header]
[ Program Header, type PT_NOTE ]
→ offset to COREDESCRIPTOR
[ Program Header, type PT_LOAD ] - one for each contiguous physical memory range
→ Memory offset of range
→ File offset
[ Note Header, type NT_VBOXCORE ]
[ COREDESCRIPTOR ]
→ Magic
→ VM core file version
→ VBox version
→ Number of vCPUs etc.
[ Note Header, type NT_VBOXCPU ] - one for each vCPU
[ vCPU 1 Note Header ]
[ DBGFCORECPU - vCPU 1 dump ]
[ Additional Notes + Data ] - currently unused
[ Memory dump ]
The memory descriptors contain physical addresses relative to the
guest and not virtual addresses. Regions of memory such as MMIO regions
are not included in the core file.
The relevant data structures and definitions can be found in the
VirtualBox sources under the following header files:
include/VBox/dbgfcorefmt.h,
include/iprt/x86.h and
src/VBox/Runtime/include/internal/ldrELFCommon.h.
The VM core file can be inspected using
elfdump and GNU
readelf or other similar
utilities.
General
Guest shows IDE/SATA errors for file-based images on slow host
file system
Occasionally, some host file systems provide very poor writing
performance and as a consequence cause the guest to time out IDE/SATA
commands. This is normal behavior and should normally cause no real
problems, as the guest should repeat commands that have timed out.
However, some guests (e.g. some Linux versions) have severe problems if a
write to an image file takes longer than about 15 seconds. Some file
systems however require more than a minute to complete a single write,
if the host cache contains a large amount of data that needs to be
written.
The symptom for this problem is that the guest can no longer
access its files during large write or copying operations, usually
leading to an immediate hang of the guest.
In order to work around this problem (the true fix is to use a
faster file system that doesn't exhibit such unacceptable write
performance), it is possible to flush the image file after a certain
amount of data has been written. This interval is normally infinite, but
can be configured individually for each disk of a VM.
For IDE disks use the following command:
VBoxManage setextradata "VM name"
"VBoxInternal/Devices/piix3ide/0/LUN#[x]/Config/FlushInterval" [b]
For SATA disks use the following command:
VBoxManage setextradata "VM name"
"VBoxInternal/Devices/ahci/0/LUN#[x]/Config/FlushInterval" [b]
The value [x] that selects the disk for IDE is 0 for the master
device on the first channel, 1 for the slave device on the first
channel, 2 for the master device on the second channel or 3 for the
master device on the second channel. For SATA use values between 0 and
29. Only disks support this configuration option; it must not be set for
CD/DVD drives.
The unit of the interval [b] is the number of bytes written since
the last flush. The value for it must be selected so that the occasional
long write delays do not occur. Since the proper flush interval depends
on the performance of the host and the host filesystem, finding the
optimal value that makes the problem disappear requires some
experimentation. Values between 1000000 and 10000000 (1 to 10 megabytes)
are a good starting point. Decreasing the interval both decreases the
probability of the problem and the write performance of the guest.
Setting the value unnecessarily low will cost performance without
providing any benefits. An interval of 1 will cause a flush for each
write operation and should solve the problem in any case, but has a
severe write performance penalty.
Providing a value of 0 for [b] is treated as an infinite flush
interval, effectively disabling this workaround. Removing the extra data
key by specifying no value for [b] has the same effect.
Responding to guest IDE/SATA flush requests
If desired, the virtual disk images can be flushed when the guest
issues the IDE FLUSH CACHE command. Normally these requests are ignored
for improved performance. The parameters below are only accepted for
disk drives. They must not be set for DVD drives.
To enable flushing for IDE disks, issue the following
command:
VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VBoxInternal/Devices/piix3ide/0/LUN#[x]/Config/IgnoreFlush" 0
The value [x] that selects the disk is 0 for the master device on
the first channel, 1 for the slave device on the first channel, 2 for
the master device on the second channel or 3 for the master device on
the second channel.
To enable flushing for SATA disks, issue the following
command:
VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VBoxInternal/Devices/ahci/0/LUN#[x]/Config/IgnoreFlush" 0
The value [x] that selects the disk can be a value between 0 and
29.
Note that this doesn't affect the flushes performed according to
the configuration described in . Restoring the default of ignoring flush
commands is possible by setting the value to 1 or by removing the
key.
Performance variation with frequency boosting
Many newer multi-core processors support some form of frequency
boosting, which means that if only one core is utilized, it can run
faster (possibly 50% faster or even more) than the rated CPU frequency.
This causes measured performance to vary somewhat as a function of the
momentary overall system load. The exact behavior depends strongly
on the specific processor model.
As a consequence, benchmarking on systems which utilize frequency
boosting may produce unstable and non-repeatable results, especially
if benchmark runs are short (on the order of seconds). To obtain stable
results, benchmarks must be run over longer periods of time and with a
constant system load apart from the VM being tested.
Frequency scaling effect on CPU usage
On some hardware platforms and operating systems, CPU frequency
scaling may cause CPU usage reporting to be highly misleading. This
happens in situations when the host CPU load is significant but not
heavy, such as 15-30% of the maximum.
Most operating systems determine CPU usage in terms of time spent,
measuring for example how many nanoseconds the systems or a process
was active within one second. However, in order to save energy, modern
systems can significantly scale down CPU speed when the system is not
fully loaded. Naturally, when the CPU is running at (for example) one
half of its maximum speed, the same number of instructions will take
roughly twice as long to execute compared to running at full speed.
Depending on the specific hardware and host OS, this effect can very
significantly skew the CPU usage reported by the OS; the reported CPU
usage can be several times higher than what it would have been had the
CPU been running at full speed. The effect can be observed both on
the host OS and in a guest OS.
Inaccurate Windows CPU usage reporting
CPU usage reporting tools which come with Windows (Task Manager, Resource
Monitor) do not take the time spent processing hardware interrupts into
account. If the interrupt load is heavy (thousands of interrupts per second),
CPU usage may be significantly underreported.
This problem affects Windows as both host and guest OS. Sysinternals tools
(e.g. Process Explorer) do not suffer from this problem.
Poor performance caused by host power management
On some hardware platforms and operating systems, virtualization
performance is negatively affected by host CPU power management. The
symptoms may be choppy audio in the guest or erratic guest clock
behavior.
Some of the problems may be caused by firmware and/or host
operating system bugs. Therefore, updating the firmware and applying
operating systems fixes is recommended.
For optimal virtualization performance, the C1E power state
support in the system's BIOS should be disabled, if such a setting is
available (not all systems support the C1E power state). On Intel
systems the Intel C State setting
should be disabled. Disabling other power management settings
may also improve performance. However, a balance between performance
and power consumption must always be considered.
GUI: 2D Video Acceleration option is grayed out
To use 2D Video Acceleration within VirtualBox, your host's video
card should support certain OpenGL extensions. On startup, VirtualBox
checks for those extensions, and, if the test fails, this option is
silently grayed out.
To find out why it has failed, you can manually execute the
following command:
VBoxTestOGL --log "log_file_name" --test 2D
It will list the required OpenGL extensions one by one and will
show you which one failed the test. This usually means that you are
running an outdated or misconfigured OpenGL driver on your host. It can
also mean that your video chip is lacking required functionality.
Windows guests
No USB 3.0 support in Windows 7 guests
If a Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2 guest is configured for USB 3.0 (xHCI) support,
the guest OS will not have any USB support at all. This happens because Windows 7 predates
USB 3.0 and therefore does not ship with any xHCI drivers; Microsoft also does not offer any
vendor-provided xHCI drivers via Windows Update.
To solve this problem, it is necessary to download and install the Intel xHCI driver
in the guest. Intel offers the driver as the USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller (xHCI) driver
for Intel 7 Series/C216 chipsets.
Note that the driver only supports Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2. The driver
package includes support for both 32-bit and 64-bit OS variants.
Windows bluescreens after changing VM configuration
Changing certain virtual machine settings can cause Windows guests
to fail during start up with a bluescreen. This may happen if you change
VM settings after installing Windows, or if you copy a disk image with
an already installed Windows to a newly created VM which has settings
that differ from the original machine.
This applies in particular to the following settings:
The ACPI and I/O APIC settings should never be changed after
installing Windows. Depending on the presence of these hardware
features, the Windows installation program chooses special kernel
and device driver versions and will fail to startup should these
hardware features be removed. (Enabling them for a Windows VM
which was installed without them does not cause any harm. However,
Windows will not use these features in this case.)
Changing the storage controller hardware will cause bootup
failures as well. This might also apply to you if you copy a disk
image from an older version of VirtualBox to a virtual machine
created with a newer VirtualBox version; the default subtype of
IDE controller hardware was changed from PIIX3 to PIIX4 with
VirtualBox 2.2. Make sure these settings are identical.
Windows 0x101 bluescreens with SMP enabled (IPI timeout)
If a VM is configured to have more than one processor (symmetrical
multiprocessing, SMP), some configurations of Windows guests crash with
an 0x101 error message, indicating a timeout for inter-processor
interrupts (IPIs). These interrupts synchronize memory management
between processors.
According to Microsoft, this is due to a race condition in
Windows. A hotfix is available.
See http://support.microsoft.com/kb/955076.
If this does not help, please reduce the number of virtual
processors to 1.
Windows 2000 installation failures
When installing Windows 2000 guests, you might run into one of the
following issues:
Installation reboots, usually during component
registration.
Installation fills the whole hard disk with empty log
files.
Installation complains about a failure installing
msgina.dll.
These problems are all caused by a bug in the hard disk driver of
Windows 2000. After issuing a hard disk request, there is a race
condition in the Windows driver code which leads to corruption if the
operation completes too fast, i.e. the hardware interrupt from the IDE
controller arrives too soon. With physical hardware, there is a
guaranteed delay in most systems so the problem is usually hidden there
(however it should be possible to reproduce it on physical hardware as
well). In a virtual environment, it is possible for the operation to be
done immediately (especially on very fast systems with multiple CPUs)
and the interrupt is signaled sooner than on a physical system. The
solution is to introduce an artificial delay before delivering such
interrupts. This delay can be configured for a VM using the following
command:
VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VBoxInternal/Devices/piix3ide/0/Config/IRQDelay" 1
This sets the delay to one millisecond. In case this doesn't help,
increase it to a value between 1 and 5 milliseconds. Please note that
this slows down disk performance. After installation, you should be able
to remove the key (or set it to 0).
How to record bluescreen information from Windows guests
When Windows guests run into a kernel crash, they display the
infamous bluescreen. Depending on how Windows is configured, the
information will remain on the screen until the machine is restarted or
it will reboot automatically. During installation, Windows is usually
configured to reboot automatically. With automatic reboots, there is no
chance to record the bluescreen information which might be important for
problem determination.
VirtualBox provides a method of halting a guest when it wants to
perform a reset. In order to enable this feature, issue the following
command:
VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VBoxInternal/PDM/HaltOnReset" 1
PCnet driver failure in 32-bit Windows Server 2003 guests
Certain editions of Windows 2000 and 2003 servers support more
than 4 GB RAM on 32-bit systems. The AMD PCnet network driver shipped with
Windows Server 2003 fails to load if the 32-bit guest OS uses paging
extensions (which will occur with more than approximately 3.5 GB RAM
assigned to the VM).
This problem is known to occur with version 4.38.0.0 of the PCnet
driver. The issue was fixed in version 4.51.0.0 of the driver, which
is available as a separate download. An alternative solution may be
changing the emulated NIC type to Intel PRO/1000 MT Desktop (82540EM),
or reducing the RAM assigned to the VM to approximately 3.5 GB or less.
No networking in Windows Vista guests
With Windows Vista, Microsoft dropped support for the AMD PCNet
card that VirtualBox used to provide as the default virtual network card
before version 1.6.0. For Windows Vista guests, VirtualBox now uses an
Intel E1000 card by default.
If, for some reason, you still want to use the AMD card, you need
to download the PCNet driver from the AMD website (available for 32-bit
Windows only). You can transfer it into the virtual machine using a
shared folder, see (see ).
Windows guests may cause a high CPU load
Several background applications of Windows guests, especially
virus scanners, are known to increases the CPU load notably even if the
guest appears to be idle. We recommend to deactivate virus scanners
within virtualized guests if possible.
Long delays when accessing shared folders
The performance for accesses to shared folders from a Windows
guest might be decreased due to delays during the resolution of the
VirtualBox shared folders name service. To fix these delays, add the
following entries to the file
\windows\system32\drivers\etc\lmhosts
of the Windows guest:
255.255.255.255 VBOXSVR #PRE
255.255.255.255 VBOXSRV #PRE
After doing this change, a reboot of the guest is required.
USB tablet coordinates wrong in Windows 98 guests
If a Windows 98 VM is configured to use the emulated USB tablet
(absolute pointing device), the coordinate translation may be incorrect
and the pointer is restricted to the upper left quarter of the guest's
screen.
The USB HID (Human Interface Device) drivers in Windows 98 are very
old and do not handle tablets the same way all more recent operating
systems do (Windows 2000 and later, Mac OS X, Solaris). To
work around the problem, issue the following command:
VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VBoxInternal/USB/HidMouse/0/Config/CoordShift" 0
To restore the default behavior, remove the key or set its value
to 1.
Windows guests are removed from an Active Directory domain after
restoring a snapshot
If a Windows guest is a member of an Active Directory domain and
the snapshot feature of VirtualBox is used, it could happen it loses
this status after you restore an older snapshot.
The reason is the automatic machine password changing performed by
Windows in regular intervals for security purposes. You can disable
this feature by following the instruction of this http://support.microsoft.com/kb/154501
article from Microsoft.
Restoring d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll
VirtualBox Guest Additions for Windows prior to 4.1.8 did not properly
back up the original d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll system files when selecting
and installing the experimental Direct3D support. This process replaces
both system files with files from the VirtualBox Guest Additions so that
Direct3D calls can be handled correctly. Although this issue was fixed
with VirtualBox 4.1.8, there is no way the Windows Guest Additions
installer can repair these files.
Corruption of these files has no implications in case 3D acceleration
is enabled and basic Direct3D support is installed, that is, without WDDM
(on Windows Vista or higher) or on older Windows systems like Windows XP.
With the basic Direct3D support all Direct3D 8.0 and Direct3D 9.0
applications will utilize VirtualBox Direct3D files directly and thus
will run as expected.
For WDDM Direct3D support however, the originally shipped d3d8.dll and
d3d9.dll files are required in order to run Direct3D 8.0
and Direct3D 9.0 applications. As a result of the above mentioned system
files corruption these applications will not work anymore. See below for
a step-by-step guide for restoring the original d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll
system files in case the VirtualBox Guest Additions installer warned
about those incorrect files or when having trouble running Direct3D
applications.
Starting at Windows 7 the 3D desktop (aka Aero) uses DirectX 10
for rendering so that corrupted d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll system files will
have no effect on the actual rendering.
This is why such a detected file corruption is not considered as fatal
for the basic Direct3D installation on all supported Windows guests,
and for WDDM Direct3D installation on Windows 7 and later guests.
Extracting d3d8 and d3d9.dll from a Windows XP installation CD:
Download and install the latest version of 7-Zip File Manager http//www.7-zip.org
Browse into the installation CD for example E:\i386 (or amd64 for the 64-bit version)
Locate file d3d8.dl_ and d3d9.dl_, double click on it and Extract d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll
Reboot Windows in Safe mode
Copy extracted d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll to C:\Windows\system32 and C:\Windows\system32\dllcache
Reboot
Extracting d3d8 and d3d9.dll from Windows XP Service pack
1, 3-6 Same as installation CD
Use 'Open inside' to open WindowsXP-KB936929-SP3-x86.exe as archive and browse i386 directory.
Extracting d3d8 and d3d9.dll from Vista/Windows7 installation CD or Service Pack iso
Download and install the latest version of 7-Zip File Manager http//www.7-zip.org
Browse into installation CD for example E:\sources
Locate file install.wim and double click it. After 7-Zip utility opens the file, you'll get a few numbered folders. Each numeric subfolder represents a different version of Windows (Starter, Home Basic, and so on)
After entering into the one of the numeric folders, browse into Windows\System32 (or C:\Windows\SysWOW64 for the 64-bit version) directory locate d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll and extract
Copy extracted d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll to C:\Windows\system32 or C:\Windows\SysWOW64 (files from system32 should go to system32, from SysWOW64 to SysWOW64)
Reboot
Windows 3.x limited to 64 MB RAM
Windows 3.x guests are typically limited to 64 MB RAM, even if a VM is assigned
much more memory. While Windows 3.1 is theoretically capable of using up to 512 MB RAM,
it only uses memory available through the XMS interface. Versions of HIMEM.SYS (the
Microsoft XMS manager) shipped with MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows 3.x can only use
up to 64 MB on standard PCs.
This is a HIMEM.SYS limitation documented by Microsoft in Knowledge base
article KB 116256.
Windows 3.1 memory limits are described in detail in Microsoft Knowledge base
article KB 84388.
It is possible for Windows 3.x guests to utilize more than 64 MB RAM if a
different XMS provider is used. That could be a newer HIMEM.SYS version (such as
that shipped with Windows 98), or a more capable third-party memory manager
(such as QEMM).
Linux and X11 guests
Linux guests may cause a high CPU load
Some Linux guests may cause a high CPU load even if the guest
system appears to be idle. This can be caused by a high timer frequency
of the guest kernel. Some Linux distributions, for example Fedora, ship
a Linux kernel configured for a timer frequency of 1000Hz. We recommend to recompile the guest
kernel and to select a timer frequency of 100Hz.
Linux kernels shipped with Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) as of
release 4.7 and 5.1 as well as kernels of related Linux distributions
(for instance CentOS and Oracle Linux) support a kernel
parameter divider=N. Hence, such kernels support a
lower timer frequency without recompilation. We suggest to add the
kernel parameter divider=10 to select a guest
kernel timer frequency of 100Hz.
AMD Barcelona CPUs
Most Linux-based guests will fail with AMD Phenoms or
Barcelona-level Opterons due to a bug in the Linux kernel. Enable the
I/O-APIC to work around the problem (see ).
Buggy Linux 2.6 kernel versions
The following bugs in Linux kernels prevent them from executing
correctly in VirtualBox, causing VM boot crashes:
The Linux kernel version 2.6.18 (and some 2.6.17 versions)
introduced a race condition that can cause boot crashes in
VirtualBox. Please use a kernel version 2.6.19 or later.
With hardware virtualization and the I/O APIC enabled,
kernels before 2.6.24-rc6 may panic on boot with the following
message:Kernel panic - not syncing: IO-APIC + timer doesn't work! Boot with
apic=debug and send a report. Then try booting with the 'noapic' option
If you see this message, either disable hardware
virtualization or the I/O APIC (see ), or upgrade the guest to a newer
kernel.
See http://www.mail-archive.com/git-commits-head@vger.kernel.org/msg30813.html
for details about the kernel fix.
Shared clipboard, auto-resizing and seamless desktop in X11
guests
Guest desktop services in guests running the X11 window system
(Solaris, Linux and others) are provided by a guest service called
VBoxClient, which runs under the ID of
the user who started the desktop session and is automatically started
using the following command lines VBoxClient --clipboard
VBoxClient --display
VBoxClient --seamless when your X11 user session is started if you
are using a common desktop environment (Gnome, KDE and others). If a
particular desktop service is not working correctly, it is worth
checking whether the process which should provide it is running.
The VBoxClient processes create
files in the user's home directory with names of the form
.vboxclient-*.pid when they are running
in order to prevent a given service from being started twice. It can
happen due to misconfiguration that these files are created owned by
root and not deleted when the services are stopped, which will prevent
them from being started in future sessions. If the services cannot be
started, you may wish to check whether these files still exist.
Solaris guests
Older Solaris 10 releases crash in 64-bit mode
Solaris 10 releases up to and including Solaris 10 8/07 ("S10U4")
incorrectly detect newer Intel processors produced since 2007. This
problem leads to the 64-bit Solaris kernel crashing (and usually causing
a triple fault) almost immediately during startup, in both virtualized
and physical environments.
The recommended solution is upgrading to at least Solaris 10 5/08
("S10U5"). Alternative solutions include forcing Solaris to always
boot the 32-bit kernel or applying a patch for bug 6574102 (while
Solaris is using the 32-bit kernel).
Certain Solaris 10 releases may take long to boot with SMP
When using more than one CPU, Solaris 10 releases 5/08 ("S10U5"),
10/08 ("S10U6"), and 5/09 ("S10U7") may take a long time to boot and
may print warnings on the system console regarding failures to read
from disk. This is a bug in Solaris 10 which affects specific physical
and virtual configurations. It is caused by trying to read microcode
updates from the boot disk when the disk interrupt is reassigned to a
not yet fully initialized secondary CPU. Disk reads will time out and
fail, triggering delays (approx. 45 seconds) and warnings.
The recommended solution is upgrading to at least Solaris 10 10/09
("S10U8") which includes a fix for this problem. Alternative solutions
include restricting the number of virtual CPUs to one or possibly
using a different storage controller.
Solaris 8 5/01 and earlier may crash on startup
Solaris 2.6, 7 and 8 releases up to and including Solaris 8 4/01 ("S8U4")
incorrectly set up Machine Check Exception (MCE) MSRs on Pentium 4 and
some later Intel CPUs. The problem leads to the Solaris kernel crashing
(and usually causing a triple fault) almost immediately during startup, in both
virtualized and physical environments. Solaris 9 and later releases are
not affected by this problem, and neither is Solaris 2.5.1 and earlier.
The recommended solution is upgrading to at least Solaris 8 7/01
("S8U5"). Alternative solutions include applying a patch for bugs 4408508
and 4414557 (on an unaffected system).
FreeBSD guests
FreeBSD 10.0 may hang with xHCI
If xHCI (USB 3.0) emulation is enabled for FreeBSD 10.0 guests, the guest
OS will hang. This is caused by the guest OS incorrectly handling systems
where MSIs (Message Signaled Interrupts) are not used with the xHCI device.
The problem does not exist in earlier FreeBSD releases and was fixed in
FreeBSD 10.1.
Windows hosts
VBoxSVC out-of-process COM server issues
VirtualBox makes use of the Microsoft Component Object Model (COM)
for inter- and intra-process communication. This allows VirtualBox to
share a common configuration among different virtual machine processes
and provide several user interface options based on a common
architecture. All global status information and configuration is
maintained by the process VBoxSVC.exe,
which is an out-of-process COM server. Whenever a VirtualBox process is
started, it requests access to the COM server and Windows automatically
starts the process. Note that it should never be started by the end
user.
When the last process disconnects from the COM server, it will
terminate itself after some seconds. The VirtualBox configuration (XML
files) is maintained and owned by the COM server and the files are
locked whenever the server runs.
In some cases - such as when a virtual machine is terminated
unexpectedly - the COM server will not notice that the client is
disconnected and stay active for a longer period (10 minutes or so)
keeping the configuration files locked. In other rare cases the COM
server might experience an internal error and subsequently other
processes fail to initialize it. In these situations, it is recommended
to use the Windows task manager to kill the process
VBoxSVC.exe.
CD/DVD changes not recognized
In case you have assigned a physical CD/DVD drive to a guest and
the guest does not notice when the medium changes, make sure that the
Windows media change notification (MCN) feature is not turned off. This
is represented by the following key in the Windows registry:HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services\Cdrom\AutorunCertain
applications may disable this key against Microsoft's advice. If it is
set to 0, change it to 1 and reboot your system. VirtualBox relies on
Windows notifying it of media changes.
Sluggish response when using Microsoft RDP client
If connecting to a Virtual Machine via the Microsoft RDP client
(called Remote Desktop Connection), there can be large delays between
input (moving the mouse over a menu is the most obvious situation) and
output. This is because this RDP client collects input for a certain
time before sending it to the RDP server.
The interval can be decreased by setting a Windows registry key to
smaller values than the default of 100. The key does not exist initially
and must be of type DWORD. The unit for its values is milliseconds.
Values around 20 are suitable for low-bandwidth connections between the
RDP client and server. Values around 4 can be used for a gigabit
Ethernet connection. Generally values below 10 achieve a performance
that is very close to that of the local input devices and screen of the
host on which the Virtual Machine is running.
Depending whether the setting should be changed for an individual
user or for the system, either
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Terminal Server Client\Min Send Interval
or
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Terminal Server Client\Min Send Interval
can be set appropriately.
Running an iSCSI initiator and target on a single system
Deadlocks can occur on a Windows host when attempting to access an
iSCSI target running in a guest virtual machine with an iSCSI initiator
(e.g. Microsoft iSCSI Initiator) that is running on the host. This is
caused by a flaw in the Windows cache manager component, and causes
sluggish host system response for several minutes, followed by a
"Delayed Write Failed" error message in the system tray or in a separate
message window. The guest is blocked during that period and may show
error messages or become unstable.
Setting the environment variable
VBOX_DISABLE_HOST_DISK_CACHE to 1 will
enable a workaround for this problem until Microsoft addresses the
issue. For example, open a command prompt window and start VirtualBox
like this:
set VBOX_DISABLE_HOST_DISK_CACHE=1
VirtualBox
While this will decrease guest disk performance (especially
writes), it does not affect the performance of other applications
running on the host.
Bridged networking adapters missing
If no bridged adapters show up in the "Networking" section of the
VM settings, this typically means that the bridged networking driver was
not installed properly on your host. This could be due to the following
reasons:
The maximum allowed filter count was reached on the host. In
this case, the MSI log would mention the
0x8004a029 error code returned on
NetFlt network component install:VBoxNetCfgWinInstallComponent: Install failed, hr (0x8004a029)
You can try to increase the maximum filter count in the
Windows registry at the following key:HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Network\MaxNumFiltersThe
maximum number allowed is 14. After a reboot, try to re-install
VirtualBox.
The INF cache is corrupt. In this case, the install log
(%windir%\inf\setupapi.log on XP
or %windir%\inf\setupapi.dev.log
on Vista or later) would typically mention the failure to find a
suitable driver package for either the
sun_VBoxNetFlt or
sun_VBoxNetFltmp components. The
solution then is to uninstall VirtualBox, remove the INF cache
(%windir%\inf\INFCACHE.1), reboot
and try to re-install VirtualBox
Host-only networking adapters cannot be created
If host-only adapter cannot be created (either via the Manager or
VBoxManage), then the INF cache is probably corrupt. In this case, the
install log (%windir%\inf\setupapi.log
on XP or %windir%\inf\setupapi.dev.log
on Vista or later) would typically mention the failure to find a
suitable driver package for the
sun_VBoxNetAdp component. Again, as
with the bridged networking problem described above, the solution is to
uninstall VirtualBox, remove the INF cache
(%windir%\inf\INFCACHE.1), reboot and
try to re-install VirtualBox.
Linux hosts
Linux kernel module refuses to load
If the VirtualBox kernel module
(vboxdrv) refuses to load, i.e. you get
an "Error inserting vboxdrv: Invalid argument", check (as root) the
output of the dmesg command to find out
why the load failed. Most probably the kernel disagrees with the version
of the gcc used to compile the module. Make sure that you use the same
compiler as used to build the kernel.
Linux host CD/DVD drive not found
If you have configured a virtual machine to use the host's CD/DVD
drive, but this does not appear to work, make sure that the current user
has permission to access the corresponding Linux device file
(/dev/hdc or
/dev/scd0 or
/dev/cdrom or similar). On most
distributions, the user must be added to a corresponding group (usually
called cdrom or
cdrw).
Linux host CD/DVD drive not found (older distributions)
On older Linux distributions, if your CD/DVD device has a
different name, VirtualBox may be unable to find it. On older Linux
hosts, VirtualBox performs the following steps to locate your CD/DVD
drives:
VirtualBox examines if the environment variable
VBOX_CDROM is defined (see
below). If so, VirtualBox omits all the following checks.
VirtualBox tests if
/dev/cdrom works.
In addition, VirtualBox checks if any CD/DVD drives are
currently mounted by checking
/etc/mtab.
In addition, VirtualBox checks if any of the entries in
/etc/fstab point to CD/DVD
devices.
In other words, you can try to set VBOX_CDROM to contain a list of
your CD/DVD devices, separated by colons, for example as follows:
export VBOX_CDROM='/dev/cdrom0:/dev/cdrom1'On
modern Linux distributions, VirtualBox uses the hardware abstraction
layer (hal) to locate CD and DVD hardware.
Linux host floppy not found
The previous instructions (for CD and DVD drives) apply
accordingly to floppy disks, except that on older distributions
VirtualBox tests for /dev/fd* devices
by default, and this can be overridden with the
VBOX_FLOPPY environment
variable.
Strange guest IDE error messages when writing to CD/DVD
If the experimental CD/DVD writer support is enabled with an
incorrect VirtualBox, host or guest configuration, it is possible that
any attempt to access the CD/DVD writer fails and simply results in
guest kernel error messages (for Linux guests) or application error
messages (for Windows guests). VirtualBox performs the usual consistency
checks when a VM is powered up (in particular it aborts with an error
message if the device for the CD/DVD writer is not writable by the user
starting the VM), but it cannot detect all misconfigurations. The
necessary host and guest OS configuration is not specific for
VirtualBox, but a few frequent problems are listed here which occurred
in connection with VirtualBox.
Special care must be taken to use the correct device. The
configured host CD/DVD device file name (in most cases
/dev/cdrom) must point to the device that allows
writing to the CD/DVD unit. For CD/DVD writer units connected to a SCSI
controller or to a IDE controller that interfaces to the Linux SCSI
subsystem (common for some SATA controllers), this must refer to the
SCSI device node (e.g. /dev/scd0). Even for IDE
CD/DVD writer units this must refer to the appropriate SCSI CD-ROM
device node (e.g. /dev/scd0) if the
ide-scsi kernel module is loaded. This module is
required for CD/DVD writer support with all Linux 2.4 kernels and some
early 2.6 kernels. Many Linux distributions load this module whenever a
CD/DVD writer is detected in the system, even if the kernel would
support CD/DVD writers without the module. VirtualBox supports the use
of IDE device files (e.g. /dev/hdc), provided the
kernel supports this and the ide-scsi module is not
loaded.
Similar rules (except that within the guest the CD/DVD writer is
always an IDE device) apply to the guest configuration. Since this setup
is very common, it is likely that the default configuration of the guest
works as expected.
VBoxSVC IPC issues
On Linux, VirtualBox makes use of a custom version of Mozilla
XPCOM (cross platform component object model) for inter- and
intra-process communication (IPC). The process
VBoxSVC serves as a communication hub
between different VirtualBox processes and maintains the global
configuration, i.e. the XML database. When starting a VirtualBox
component, the processes VBoxSVC and
VBoxXPCOMIPCD are started
automatically. They are only accessible from the user account they are
running under. VBoxSVC owns the
VirtualBox configuration database which normally resides in
~/.config/VirtualBox, or the appropriate configuration directory for your operating system. While it is running, the
configuration files are locked. Communication between the various
VirtualBox components and VBoxSVC is
performed through a local domain socket residing in
/tmp/.vbox-<username>-ipc. In
case there are communication problems (i.e. a VirtualBox application
cannot communicate with VBoxSVC),
terminate the daemons and remove the local domain socket
directory.
USB not working
If USB is not working on your Linux host, make sure that the
current user is a member of the
vboxusers group.
Please keep in mind that group membership does not take effect immediately
but rather at the next login. If available, the
newgrp command may avoid the need for
logout/login.
PAX/grsec kernels
Linux kernels including the grsec patch (see http://www.grsecurity.net/)
and derivates have to disable PAX_MPROTECT for the VBox binaries to be
able to start a VM. The reason is that VBox has to create executable
code on anonymous memory.
Linux kernel vmalloc pool exhausted
When running a large number of VMs with a lot of RAM on a Linux
system (say 20 VMs with 1 GB of RAM each), additional VMs might fail to
start with a kernel error saying that the vmalloc pool is exhausted and
should be extended. The error message also tells you to specify
vmalloc=256MB in your kernel parameter
list. If adding this parameter to your GRUB or LILO configuration makes
the kernel fail to boot (with a weird error message such as "failed to
mount the root partition"), then you have probably run into a memory
conflict of your kernel and initial RAM disk. This can be solved by
adding the following parameter to your GRUB configuration:
uppermem 524288
Solaris hosts
Cannot start VM, not enough contiguous memory
The ZFS file system is known to use nearly all available RAM as cache if
the default system settings are not changed. This may lead to a heavy
fragmentation of the host memory preventing VirtualBox VMs from being
started. We recommend to limit the ZFS cache by adding a lineset zfs:zfs_arc_max = xxxx
to /etc/system where xxxx bytes is the
amount of memory usable for the ZFS cache.
VM aborts with out of memory errors on Solaris 10 hosts
32-bit Solaris 10 hosts (bug 1225025) require swap space equal to,
or greater than the host's physical memory size. For example, 8 GB
physical memory would require at least 8 GB swap. This can be configured
during a Solaris 10 install by choosing a 'custom install' and changing
the default partitions.
This restriction applies only to 32-bit Solaris hosts, 64-bit
hosts are not affected!
For existing Solaris 10 installs, an additional swap image needs
to be mounted and used as swap. Hence if you have 1 GB swap and 8 GB of
physical memory, you require to add 7 GB more swap. This can be done as
follows:
For ZFS (as root user):
zfs create -V 8gb /_<ZFS volume>_/swap
swap -a /dev/zvol/dsk/_<ZFS volume>_/swap
To mount if after reboot, add the following line to
/etc/vfstab:
/dev/zvol/dsk/_<ZFS volume>_/swap - - swap - no -
Alternatively, you could grow the existing swap using:
zfs set volsize=8G rpool/swap
And reboot the system for the changes to take effect.
For UFS (as root user):
mkfile 7g /path/to/swapfile.img
swap -a /path/to/swapfile.img
To mount it after reboot, add the following line to
/etc/vfstab:
/path/to/swap.img - - swap - no -