VirtualBox

Version 11 (modified by bird, 17 years ago) ( diff )

yasm getcwd fix

Solaris build instructions

The Solaris port of VirtualBox is work in progress and so is this page. The current page is just an edited version of the GNU/Linux one.

Prerequisites

You need:

  • Solaris Nevada build 70 or later. It will probably work with earlier builds and Solaris 10, but we haven't tried that yet.
  • GCC 3.4.3. It will probably work with 3.4.6 or even 4.x.y, but 3.4.3 is the one we've tried and which problems we have work around.
  • as86. This ships with the Solaris builds we're using.
  • bcc (Bruce Evans C Compiler). This ships with the Solaris builds we're using.
  • IASL (Intel ACPI compiler). Doesn't this ship too?
  • xsltproc (libxslt, XML style sheet processor). Ships with the Solaris builds we're using.
  • libxerces (Xerces XML parser; the C++, not the Java version). You'll probably have to build this yourself or see below.
  • libxalan (Xalan XSL library, depends on Xerces; again, the C++, not the Java version). You'll probably have to build this yourself or see below.
  • libIDL. This ships with the Solaris builds we're using.
  • The PATH and LD_LIBRARY_PATH has to include the following directories (replace bin with lib for the LD_LIBRARY_PATH):
    • /usr/sfw/bin - for gcc and related tools.
    • /usr/ccs/bin - for ar and other tools.
    • $QTDIR/bin - for Qt.

The xerces and xalan sources we together with the appropriate kBuild makefiles can be found here: http://virtualbox.org/download/testcase/xerces-and-xalan-vbox-src.tar.bz2 Untar them into the VirtualBox trunk directory.

Building VirtualBox

  1. Change to the root directory of the sources and execute the configure script: ./configure. If it finds everything it needs, it will create a file called 'AutoConfig.kmk' containing paths to the various tools on your system. Also, it will create an environment setup script called env.sh. This step only has to be done once (if something changes in your build tool setup, you might have to repeat it but keep in mind that both output files will be overwritten).
  1. Whenever you want to build VirtualBox, you have to open a shell and source the generated environment setup script 'env.sh', i.e. do
    source ./env.sh
    
  1. To build a release package, type kmk all. This produces the required binaries in out/solaris.x86/release/bin/. (If you want to build a debug version, type kmk BUILD_TYPE=debug.) In case you have more than one CPU core, you could take advantage of our parallel build system by supplying -j3 (number of cores + 1) as an option to kmk.

Running your build

You can run VirtualBox directly from the build target directory (out/solaris.x86/release/bin/). But first of all, you must build and install the VirtualBox kernel module. There is a script src/VBox/HostDrivers/Support/solaris/mod.sh which does this for you. It requires you to either install sudo or edit out the SUDO=sudo bit and run it as root. (If you see an error about missing a 64-bit driver, then you're running a 64-bit kernel. This is something that isn't yet support. Try force Solaris to boot with the 32-bit kernel.)

Next you should start the VirtualBox XPCOM daemon using

cd ./out/solaris.x86/release/bin
LD_LIBRARY_PATH=".:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" ./VBoxSVC &

Finally, you can start one of the frontends, e.g.

LD_LIBRARY_PATH=".:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" ./VirtualBox

Note that the LD_LIBRARY_PATH=".:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH" is required because we have to find our .so files and the output directory is not in the system's library path.

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