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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>
5 <title id="guestadditions">Guest Additions</title>
6
7 <para>The previous chapter covered getting started with VirtualBox and
8 installing operating systems in a virtual machine. For any serious and
9 interactive use, the VirtualBox Guest Additions will make your life much
10 easier by providing closer integration between host and guest and improving
11 the interactive performance of guest systems. This chapter describes the
12 Guest Additions in detail.</para>
13
14 <sect1>
15 <title>Introduction</title>
16
17 <para>As mentioned in <xref linkend="virtintro" />, the Guest Additions
18 are designed to be installed <emphasis>inside</emphasis> a virtual machine
19 after the guest operating system has been installed. They consist of
20 device drivers and system applications that optimize the guest operating
21 system for better performance and usability. Please see <xref
22 linkend="guestossupport" /> for details on what guest operating systems
23 are fully supported with Guest Additions by VirtualBox.</para>
24
25 <para>The VirtualBox Guest Additions for all supported guest operating
26 systems are provided as a single CD-ROM image file which is called
27 <computeroutput>VBoxGuestAdditions.iso</computeroutput>. This image file
28 is located in the installation directory of VirtualBox. To install the
29 Guest Additions for a particular VM, you mount this ISO file in your VM as
30 a virtual CD-ROM and install from there.</para>
31
32 <para>The Guest Additions offer the following features:<glosslist>
33 <glossentry>
34 <glossterm>Mouse pointer integration</glossterm>
35
36 <glossdef>
37 <para>To overcome the limitations for mouse support that were
38 described in <xref linkend="keyb_mouse_normal" />, this provides
39 you with seamless mouse support. You will only have one mouse
40 pointer and pressing the Host key is no longer required to "free"
41 the mouse from being captured by the guest OS. To make this work,
42 a special mouse driver is installed in the guest that communicates
43 with the "real" mouse driver on your host and moves the guest
44 mouse pointer accordingly.</para>
45 </glossdef>
46 </glossentry>
47
48 <glossentry>
49 <glossterm>Shared folders</glossterm>
50
51 <glossdef>
52 <para>These provide an easy way to exchange files between the host
53 and the guest. Much like ordinary Windows network shares, you can
54 tell VirtualBox to treat a certain host directory as a shared
55 folder, and VirtualBox will make it available to the guest
56 operating system as a network share, irrespective of whether guest
57 actually has a network. For details, please refer to <xref
58 linkend="sharedfolders" />.</para>
59 </glossdef>
60 </glossentry>
61
62 <glossentry>
63 <glossterm>Better video support</glossterm>
64
65 <glossdef>
66 <para>While the virtual graphics card which VirtualBox emulates
67 for any guest operating system provides all the basic features,
68 the custom video drivers that are installed with the Guest
69 Additions provide you with extra high and non-standard video modes
70 as well as accelerated video performance.</para>
71
72 <para>In addition, with Windows and recent Linux, Solaris and
73 OpenSolaris guests, if the Guest Additions are installed, you can
74 resize the virtual machine's window, and the video resolution in
75 the guest will be automatically adjusted (as if you had manually
76 entered an arbitrary resolution in the guest's display
77 settings).</para>
78
79 <para>Finally, if the Guest Additions are installed, 3D graphics
80 and 2D video for guest applications can be accelerated; see <xref
81 linkend="guestadd-video" />. </para>
82 </glossdef>
83 </glossentry>
84
85 <glossentry>
86 <glossterm>Seamless windows</glossterm>
87
88 <glossdef>
89 <para>With this feature, the individual windows that are displayed
90 on the desktop of the virtual machine can be mapped on the host's
91 desktop, as if the underlying application was actually running on
92 the host. See <xref linkend="seamlesswindows" /> for
93 details.</para>
94 </glossdef>
95 </glossentry>
96
97 <glossentry>
98 <glossterm>Generic host/guest communication channels</glossterm>
99
100 <glossdef>
101 <para>The Guest Additions enable you to control and monitor guest
102 execution in ways other than those mentioned above. The so-called
103 "guest properties" provide a generic string-based mechanism to
104 exchange data bits between a guest and a host, some of which have
105 special meanings for contolling and monitoring the guest; see
106 <xref linkend="guestadd-guestprops" /> for details. </para>
107
108 <para>Additionally, applications can be started in a guest from
109 the host; see <xref linkend="guestadd-guestcontrol" />. </para>
110 </glossdef>
111 </glossentry>
112
113 <glossentry>
114 <glossterm>Time synchronization</glossterm>
115
116 <glossdef>
117 <para>With the Guest Additions installed, VirtualBox can ensure
118 that the guest's system time is better synchronized with that of
119 the host.</para>
120
121 <para>For various reasons, the time in the guest might run at a
122 slightly different rate than the time on the host. The host could
123 be receiving updates via NTP and its own time might not run
124 linearly. A VM could also be paused, which stops the flow of time
125 in the guest for a shorter or longer period of time. When the wall
126 clock time between the guest and host only differs slightly, the
127 time synchronization service attempts to gradually and smoothly
128 adjust the guest time in small increments to either "catch up" or
129 "lose" time. When the difference is too great (e.g., a VM paused
130 for hours or restored from saved state), the guest time is changed
131 immediately, without a gradual adjustment.</para>
132
133 <para>The Guest Additions will re-synchronize the time regularly.
134 See <xref linkend="changetimesync" /> for how to configure the
135 parameters of the time synchronization mechanism.</para>
136 </glossdef>
137 </glossentry>
138
139 <glossentry>
140 <glossterm>Shared clipboard</glossterm>
141
142 <glossdef>
143 <para>With the Guest Additions installed, the clipboard of the
144 guest operating system can optionally be shared with your host
145 operating system; see <xref linkend="generalsettings" />.</para>
146 </glossdef>
147 </glossentry>
148
149 <glossentry>
150 <glossterm>Automated logons (credentials passing)</glossterm>
151
152 <glossdef>
153 <para>For details, please see <xref linkend="autologon" />.</para>
154 </glossdef>
155 </glossentry>
156 </glosslist></para>
157
158 <para>Each version of VirtualBox, even minor releases, ship with their own
159 version of the Guest Additions. While the interfaces through which the
160 VirtualBox core communicates with the Guest Additions are kept stable so
161 that Guest Additions already installed in a VM should continue to work
162 when VirtualBox is upgraded on the host, for best results, it is
163 recommended to keep the Guest Additions at the same version.</para>
164
165 <para>Starting with VirtualBox 3.1, the Windows and Linux Guest Additions
166 therefore check automatically whether they have to be updated. If the host
167 is running a newer VirtualBox version than the Guest Additions, a
168 notification with further instructions is displayed in the guest.</para>
169
170 <para>To disable this update check for the Guest Additions of a given
171 virtual machine, set the value of its
172 <computeroutput>/VirtualBox/GuestAdd/CheckHostVersion</computeroutput>
173 guest property to <computeroutput>0</computeroutput>; see <xref
174 linkend="guestadd-guestprops" /> for details.</para>
175 </sect1>
176
177 <sect1>
178 <title>Installing and Maintaining Guest Additions</title>
179
180 <para>Guest Additions are available for virtual machines running Windows,
181 Linux, Solaris or OS/2. The following sections describe the specifics of
182 each variant in detail.</para>
183
184 <sect2 id="additions-windows">
185 <title>Guest Additions for Windows</title>
186
187 <para>The VirtualBox Windows Guest Additions are designed to be
188 installed in a virtual machine running a Windows operating system. The
189 following versions of Windows guests are supported:</para>
190
191 <itemizedlist>
192 <listitem>
193 <para>Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 (any service pack)</para>
194 </listitem>
195
196 <listitem>
197 <para>Microsoft Windows 2000 (any service pack)</para>
198 </listitem>
199
200 <listitem>
201 <para>Microsoft Windows XP (any service pack)</para>
202 </listitem>
203
204 <listitem>
205 <para>Microsoft Windows Server 2003 (any service pack)</para>
206 </listitem>
207
208 <listitem>
209 <para>Microsoft Windows Server 2008</para>
210 </listitem>
211
212 <listitem>
213 <para>Microsoft Windows Vista (all editions)</para>
214 </listitem>
215
216 <listitem>
217 <para>Microsoft Windows 7 (all editions)</para>
218 </listitem>
219 </itemizedlist>
220
221 <sect3 id="mountingadditionsiso">
222 <title>Installation</title>
223
224 <para>In the "Devices" menu in the virtual machine's menu bar,
225 VirtualBox has a handy menu item named "Install Guest Additions",
226 which either allows to upgrade already installed Guest Additions (only
227 Windows Guest Additions 4.0 and later) automatically or mounts the
228 Guest Additions ISO file inside your virtual machine to perform a
229 manual update.</para>
230
231 <para>In case of a manual update, a Windows guest should then
232 automatically start the Guest Additions installer, which allows to
233 install the Guest Additions into your Windows guest.</para>
234
235 <note>
236 <para>For Direct 3D acceleration to work in a Windows Guest, you
237 must install the Guest Additions in "Safe Mode"; see <xref
238 linkend="KnownIssues" /> for details.</para>
239 </note>
240
241 <para>If you prefer to mount the additions manually, you can perform
242 the following steps:</para>
243
244 <orderedlist>
245 <listitem>
246 <para>Start the virtual machine in which you have installed
247 Windows.</para>
248 </listitem>
249
250 <listitem>
251 <para>Select "Mount CD/DVD-ROM" from the "Devices" menu in the
252 virtual machine's menu bar and then "CD/DVD-ROM image". This
253 brings up the Virtual Media Manager described in <xref
254 linkend="vdis" />.</para>
255 </listitem>
256
257 <listitem>
258 <para>In the Virtual Media Manager, press the "Add" button and
259 browse your host file system for the
260 <computeroutput>VBoxGuestAdditions.iso</computeroutput>
261 file:<itemizedlist>
262 <listitem>
263 <para>On a Windows host, you can find this file in the
264 VirtualBox installation directory (usually under
265 <computeroutput>C:\Program
266 files\Oracle\VirtualBox</computeroutput> ).</para>
267 </listitem>
268
269 <listitem>
270 <para>On Mac OS X hosts, you can find this file in the
271 application bundle of VirtualBox. (Right click on the
272 VirtualBox icon in Finder and choose <emphasis>Show Package
273 Contents</emphasis>. There it is located in the
274 <computeroutput>Contents/MacOS</computeroutput>
275 folder.)</para>
276 </listitem>
277
278 <listitem>
279 <para>On a Linux host, you can find this file in the
280 <computeroutput>additions</computeroutput> folder under
281 where you installed VirtualBox (normally
282 <computeroutput>/opt/VirtualBox/</computeroutput>).</para>
283 </listitem>
284
285 <listitem>
286 <para>On Solaris hosts, you can find this file in the
287 <computeroutput>additions</computeroutput> folder under
288 where you installed VirtualBox (normally
289 <computeroutput>/opt/VirtualBox</computeroutput>).</para>
290 </listitem>
291 </itemizedlist></para>
292 </listitem>
293
294 <listitem>
295 <para>Back in the Virtual Media Manager, select that ISO file and
296 press the "Select" button. This will mount the ISO file and
297 present it to your Windows guest as a CD-ROM.</para>
298 </listitem>
299 </orderedlist>
300
301 <para>Unless you have the Autostart feature disabled in your Windows
302 guest, Windows will now autostart the VirtualBox Guest Additions
303 installation program from the Additions ISO. If the Autostart feature
304 has been turned off, choose
305 <computeroutput>VBoxWindowsAdditions.exe</computeroutput> from the
306 CD/DVD drive inside the guest to start the installer.</para>
307
308 <para>The installer will add several device drivers to the Windows
309 driver database and then invoke the hardware detection wizard.</para>
310
311 <para>Depending on your configuration, it might display warnings that
312 the drivers are not digitally signed. You must confirm these in order
313 to continue the installation and properly install the
314 Additions.</para>
315
316 <para>After installation, reboot your guest operating system to
317 activate the Additions.</para>
318 </sect3>
319
320 <sect3>
321 <title>Updating the Windows Guest Additions</title>
322
323 <para>Windows Guest Additions can be updated by running the
324 installation program again, as previously described. This will then
325 replace the previous Additions drivers with updated versions.</para>
326
327 <para>Alternatively, you may also open the Windows Device Manager and
328 select "Update driver..." for two devices:</para>
329
330 <orderedlist>
331 <listitem>
332 <para>the VirtualBox Graphics Adapter and</para>
333 </listitem>
334
335 <listitem>
336 <para>the VirtualBox System Device.</para>
337 </listitem>
338 </orderedlist>
339
340 <para>For each, choose to provide your own driver and use "Have Disk"
341 to point the wizard to the CD-ROM drive with the Guest
342 Additions.</para>
343 </sect3>
344
345 <sect3>
346 <title>Unattended Installation</title>
347
348 <para>In order to allow for completely unattended guest installations,
349 you can specify a command line parameter to the install
350 launcher:</para>
351
352 <screen>VBoxWindowsAdditions.exe /S</screen>
353
354 <para>This automatically installs the right files and drivers for the
355 corresponding platform (32- or 64-bit).</para>
356
357 <note>
358 <para>Because of the drivers are not yet WHQL certified, you still
359 might get some driver installation popups, depending on the Windows
360 guest version.</para>
361 </note>
362
363 <para>For more options regarding unattended guest installations,
364 consult the command line help by using the command:</para>
365
366 <screen>VBoxWindowsAdditions.exe /?</screen>
367 </sect3>
368
369 <sect3 id="windows-guest-file-extraction">
370 <title>Manual file extraction</title>
371
372 <para>If you would like to install the files and drivers manually, you
373 can extract the files from the Windows Guest Additions setup by
374 typing:</para>
375
376 <screen>VBoxWindowsAdditions.exe /extract</screen>
377
378 <para>To explicitly extract the Windows Guest Additions for another
379 platform than the current running one (e.g. 64-bit files on a 32-bit
380 system), you have to execute the appropriate platform installer
381 (<computeroutput>VBoxWindowsAdditions-x86.exe</computeroutput> or
382 <computeroutput>VBoxWindowsAdditions-amd64.exe</computeroutput>) with
383 the <computeroutput>/extract</computeroutput> parameter.</para>
384 </sect3>
385
386 <sect3 id="vista_networking">
387 <title>Windows Vista networking</title>
388
389 <para>Earlier versions of VirtualBox provided a virtual AMD PCNet
390 Ethernet card to guests by default. Since Microsoft no longer ships a
391 driver for that card with Windows (starting with Windows Vista), if
392 you select Windows Vista or newer as the guest operating system for a
393 virtual machine, VirtualBox will instead present a virtual Intel
394 network controller to the guest (see <xref
395 linkend="nichardware" />).</para>
396
397 <para>However, if for any reason you have a 32-bit Windows Vista VM
398 that is configured to use an AMD PCNet card, you will have no
399 networking in the guest initially.</para>
400
401 <para>As a convenience, VirtualBox ships with a 32-bit driver for the
402 AMD PCNet card, which comes with the Windows Guest Additions. If you
403 install these in a 32-bit Vista guest, the driver will automatically
404 be installed as well. If, for some reason, you would like to install
405 the driver manually, you can extract the required files from the
406 Windows Guest Additions setup. Please consult <xref
407 linkend="windows-guest-file-extraction" /> on how to achieve this. You
408 will then find the AMD PCNet driver files in the
409 <computeroutput>x86\Network\AMD\netamd.inf</computeroutput>
410 subdirectory of the default install directory.</para>
411
412 <para>Alternatively, change the Vista guest's VM settings to use an
413 Intel networking card instead of the default AMD PCNet card; see <xref
414 linkend="settings-network" /> for details.</para>
415
416 <para>Unfortunately, there is no 64-bit driver available for the AMD
417 PCNet card. So for 64-bit Windows VMs, you should always use the Intel
418 networking devices.</para>
419 </sect3>
420 </sect2>
421
422 <sect2>
423 <title>Guest Additions for Linux</title>
424
425 <para>Like the Windows Guest Additions, the VirtualBox Guest Additions
426 for Linux take the form of a set of device drivers and system
427 applications which may be installed in the guest operating
428 system.</para>
429
430 <para>The following Linux distributions are officially supported:</para>
431
432 <itemizedlist>
433 <listitem>
434 <para>Fedora as of Fedora Core 4;</para>
435 </listitem>
436
437 <listitem>
438 <para>Redhat Enterprise Linux as of version 3;</para>
439 </listitem>
440
441 <listitem>
442 <para>SUSE and openSUSE Linux as of version 9;</para>
443 </listitem>
444
445 <listitem>
446 <para>Ubuntu as of version 5.10.</para>
447 </listitem>
448 </itemizedlist>
449
450 <para>Many other distributions are known to work with the Guest
451 Additions.</para>
452
453 <para>The version of the Linux kernel supplied by default in SUSE and
454 openSUSE 10.2, Ubuntu 6.10 (all versions) and Ubuntu 6.06 (server
455 edition) contains a bug which can cause it to crash during startup when
456 it is run in a virtual machine. The Guest Additions work in those
457 distributions.</para>
458
459 <para>Note that some Linux distributions already come with VirtualBox
460 Guest Additions or a part thereof. You may keep the distribution's
461 version of the Guest Additions but often, these are not up to date and
462 limited in functionality. Therefore, you can choose the install the
463 Guest Additions that come with VirtualBox, overriding the already
464 installed version. The VirtualBox Linux Guest Additions installer tries
465 to detect existing installation and replace them but depending on how
466 the distribution integrates the Guest Additions, they may require some
467 manual interaction. It is highly recommended to take a snapshot of the
468 virtual machine before overriding the installation.</para>
469
470 <sect3>
471 <title>Installing the Linux Guest Additions</title>
472
473 <para>The VirtualBox Guest Additions for Linux are provided on the
474 same ISO CD-ROM as the Additions for Windows described above. They
475 also come with an installation program guiding you through the setup
476 process, although, due to the significant differences between Linux
477 distributions, installation may be slightly more complex.</para>
478
479 <para>Installation generally involves the following steps:</para>
480
481 <orderedlist>
482 <listitem>
483 <para>Before installing the Guest Additions, you will have to
484 prepare your guest system for building external kernel modules.
485 This works similarly as described in <xref
486 linkend="externalkernelmodules" />, except that this step must now
487 be performed in your Linux <emphasis>guest</emphasis> instead of
488 on a Linux host system, as described there.</para>
489
490 <para>Again, as with Linux hosts, we recommend using DKMS for
491 Linux guests as well. If it is not installed, use this command for
492 Ubuntu/Debian systems:<screen>sudo apt-get install dkms</screen>
493 or for Fedora systems: <screen>yum install dkms</screen></para>
494
495 <para>Make sure to nstall DKMS <emphasis>before</emphasis>
496 installing the Linux Guest Additions.</para>
497 </listitem>
498
499 <listitem>
500 <para>Mount the
501 <computeroutput>VBoxGuestAdditions.iso</computeroutput> file as
502 your Linux guest's virtual CD-ROM drive, exactly the same way as
503 described for a Windows guest in <xref
504 linkend="mountingadditionsiso" />.</para>
505 </listitem>
506
507 <listitem>
508 <para>Change to the directory where your CD-ROM drive is mounted
509 and execute as root:</para>
510
511 <screen>sh ./VBoxLinuxAdditions-x86.run</screen>
512
513 <para>In a 64-bit Linux guest, use
514 <computeroutput>VBoxLinuxAdditions-amd64.run</computeroutput>
515 instead.</para>
516 </listitem>
517 </orderedlist>
518
519 <para>For your convenience, the following step-by-step instructions
520 have been verified to work for freshly installed copies of the most
521 popular Linux distributions. After these preparational steps, you can
522 execute the VirtualBox Guest Additions installer as described
523 above.</para>
524
525 <sect4>
526 <title>Ubuntu 10.04 ("Lucid Lynx")</title>
527
528 <para><orderedlist>
529 <listitem>
530 <para>In order to update your system to the latest version of
531 the packets, open a terminal and as root, execute <screen>apt-get update</screen>
532 followed by <screen>apt-get upgrade</screen></para>
533 </listitem>
534
535 <listitem>
536 <para>Install DKMS using <screen>apt-get install dkms</screen></para>
537 </listitem>
538
539 <listitem>
540 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
541 updates and then proceed as described above.</para>
542 </listitem>
543 </orderedlist></para>
544 </sect4>
545
546 <sect4>
547 <title>Fedora 13 ("Goddard")</title>
548
549 <para><orderedlist>
550 <listitem>
551 <para>In order to update your system to the latest version of
552 the packets, open a terminal and as root, execute <screen>yum update</screen></para>
553 </listitem>
554
555 <listitem>
556 <para>Install DKMS and the GNU C compiler using <screen>yum install dkms</screen>
557 followed by <screen>yum install gcc</screen></para>
558 </listitem>
559
560 <listitem>
561 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
562 updates and then proceed as described above.</para>
563 </listitem>
564 </orderedlist></para>
565 </sect4>
566
567 <sect4>
568 <title>openSUSE 11.2</title>
569
570 <para><orderedlist>
571 <listitem>
572 <para>In order to update your system to the latest version of
573 the packets, open a terminal and as root, execute <screen>zypper update</screen></para>
574 </listitem>
575
576 <listitem>
577 <para>Install the make tool and the GNU C compiler using
578 <screen>zypper install make gcc</screen></para>
579 </listitem>
580
581 <listitem>
582 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
583 updates.</para>
584 </listitem>
585
586 <listitem>
587 <para>Find out which kernel you are running using <screen>uname -a</screen>
588 An example would be
589 <computeroutput>2.6.31.12-0.2-default</computeroutput> which
590 refers to the "default" kernel. Then install the correct
591 kernel development package. In the above example this would be
592 <screen>zypper install kernel-default-devel</screen></para>
593 </listitem>
594
595 <listitem>
596 <para>Make sure that your running kernel
597 (<computeroutput>uname -a</computeroutput>) and the kernel
598 packages you have installed (<computeroutput>rpm -qa
599 kernel\*</computeroutput>) have the exact same version number.
600 Proceed with the installation as described above.</para>
601 </listitem>
602 </orderedlist></para>
603 </sect4>
604
605 <sect4>
606 <title>SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED) 11</title>
607
608 <para><orderedlist>
609 <listitem>
610 <para>In order to update your system to the latest version of
611 the packets, open a terminal and as root, execute <screen>zypper update</screen></para>
612 </listitem>
613
614 <listitem>
615 <para>Install the GNU C compiler using <screen>zypper install gcc</screen></para>
616 </listitem>
617
618 <listitem>
619 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
620 updates.</para>
621 </listitem>
622
623 <listitem>
624 <para>Find out which kernel you are running using <screen>uname -a</screen>
625 An example would be
626 <computeroutput>2.6.27.19-5.1-default</computeroutput> which
627 refers to the "default" kernel. Then install the correct
628 kernel development package. In the above example this would be
629 <screen>zypper install kernel-syms kernel-source</screen></para>
630 </listitem>
631
632 <listitem>
633 <para>Make sure that your running kernel
634 (<computeroutput>uname -a</computeroutput>) and the kernel
635 packages you have installed (<computeroutput>rpm -qa
636 kernel\*</computeroutput>) have the exact same version number.
637 Proceed with the installation as described above.</para>
638 </listitem>
639 </orderedlist></para>
640 </sect4>
641
642 <sect4>
643 <title>Mandrake 2010</title>
644
645 <para><orderedlist>
646 <listitem>
647 <para>Mandrake ships with the VirtualBox Guest Additions which
648 will be replaced if you follow these steps.</para>
649 </listitem>
650
651 <listitem>
652 <para>In order to update your system to the latest version of
653 the packets, open a terminal and as root and execute <screen>urpmi --auto-update</screen></para>
654 </listitem>
655
656 <listitem>
657 <para>Reboot your system in order to activate the
658 updates.</para>
659 </listitem>
660
661 <listitem>
662 <para>Install DKMS using <screen>urpmi dkms</screen> and make
663 sure the choose the correct kernel-devel package when asked by
664 the installer (use <computeroutput>uname -a</computeroutput>
665 to compare).</para>
666 </listitem>
667 </orderedlist></para>
668 </sect4>
669
670 <sect4>
671 <title>CentOS 5.5, Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5.5 and Oracle
672 Enterprise Linux 5.5</title>
673
674 <para><orderedlist>
675 <listitem>
676 <para>Add <computeroutput>divider=10</computeroutput> to the
677 kernel boot options in
678 <computeroutput>/etc/grub.conf</computeroutput> to reduce the
679 idle CPU load.</para>
680 </listitem>
681
682 <listitem>
683 <para>To update your system to the latest version of the
684 packets, open a terminal and as root, execute <screen>yum update</screen></para>
685 </listitem>
686
687 <listitem>
688 <para>Install the GNU C compiler and the kernel development
689 packages using <screen>yum install gcc</screen> followed by
690 <screen>yum install kernel-devel</screen></para>
691 </listitem>
692
693 <listitem>
694 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
695 updates and then proceed as described above.</para>
696 </listitem>
697
698 <listitem>
699 <para>Note that OpenGL support is not available unless you
700 update to a later Linux kernel.</para>
701
702 <para>In case Oracle Enterprise Linux does not find the
703 required packages, you either have to install them from a
704 different source (e.g. DVD) or use Oracle's public Yum server
705 located at <ulink
706 url="http://public-yum.oracle.com/">http://public-yum.oracle.com</ulink>.</para>
707 </listitem>
708 </orderedlist></para>
709 </sect4>
710
711 <sect4>
712 <title>Debian 5 ("Lenny")</title>
713
714 <para><orderedlist>
715 <listitem>
716 <para>In order to update your system to the latest version of
717 the packets, open a terminal and as root, execute <screen>apt-get update</screen>
718 followed by <screen>apt-get upgrade</screen></para>
719 </listitem>
720
721 <listitem>
722 <para>Install the make tool and the GNU C compiler using
723 <screen>apt-get install make gcc</screen></para>
724 </listitem>
725
726 <listitem>
727 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
728 updates.</para>
729 </listitem>
730
731 <listitem>
732 <para>Determine the exact version of your kernel using
733 <computeroutput>uname -a</computeroutput> and install the
734 correct version of the linux-headers package, e.g. using
735 <screen>apt-get install linux-headers-2.6.26-2-686</screen></para>
736
737 <para>Note that OpenGL support is not available unless you
738 update to a later Linux kernel.</para>
739 </listitem>
740 </orderedlist></para>
741 </sect4>
742 </sect3>
743
744 <sect3>
745 <title>Manual setup of selected guest services</title>
746
747 <para>The VirtualBox Guest Additions contain several different
748 drivers. If for any reason you do not wish to set them all up, you can
749 install the Guest Additions using the following command:</para>
750
751 <screen> sh ./VBoxLinuxAdditions-x86.run no_setup</screen>
752
753 <para>(substituting <computeroutput>VBoxLinuxAdditions-amd64
754 </computeroutput> on a 64-bit guest).</para>
755
756 <para>After this, you will need to at least compile the kernel modules
757 by running the command <screen> /usr/lib/VBoxGuestAdditions/vboxadd setup</screen>
758 as root (you will need to replace <emphasis>lib</emphasis> by
759 <emphasis>lib64</emphasis> on some 64bit guests), and on older guests
760 without the udev service you will need to add the
761 <emphasis>vboxadd</emphasis> service to the default runlevel to ensure
762 that the modules get loaded.</para>
763
764 <para>To setup the time synchronization service, run the command
765 <screen> /usr/lib/VBoxGuestAdditions/vboxadd-service setup</screen>
766 and add the service vboxadd-service to the default runlevel. To set up
767 the X11 and OpenGL part of the Guest Additions, run the command
768 <screen> /usr/lib/VBoxGuestAdditions/vboxadd-x11 setup</screen> (you
769 do not need to enable any services for this).</para>
770
771 <para>To recompile the guest kernel modules, use this command:
772 <screen> /usr/lib/VBoxGuestAdditions/vboxadd setup</screen> After
773 compilation you should reboot your guest to ensure that the new
774 modules are actually used.</para>
775 </sect3>
776
777 <sect3>
778 <title>Video acceleration and high resolution graphics modes</title>
779
780 <para>In Linux guests, VirtualBox video acceleration is available
781 through the X Window System. Typically, in today's Linux
782 distributions, this will be the X.Org server. During the installation
783 process, X will be set up to use the VirtualBox video driver shipped
784 with the Guest Additions.</para>
785
786 <para>For Linux and Solaris guests, the X.org server version 1.3 or
787 later is required for automatic resizing (the feature has been
788 disabled on Fedora 9 guests due to a bug in the X server they supply).
789 The server version can be checked with <computeroutput>Xorg
790 -version</computeroutput>.</para>
791
792 <para>You can also send video mode hints using the
793 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> tool.</para>
794
795 <para>If you are only using recent Linux guests systems, you can skip
796 the rest of this section. On older guest systems, whatever graphics
797 modes were set up before the installation will be used. If these modes
798 do not suit your requirements, you can change your setup by editing
799 the configuration file of the X server, usually found in
800 <computeroutput>/etc/X11/xorg.conf</computeroutput>.</para>
801
802 <para>VirtualBox can use any default X graphics mode which fits into
803 the virtual video memory allocated to the virtual machine, as
804 described in <xref linkend="generalsettings" />. You can also add your
805 own modes to the X server configuration file. You simply need to add
806 them to the "Modes" list in the "Display" subsection of the "Screen"
807 section. For example, the section shown here has a custom 2048x800
808 resolution mode added:</para>
809
810 <screen>Section "Screen"
811 Identifier "Default Screen"
812 Device "VirtualBox graphics card"
813 Monitor "Generic Monitor"
814 DefaultDepth 24
815 SubSection "Display"
816 Depth 24
817 Modes "2048x800" "800x600" "640x480"
818 EndSubSection
819EndSection</screen>
820 </sect3>
821
822 <sect3>
823 <title>Updating the Linux Guest Additions</title>
824
825 <para>The Guest Additions can simply be updated by going through the
826 installation procedure again with an updated CD-ROM image. This will
827 replace the drivers with updated versions. You should reboot after
828 updating the Guest Additions.</para>
829 </sect3>
830
831 <sect3>
832 <title>Uninstalling the Linux Guest Additions</title>
833
834 <para>If you have a version of the Guest Additions installed on your
835 virtual machine and wish to remove it without installing new ones, you
836 can do so by inserting the Guest Additions CD image into the virtual
837 CD-ROM drive as described above and running the installer for the
838 current Guest Additions with the "uninstall" parameter from the path
839 that the CD image is mounted on in the guest: <screen>sh ./VBoxLinuxAdditions-x86.run uninstall</screen></para>
840
841 <para>With a 64-bit guest, use
842 <computeroutput>VBoxLinuxAdditions-amd64</computeroutput> instead.
843 While this will normally work without issues, you may need to do some
844 manual cleanup of the guest (particularly of the XFree86Config or
845 xorg.conf file) in some cases, particularly if the Additions version
846 installed or the guest operating system were very old, or if you made
847 your own changes to the Guest Additions setup after you installed
848 them.</para>
849
850 <para>Starting with version 3.1.0, you can uninstall the Additions by
851 invoking <screen>/opt/VBoxGuestAdditions-$VBOX_VERSION_STRING/uninstall.sh</screen>Please
852 replace
853 <computeroutput>/opt/VBoxGuestAdditions-$VBOX_VERSION_STRING</computeroutput>
854 with the correct Guest Additions installation directory.</para>
855 </sect3>
856 </sect2>
857
858 <sect2>
859 <title>Guest Additions for Solaris</title>
860
861 <para>Like the Windows Guest Additions, the VirtualBox Guest Additions
862 for Solaris take the form of a set of device drivers and system
863 applications which may be installed in the guest operating
864 system.</para>
865
866 <para>The following Solaris distributions are officially
867 supported:</para>
868
869 <itemizedlist>
870 <listitem>
871 <para>OpenSolaris Nevada (Build 82 and higher; this includes
872 OpenSolaris 2008.05, 2008.11 and 2009.06);</para>
873 </listitem>
874
875 <listitem>
876 <para>OpenSolaris Indiana (Developer Preview 2 and higher);</para>
877 </listitem>
878
879 <listitem>
880 <para>Solaris 10 (u5 and higher).</para>
881 </listitem>
882 </itemizedlist>
883
884 <para>Other distributions may work if they are based on comparable
885 software releases.</para>
886
887 <sect3>
888 <title>Installing the Solaris Guest Additions</title>
889
890 <para>The VirtualBox Guest Additions for Solaris are provided on the
891 same ISO CD-ROM as the Additions for Windows and Linux described
892 above. They also come with an installation program guiding you through
893 the setup process.</para>
894
895 <para>Installation involves the following steps:</para>
896
897 <orderedlist>
898 <listitem>
899 <para>Mount the
900 <computeroutput>VBoxGuestAdditions.iso</computeroutput> file as
901 your Solaris guest's virtual CD-ROM drive, exactly the same way as
902 described for a Windows guest in <xref
903 linkend="mountingadditionsiso" />.</para>
904
905 <para>If in case the CD-ROM drive on the guest doesn't get mounted
906 (observed on some versions of Solaris 10), execute as root:</para>
907
908 <screen>svcadm restart volfs</screen>
909 </listitem>
910
911 <listitem>
912 <para>Change to the directory where your CD-ROM drive is mounted
913 and execute as root:</para>
914
915 <screen>pkgadd -G -d ./VBoxSolarisAdditions.pkg</screen>
916 </listitem>
917
918 <listitem>
919 <para>Choose "1" and confirm installation of the Guest Additions
920 package. After the installation is complete, re-login to X server
921 on your guest to activate the X11 Guest Additions.</para>
922 </listitem>
923 </orderedlist>
924 </sect3>
925
926 <sect3>
927 <title>Uninstalling the Solaris Guest Additions</title>
928
929 <para>The Solaris Guest Additions can be safely removed by removing
930 the package from the guest. Open a root terminal session and
931 execute:</para>
932
933 <para><screen>pkgrm SUNWvboxguest</screen></para>
934 </sect3>
935
936 <sect3>
937 <title>Updating the Solaris Guest Additions</title>
938
939 <para>The Guest Additions should be updated by first uninstalling the
940 existing Guest Additions and then installing the new ones. Attempting
941 to install new Guest Additions without removing the existing ones is
942 not possible.</para>
943 </sect3>
944 </sect2>
945
946 <sect2>
947 <title>Guest Additions for OS/2</title>
948
949 <para>VirtualBox also ships with a set of drivers that improve running
950 OS/2 in a virtual machine. Due to restrictions of OS/2 itself, this
951 variant of the Guest Additions has a limited feature set; see <xref
952 linkend="KnownIssues" /> for details.</para>
953
954 <para>The OS/2 Guest Additions are provided on the same ISO CD-ROM as
955 those for the other platforms. As a result, mount the ISO in OS/2 as
956 described previously. The OS/2 Guest Additions are located in the
957 directory <computeroutput>\32bit\OS2</computeroutput>.</para>
958
959 <para>As we do not provide an automatic installer at this time, please
960 refer to the <computeroutput>readme.txt</computeroutput> file in that
961 directory, which describes how to install the OS/2 Guest Additions
962 manually.</para>
963 </sect2>
964 </sect1>
965
966 <sect1 id="sharedfolders">
967 <title>Shared folders</title>
968
969 <para>With the "shared folders" feature of VirtualBox, you can access
970 files of your host system from within the guest system. This is similar
971 how you would use network shares in Windows networks -- except that shared
972 folders do not need require networking, only the Guest Additions. Shared
973 Folders are supported with Windows (2000 or newer), Linux and Solaris
974 guests.</para>
975
976 <para>Shared folders must physically reside on the
977 <emphasis>host</emphasis> and are then shared with the guest, which uses a
978 special file system driver in the Guest Addition to talk to the host. For
979 Windows guests, shared folders are implemented as a pseudo-network
980 redirector; for Linux and Solaris guests, the Guest Additions provide a
981 virtual file system.</para>
982
983 <para>To share a host folder with a virtual machine in VirtualBox, you
984 must specify the path of that folder and choose for it a "share name" that
985 the guest can use to access it. Hence, first create the shared folder on
986 the host; then, within the guest, connect to it.</para>
987
988 <para>There are several ways in which shared folders can be set up for a
989 particular virtual machine:<itemizedlist>
990 <listitem>
991 <para>In the window of a running VM, you can select "Shared folders"
992 from the "Devices" menu, or click on the folder icon on the status
993 bar in the bottom right corner.</para>
994 </listitem>
995
996 <listitem>
997 <para>If a VM is not currently running, you can configure shared
998 folders in each virtual machine's "Settings" dialog.</para>
999 </listitem>
1000
1001 <listitem>
1002 <para>From the command line, you can create shared folders using
1003 VBoxManage, as follows: <screen>VBoxManage sharedfolder add "VM name" --name "sharename" --hostpath "C:\test"</screen></para>
1004
1005 <para>See <xref linkend="vboxmanage-sharedfolder" /> for
1006 details.</para>
1007 </listitem>
1008 </itemizedlist></para>
1009
1010 <para>There are two types of shares:</para>
1011
1012 <orderedlist>
1013 <listitem>
1014 <para>VM shares which are only available to the VM for which they have
1015 been defined;</para>
1016 </listitem>
1017
1018 <listitem>
1019 <para>transient VM shares, which can be added and removed at runtime
1020 and do not persist after a VM has stopped; for these, add the
1021 <computeroutput>--transient</computeroutput> option to the above
1022 command line.</para>
1023 </listitem>
1024 </orderedlist>
1025
1026 <para>Shared folders have read/write access to the files at the host path
1027 by default. To restrict the guest to have read-only access, create a
1028 read-only shared folder. This can either be achieved using the GUI or by
1029 appending the parameter <computeroutput>--readonly</computeroutput> when
1030 creating the shared folder with VBoxManage.</para>
1031
1032 <sect2 id="sf_mount_manual">
1033 <title>Manual mounting</title>
1034
1035 <para>You can mount the shared folder from inside a VM the same way as
1036 you would mount an ordinary network share:</para>
1037
1038 <para><itemizedlist>
1039 <listitem>
1040 <para>In a Windows guest, shared folders are browseable and
1041 therefore visible in Windows Explorer. So, to attach the host's
1042 shared folder to your Windows guest, open Windows Explorer and
1043 look for it under "My Networking Places" -&gt; "Entire Network"
1044 -&gt; "VirtualBox Shared Folders". By right-clicking on a shared
1045 folder and selecting "Map network drive" from the menu that pops
1046 up, you can assign a drive letter to that shared folder.</para>
1047
1048 <para>Alternatively, on the Windows command line, use the
1049 following:</para>
1050
1051 <screen>net use x: \\vboxsvr\sharename</screen>
1052
1053 <para>While <computeroutput>vboxsvr</computeroutput> is a fixed
1054 name (note that <computeroutput>vboxsrv</computeroutput> would
1055 also work), replace "x:" with the drive letter that you want to
1056 use for the share, and <computeroutput>sharename</computeroutput>
1057 with the share name specified with
1058 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>.</para>
1059 </listitem>
1060
1061 <listitem>
1062 <para>In a Linux guest, use the following command:</para>
1063
1064 <screen>mount -t vboxsf [-o OPTIONS] sharename mountpoint</screen>
1065
1066 <para>To mount a shared folder during boot, add the following
1067 entry to /etc/fstab:</para>
1068
1069 <screen>sharename mountpoint vboxsf defaults 0 0</screen>
1070 </listitem>
1071
1072 <listitem>
1073 <para>In a Solaris guest, use the following command:</para>
1074
1075 <screen>mount -F vboxfs [-o OPTIONS] sharename mountpoint</screen>
1076
1077 <para>Replace <computeroutput>sharename</computeroutput> (use
1078 lowercase) with the share name specified with
1079 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> or the GUI, and
1080 <computeroutput>mountpoint</computeroutput> with the path where
1081 you want the share to be mounted on the guest (e.g.
1082 <computeroutput>/mnt/share</computeroutput>). The usual mount
1083 rules apply, that is, create this directory first if it does not
1084 exist yet.</para>
1085
1086 <para>Here is an example of mounting the shared folder for the
1087 user "jack" on OpenSolaris:</para>
1088
1089 <screen>$ id
1090uid=5000(jack) gid=1(other)
1091$ mkdir /export/home/jack/mount
1092$ pfexec mount -F vboxfs -o uid=5000,gid=1 jackshare /export/home/jack/mount
1093$ cd ~/mount
1094$ ls
1095sharedfile1.mp3 sharedfile2.txt
1096$</screen>
1097
1098 <para>Beyond the standard options supplied by the
1099 <computeroutput>mount</computeroutput> command, the following are
1100 available:</para>
1101
1102 <screen>iocharset CHARSET</screen>
1103
1104 <para>to set the character set used for I/O operations (utf8 by
1105 default) and</para>
1106
1107 <screen>convertcp CHARSET</screen>
1108
1109 <para>to specify the character set used for the shared folder name
1110 (utf8 by default).</para>
1111
1112 <para>The generic mount options (documented in the mount manual
1113 page) apply also. Especially useful are the options
1114 <computeroutput>uid</computeroutput>,
1115 <computeroutput>gid</computeroutput> and
1116 <computeroutput>mode</computeroutput>, as they allow access by
1117 normal users (in read/write mode, depending on the settings) even
1118 if root has mounted the filesystem.</para>
1119 </listitem>
1120 </itemizedlist></para>
1121 </sect2>
1122
1123 <sect2 id="sf_mount_auto">
1124 <title>Automatic mounting</title>
1125
1126 <para>Starting with version 4.0, VirtualBox can mount shared folders
1127 automatically, at your option. If automatic mounting is enabled for a
1128 specific shared folder, the Guest Additions will automatically mount
1129 that folder as soon as a user logs into the guest OS. The details depend
1130 on the guest OS type:<itemizedlist>
1131 <listitem>
1132 <para>With Windows guests, any auto-mounted shared folder will
1133 receive its own drive letter (e.g.
1134 <computeroutput>E:</computeroutput>) depending on the free drive
1135 letters remaining in the guest. </para>
1136
1137 <para>If there no free drive letters left, auto-mounting will
1138 fail; as a result, the number of auto-mounted shared folders is
1139 typically limited to 22 or less with Windows guests.</para>
1140 </listitem>
1141
1142 <listitem>
1143 <para>With Linux and Solaris guests, auto-mounted shared folders
1144 are mounted into the <computeroutput>/media</computeroutput>
1145 directory, along with the prefix
1146 <computeroutput>sf_</computeroutput>. For example, the shared
1147 folder <computeroutput>myfiles</computeroutput> would be mounted
1148 to <computeroutput>/media/sf_myfiles</computeroutput> on Linux and
1149 <computeroutput>/mnt/sf_myfiles</computeroutput> on
1150 Solaris.</para>
1151
1152 <para>The guest property
1153 <computeroutput>/VirtualBox/GuestAdd/SharedFolders/MountPrefix</computeroutput>
1154 determines the prefix that is used. Change that guest property to
1155 a value other than "sf" to change that prefix; see <xref
1156 linkend="guestadd-guestprops" /> for details.<note>
1157 <para>Read/write access to auto-mounted shared folders is only
1158 granted to the user group
1159 <computeroutput>vboxsf</computeroutput>, which is created by
1160 the VirtualBox Guest Additions installer. You must therefore
1161 add user accounts to that group for a user to have read/write
1162 access. Other users are granted read-only access, even if the
1163 shared folder in question has been defined as
1164 read/write.</para>
1165 </note></para>
1166 </listitem>
1167
1168 <listitem>
1169 <para>Solaris guests behave like Linux guests except that
1170 <computeroutput>/mnt</computeroutput> is used for mounting the
1171 shared folders instead of
1172 <computeroutput>/media</computeroutput>.</para>
1173 </listitem>
1174 </itemizedlist></para>
1175
1176 <para>To have any changes to auto-mounted shared folders applied while a
1177 VM is running, the guest OS needs to be rebooted. (This applies only to
1178 auto-mounted shared folders, not the ones which are mounted
1179 manually.)</para>
1180 </sect2>
1181 </sect1>
1182
1183 <sect1 id="guestadd-video">
1184 <title>Hardware-accelerated graphics</title>
1185
1186 <sect2 id="guestadd-3d">
1187 <title>Hardware 3D acceleration (OpenGL and Direct3D 8/9)</title>
1188
1189 <para>The VirtualBox Guest Additions contain experimental hardware 3D
1190 support for Windows, Linux and Solaris guests.<footnote>
1191 <para>OpenGL support for Windows guests was added with VirtualBox
1192 2.1; support for Linux and Solaris followed with VirtualBox 2.2.
1193 With VirtualBox 3.0, Direct3D 8/9 support was added for Windows
1194 guests. OpenGL 2.0 is now supported as well.</para>
1195 </footnote></para>
1196
1197 <para>With this feature, if an application inside your virtual machine
1198 uses 3D features through the OpenGL or Direct3D 8/9 programming
1199 interfaces, instead of emulating them in software (which would be slow),
1200 VirtualBox will attempt to use your host's 3D hardware. This works for
1201 all supported host platforms (Windows, Mac, Linux, Solaris), provided
1202 that your host operating system can make use of your accelerated 3D
1203 hardware in the first place.</para>
1204
1205 <para>The 3D acceleration currently has the following
1206 preconditions:<orderedlist>
1207 <listitem>
1208 <para>It is only available for certain Windows, Linux and Solaris
1209 guests. In particular:<itemizedlist>
1210 <listitem>
1211 <para>For Windows guests, support is restricted to 32-bit
1212 versions of XP and Vista. Both OpenGL and Direct3D 8/9 are
1213 supported (experimental).</para>
1214 </listitem>
1215
1216 <listitem>
1217 <para>OpenGL on Linux requires kernel 2.6.27 and higher as
1218 well as X.org server version 1.5 and higher. Ubuntu 8.10 and
1219 Fedora 10 have been tested and confirmed as working.</para>
1220 </listitem>
1221
1222 <listitem>
1223 <para>OpenGL on Solaris guests requires X.org server version
1224 1.5 and higher.</para>
1225 </listitem>
1226 </itemizedlist></para>
1227 </listitem>
1228
1229 <listitem>
1230 <para>The Guest Additions must be installed.<note>
1231 <para>For Direct 3D acceleration to work in a Windows Guest,
1232 VirtualBox needs to replace Windows system files in the
1233 virtual machine. As a result, the Guest Additions installation
1234 program offers Direct 3D acceleration as an option that must
1235 be explicitly enabled. Also, you must install the Guest
1236 Additions in "Safe Mode"; see <xref linkend="KnownIssues" />
1237 for details.</para>
1238 </note></para>
1239 </listitem>
1240
1241 <listitem>
1242 <para>Because 3D support is still experimental at this time, it is
1243 disabled by default and must be <emphasis role="bold">manually
1244 enabled</emphasis> in the VM settings (see <xref
1245 linkend="generalsettings" />).<note>
1246 <para>Enabling 3D acceleration may expose security holes to
1247 malicious software running in the guest. The third-party code
1248 that VirtualBox uses for this purpose (Chromium) is not
1249 hardened enough to prevent every risky 3D operation on the
1250 host.</para>
1251 </note></para>
1252 </listitem>
1253 </orderedlist></para>
1254
1255 <para>Technically, VirtualBox implements this by installing an
1256 additional hardware 3D driver inside your guest when the Guest Additions
1257 are installed. This driver acts as a hardware 3D driver and reports to
1258 the guest operating system that the (virtual) hardware is capable of 3D
1259 hardware acceleration. When an application in the guest then requests
1260 hardware acceleration through the OpenGL or Direct3D programming
1261 interfaces, these are sent to the host through a special communication
1262 tunnel implemented by VirtualBox, and then the <emphasis>host</emphasis>
1263 performs the requested 3D operation via the host's programming
1264 interfaces.</para>
1265 </sect2>
1266
1267 <sect2 id="guestadd-2d">
1268 <title>Hardware 2D video acceleration for Windows guests</title>
1269
1270 <para>Starting with version 3.1, the VirtualBox Guest Additions contain
1271 experimental hardware 2D video acceleration support for Windows
1272 guests.</para>
1273
1274 <para>With this feature, if an application (e.g. a video player) inside
1275 your Windows VM uses 2D video overlays to play a movie clip, then
1276 VirtualBox will attempt to use your host's video acceleration hardware
1277 instead of performing overlay stretching and color conversion in
1278 software (which would be slow). This currently works for Windows, Linux
1279 and Mac host platforms, provided that your host operating system can
1280 make use of 2D video acceleration in the first place.</para>
1281
1282 <para>The 2D video acceleration currently has the following
1283 preconditions:<orderedlist>
1284 <listitem>
1285 <para>It is only available for Windows guests (XP or
1286 later).</para>
1287 </listitem>
1288
1289 <listitem>
1290 <para>The Guest Additions must be installed.</para>
1291 </listitem>
1292
1293 <listitem>
1294 <para>Because 2D support is still experimental at this time, it is
1295 disabled by default and must be <emphasis role="bold">manually
1296 enabled</emphasis> in the VM settings (see <xref
1297 linkend="generalsettings" />).</para>
1298 </listitem>
1299 </orderedlist></para>
1300
1301 <para>Technically, VirtualBox implements this by exposing video overlay
1302 DirectDraw capabilities in the Guest Additions video driver. The driver
1303 sends all overlay commands to the host through a special communication
1304 tunnel implemented by VirtualBox. On the host side, OpenGL is then used
1305 to implement color space transformation and scaling</para>
1306 </sect2>
1307 </sect1>
1308
1309 <sect1 id="seamlesswindows">
1310 <title>Seamless windows</title>
1311
1312 <para>With the "seamless windows" feature of VirtualBox, you can have the
1313 windows that are displayed within a virtual machine appear side by side
1314 next to the windows of your host. This feature is supported for the
1315 following guest operating systems (provided that the Guest Additions are
1316 installed):<itemizedlist>
1317 <listitem>
1318 <para>Windows guests (support added with VirtualBox 1.5);</para>
1319 </listitem>
1320
1321 <listitem>
1322 <para>Linux or Solaris/OpenSolaris guests with an X.org server
1323 version 1.3 or higher<footnote>
1324 <para>The X server version is not the same as the version of the
1325 entire X.org suite. You can type <computeroutput>X
1326 -version</computeroutput> in a terminal to find out about the
1327 X.org server version level that is currently installed.</para>
1328 </footnote> (support added with VirtualBox 1.6). The exception is
1329 Fedora 9, due to a bug in its X server.</para>
1330 </listitem>
1331 </itemizedlist></para>
1332
1333 <para>After seamless windows are enabled (see below), VirtualBox
1334 suppresses the display of the Desktop background of your guest, allowing
1335 you to run the windows of your guest operating system seamlessly next to
1336 the windows of your host:</para>
1337
1338 <para><mediaobject>
1339 <imageobject>
1340 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/seamless.png" width="10cm" />
1341 </imageobject>
1342 </mediaobject>To enable seamless mode, after starting the virtual
1343 machine, press the Host key (normally the right control key) together with
1344 "L". This will enlarge the size of the VM's display to the size of your
1345 host screen and mask out the guest operating system's background. To go
1346 back to the "normal" VM display (i.e. to disable seamless windows), press
1347 the Host key and "L" again.</para>
1348 </sect1>
1349
1350 <sect1 id="guestadd-guestprops">
1351 <title>Guest properties</title>
1352
1353 <para>Starting with version 2.1, VirtualBox allows for requesting certain
1354 properties from a running guest, provided that the VirtualBox Guest
1355 Additions are installed and the VM is running. This is good for two
1356 things:<orderedlist>
1357 <listitem>
1358 <para>A number of predefined VM characteristics are automatically
1359 maintained by VirtualBox and can be retrieved on the host, e.g. to
1360 monitor VM performance and statistics.</para>
1361 </listitem>
1362
1363 <listitem>
1364 <para>In addition, arbitrary string data can be exchanged between
1365 guest and host. This works in both directions.</para>
1366 </listitem>
1367 </orderedlist></para>
1368
1369 <para>To accomplish this, VirtualBox establishes a private communication
1370 channel between the VirtualBox Guest Additions and the host, and software
1371 on both sides can use this channel to exchange string data for arbitrary
1372 purposes. Guest properties are simply string keys to which a value is
1373 attached. They can be set (written to) by either the host and the guest,
1374 and they can also be read from both sides.</para>
1375
1376 <para>In addition to establishing the general mechanism of reading and
1377 writing values, a set of predefined guest properties is automatically
1378 maintained by the VirtualBox Guest Additions to allow for retrieving
1379 interesting guest data such as the guest's exact operating system and
1380 service pack level, the installed version of the Guest Additions, users
1381 that are currently logged into the guest OS, network statistics and more.
1382 These predefined properties are all prefixed with
1383 <computeroutput>/VirtualBox/</computeroutput> and organized into a
1384 hierarchical tree of keys.</para>
1385
1386 <para>Some of this runtime information is shown when you select "Session
1387 Information Dialog" from a virtual machine's "Machine" menu.</para>
1388
1389 <para>A more flexible way to use this channel is via the
1390 <computeroutput>VBoxManage guestproperty</computeroutput> command set; see
1391 <xref linkend="vboxmanage-guestproperty" /> for details. For example, to
1392 have <emphasis>all</emphasis> the available guest properties for a given
1393 running VM listed with their respective values, use this:<screen>$ VBoxManage guestproperty enumerate "Windows Vista III"
1394VirtualBox Command Line Management Interface Version $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD
1395(C) 2005-$VBOX_C_YEAR $VBOX_VENDOR
1396All rights reserved.
1397
1398Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Product, value: Windows Vista Business Edition,
1399 timestamp: 1229098278843087000, flags:
1400Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Release, value: 6.0.6001,
1401 timestamp: 1229098278950553000, flags:
1402Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/ServicePack, value: 1,
1403 timestamp: 1229098279122627000, flags:
1404Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/InstallDir,
1405 value: C:/Program Files/Oracle/VirtualBox
1406 Guest Additions, timestamp: 1229098279269739000, flags:
1407Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Revision, value: 40720,
1408 timestamp: 1229098279345664000, flags:
1409Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Version, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD,
1410 timestamp: 1229098279479515000, flags:
1411Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxControl.exe, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1412 timestamp: 1229098279651731000, flags:
1413Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxHook.dll, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1414 timestamp: 1229098279804835000, flags:
1415Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxDisp.dll, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1416 timestamp: 1229098279880611000, flags:
1417Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxMRXNP.dll, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1418 timestamp: 1229098279882618000, flags:
1419Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxService.exe, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1420 timestamp: 1229098279883195000, flags:
1421Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxTray.exe, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1422 timestamp: 1229098279885027000, flags:
1423Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxGuest.sys, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1424 timestamp: 1229098279886838000, flags:
1425Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxMouse.sys, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1426 timestamp: 1229098279890600000, flags:
1427Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxSF.sys, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1428 timestamp: 1229098279893056000, flags:
1429Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxVideo.sys, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1430 timestamp: 1229098279895767000, flags:
1431Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/LoggedInUsers, value: 1,
1432 timestamp: 1229099826317660000, flags:
1433Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/NoLoggedInUsers, value: false,
1434 timestamp: 1229098455580553000, flags:
1435Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/Count, value: 1,
1436 timestamp: 1229099826299785000, flags:
1437Name: /VirtualBox/HostInfo/GUI/LanguageID, value: C,
1438 timestamp: 1229098151272771000, flags:
1439Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/0/V4/IP, value: 192.168.2.102,
1440 timestamp: 1229099826300088000, flags:
1441Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/0/V4/Broadcast, value: 255.255.255.255,
1442 timestamp: 1229099826300220000, flags:
1443Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/0/V4/Netmask, value: 255.255.255.0,
1444 timestamp: 1229099826300350000, flags:
1445Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/0/Status, value: Up,
1446 timestamp: 1229099826300524000, flags:
1447Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/LoggedInUsersList, value: username,
1448 timestamp: 1229099826317386000, flags:</screen></para>
1449
1450 <para>To query the value of a single property, use the "get" subcommand
1451 like this:<screen>$ VBoxManage guestproperty get "Windows Vista III"
1452 "/VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Product"
1453VirtualBox Command Line Management Interface Version $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD
1454(C) 2005-$VBOX_C_YEAR $VBOX_VENDOR
1455All rights reserved.
1456
1457Value: Windows Vista Business Edition
1458</screen></para>
1459
1460 <para>To add or change guest properties from the guest, use the tool
1461 <computeroutput>VBoxControl</computeroutput>. This tool is included in the
1462 Guest Additions of VirtualBox 2.2 or later. When started from a Linux
1463 guest, this tool requires root privileges for security reasons:<screen>$ sudo VBoxControl guestproperty enumerate
1464VirtualBox Guest Additions Command Line Management Interface Version $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD
1465(C) 2009-$VBOX_C_YEAR $VBOX_VENDOR
1466All rights reserved.
1467
1468Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Release, value: 2.6.28-18-generic,
1469 timestamp: 1265813265835667000, flags: &lt;NULL&gt;
1470Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Version, value: #59-Ubuntu SMP Thu Jan 28 01:23:03 UTC 2010,
1471 timestamp: 1265813265836305000, flags: &lt;NULL&gt;
1472 ...</screen></para>
1473
1474 <para>For more complex needs, you can use the VirtualBox programming
1475 interfaces; see <xref linkend="VirtualBoxAPI" />.</para>
1476 </sect1>
1477
1478 <sect1 id="guestadd-guestcontrol">
1479 <title>Guest control</title>
1480
1481 <para>Starting with version 3.2, the Guest Additions of VirtualBox allow
1482 starting applications inside a VM from the host system.</para>
1483
1484 <para>For this to work, the application needs to be installed inside the
1485 guest; no additional software needs to be installed on the host.
1486 Additionally, text mode output (to stdout and stderr) can be shown on the
1487 host for further processing along with options to specify user credentials
1488 and a timeout value (in milliseconds) to limit time the application is
1489 able to run.</para>
1490
1491 <para>This feature can be used to automate deployment of software within
1492 the guest.</para>
1493
1494 <para>Starting with version 4.0, the Guest Additions for Windows allow for
1495 automatic updating (only already installed Guest Additions 4.0 or
1496 later).</para>
1497
1498 <para>To use these feature, use the VirtualBox command line or the GUI.
1499 See <xref linkend="mountingadditionsiso" /> or <xref
1500 linkend="vboxmanage-guestcontrol" /> for details.</para>
1501 </sect1>
1502
1503 <sect1>
1504 <title>Memory overcommitment</title>
1505
1506 <para>In server environments with many VMs; the Guest Additions can be
1507 used to share physical host memory between several VMs, reducing the total
1508 amount of memory in use by the VMs. If memory usage is the limiting factor
1509 and CPU resources are still available, this can help with packing more VMs
1510 on each host.</para>
1511
1512 <sect2 id="guestadd-balloon">
1513 <title>Memory ballooning</title>
1514
1515 <para>Starting with version 3.2, the Guest Additions of VirtualBox can
1516 change the amount of host memory that a VM uses while the machine is
1517 running. Because of how this is implemented, this feature is called
1518 "memory ballooning".</para>
1519
1520 <note>
1521 <para>VirtualBox supports memory ballooning only on 64-bit hosts, and
1522 it is not supported on Mac OS X hosts.</para>
1523 </note>
1524
1525 <para>Normally, to change the amount of memory allocated to a virtual
1526 machine, one has to shut down the virtual machine entirely and modify
1527 its settings. With memory ballooning, memory that was allocated for a
1528 virtual machine can be given to another virtual machine without having
1529 to shut the machine down.</para>
1530
1531 <para>When memory ballooning is requested, the VirtualBox Guest
1532 Additions (which run inside the guest) allocate physical memory from the
1533 guest operating system on the kernel level and lock this memory down in
1534 the guest. This ensures that the guest will not use that memory any
1535 longer: no guest applications can allocate it, and the guest kernel will
1536 not use it either. VirtualBox can then re-use this memory and give it to
1537 another virtual machine.</para>
1538
1539 <para>The memory made available through the ballooning mechanism is only
1540 available for re-use by VirtualBox. It is <emphasis>not</emphasis>
1541 returned as free memory to the host. Requesting balloon memory from a
1542 running guest will therefore not increase the amount of free,
1543 unallocated memory on the host. Effectively, memory ballooning is
1544 therefore a memory overcommitment mechanism for multiple virtual
1545 machines while they are running. This can be useful to temporarily start
1546 another machine, or in more complicated environments, for sophisticated
1547 memory management of many virtual machines that may be running in
1548 parallel depending on how memory is used by the guests.</para>
1549
1550 <para>At this time, memory ballooning is only supported through
1551 VBoxManage. Use the following command to increase or decrease the size
1552 of the memory balloon within a running virtual machine that has Guest
1553 Additions installed: <screen>VBoxManage controlvm "VM name" guestmemoryballoon &lt;n&gt;</screen>where
1554 <computeroutput>"VM name"</computeroutput> is the name or UUID of the
1555 virtual machine in question and
1556 <computeroutput>&lt;n&gt;</computeroutput> is the amount of memory to
1557 allocate from the guest in megabytes. See <xref
1558 linkend="vboxmanage-controlvm" /> for more information.</para>
1559
1560 <para>You can also set a default balloon that will automatically be
1561 requested from the VM every time after it has started up with the
1562 following command: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --guestmemoryballoon &lt;n&gt;</screen></para>
1563
1564 <para>By default, no balloon memory is allocated. This is a VM setting,
1565 like other <computeroutput>modifyvm</computeroutput> settings, and
1566 therefore can only be set while the machine is shut down; see <xref
1567 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" />.</para>
1568 </sect2>
1569
1570 <sect2 id="guestadd-pagefusion">
1571 <title>Page Fusion</title>
1572
1573 <para>Whereas memory ballooning simply reduces the amount of RAM that is
1574 available to a VM, Page Fusion works differently: it avoids memory
1575 duplication between several similar running VMs.</para>
1576
1577 <para>In a server environment running several similar VMs (e.g. with
1578 identical operating systems) on the same host, lots of memory pages are
1579 identical. VirtualBox's Page Fusion technology, introduced with
1580 VirtualBox 3.2, is a novel technique to efficiently identify these
1581 identical memory pages and share them between multiple VMs.<note>
1582 <para>VirtualBox supports Page Fusion only on 64-bit hosts, and it
1583 is not supported on Mac OS X hosts. Page Fusion currently works only
1584 with Windows guests (2000 and later).</para>
1585 </note></para>
1586
1587 <para>The more similar the VMs on a given host are, the more efficiently
1588 Page Fusion can reduce the amount of host memory that is in use. It
1589 therefore works best if all VMs on a host run identical operating
1590 systems (e.g. Windows XP Service Pack 2). Instead of having a complete
1591 copy of each operating system in each VM, Page Fusion identifies the
1592 identical memory pages in use by these operating systems and eliminates
1593 the duplicates, sharing host memory between several machines
1594 ("deduplication"). If a VM tries to modify a page that has been shared
1595 with other VMs, a new page is allocated again for that VM with a copy of
1596 the shared page ("copy on write"). All this is fully transparent to the
1597 virtual machine.</para>
1598
1599 <para>You may be familiar with this kind of memory overcommitment from
1600 other hypervisor products, which call this feature "page sharing" or
1601 "same page merging". However, Page Fusion differs significantly from
1602 those other solutions, whose approaches have several
1603 drawbacks:<orderedlist>
1604 <listitem>
1605 <para>Traditional hypervisors scan <emphasis>all</emphasis> guest
1606 memory and compute checksums (hashes) for every single memory
1607 page. Then, they look for pages with identical hashes and compare
1608 the entire content of those pages; if two pages produce the same
1609 hash, it is very likely that the pages are identical in content.
1610 This, of course, can take rather long, especially if the system is
1611 not idling. As a result, the additional memory only becomes
1612 available after a significant amount of time (this can be hours or
1613 even days!). Even worse, this kind of page sharing algorithm
1614 generally consumes significant CPU resources and increases the
1615 virtualization overhead by 10-20%.</para>
1616
1617 <para>Page Fusion in VirtualBox uses logic in the VirtualBox Guest
1618 Additions to quickly identify memory cells that are most likely
1619 identical across VMs. It can therefore achieve most of the
1620 possible savings of page sharing almost immediately and with
1621 almost no overhead.</para>
1622 </listitem>
1623
1624 <listitem>
1625 <para>Page Fusion is also much less likely to be confused by
1626 identical memory that it will eliminate just to learn seconds
1627 later that the memory will now change and having to perform a
1628 highly expensive and often service-disrupting reallocation.</para>
1629 </listitem>
1630 </orderedlist></para>
1631
1632 <para>At this time, Page Fusion can only be controlled with VBoxManage,
1633 and only while a VM is shut down. To enable Page Fusion for a VM, use
1634 the following command:<screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --pagefusion on</screen></para>
1635
1636 <para>You can observe Page Fusion operation using some metrics.
1637 <computeroutput>RAM/VMM/Shared</computeroutput> shows the total amount
1638 of fused pages, whereas the per-VM metric
1639 <computeroutput>Guest/RAM/Usage/Shared</computeroutput> will return the
1640 amount of fused memory for a given VM. Please refer to <xref
1641 linkend="metrics" /> for information on how to query metrics.</para>
1642 </sect2>
1643 </sect1>
1644</chapter>
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