VirtualBox

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN"
3"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd">
4<glossary id="Glossary">
5 <glossdiv>
6 <title>A</title>
7
8 <glossentry>
9 <glossterm>ACPI</glossterm>
10
11 <glossdef>
12 <para>Advanced Configuration and Power Interface, an industry
13 specification for BIOS and hardware extensions to configure PC
14 hardware and perform power management. Windows 2000 and higher as well
15 as Linux 2.4 and higher support ACPI. Windows can only enable or
16 disable ACPI support at installation time.</para>
17 </glossdef>
18 </glossentry>
19
20 <glossentry>
21 <glossterm>AHCI</glossterm>
22
23 <glossdef>
24 <para>Advanced Host Controller Interface, the interface that supports
25 SATA devices such as hard disks. See <xref
26 linkend="harddiskcontrollers" />.</para>
27 </glossdef>
28 </glossentry>
29
30 <glossentry>
31 <glossterm>AMD-V</glossterm>
32
33 <glossdef>
34 <para>The hardware virtualization features built into modern AMD
35 processors. See <xref linkend="hwvirt" />.</para>
36 </glossdef>
37 </glossentry>
38
39 <glossentry>
40 <glossterm>API</glossterm>
41
42 <glossdef>
43 <para>Application Programming Interface.</para>
44 </glossdef>
45 </glossentry>
46
47 <glossentry>
48 <glossterm>APIC</glossterm>
49
50 <glossdef>
51 <para>Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller, a newer version of
52 the original PC PIC (programmable interrupt controller). Most modern
53 CPUs contain an on-chip APIC ("local APIC"). Many systems also contain
54 an I/O APIC (input output APIC) as a separate chip which provides more
55 than 16 IRQs. Windows 2000 and higher use a different kernel if they
56 detect an I/O APIC during installation. Therefore an I/O APIC must not
57 be removed after installation.</para>
58 </glossdef>
59 </glossentry>
60
61 <glossentry>
62 <glossterm>ATA</glossterm>
63
64 <glossdef>
65 <para>Advanced Technology Attachment, an industry standard for hard
66 disk interfaces (synonymous with IDE). See <xref
67 linkend="harddiskcontrollers" />.</para>
68 </glossdef>
69 </glossentry>
70 </glossdiv>
71
72 <glossdiv>
73 <title>B</title>
74
75 <glossentry>
76 <glossterm>BIOS</glossterm>
77
78 <glossdef>
79 <para>Basic Input/Output System, the firmware built into most personal
80 computers which is responsible of initializing the hardware after the
81 computer has been turned on and then booting an operating system.
82 VirtualBox ships with its own virtual BIOS that runs when a virtual
83 machine is started.</para>
84 </glossdef>
85 </glossentry>
86 </glossdiv>
87
88 <glossdiv>
89 <title>C</title>
90
91 <glossentry>
92 <glossterm>COM</glossterm>
93
94 <glossdef>
95 <para>Microsoft Component Object Model, a programming infrastructure
96 for modular software. COM allows applications to provide application
97 programming interfaces which can be accessed from various other
98 programming languages and applications. VirtualBox makes use of COM
99 both internally and externally to provide a comprehensive API to 3rd
100 party developers.</para>
101 </glossdef>
102 </glossentry>
103 </glossdiv>
104
105 <glossdiv>
106 <title>D</title>
107
108 <glossentry>
109 <glossterm>DHCP</glossterm>
110
111 <glossdef>
112 <para>Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. This allows a networking
113 device in a network to acquire its IP address (and other networking
114 details) automatically, in order to avoid having to configure all
115 devices in a network with fixed IP addresses. VirtualBox has a
116 built-in DHCP server that delivers an IP addresses to a virtual
117 machine when networking is configured to NAT; see <xref
118 linkend="networkingdetails" />.</para>
119 </glossdef>
120 </glossentry>
121 </glossdiv>
122
123 <glossdiv>
124 <title>E</title>
125
126 <glossentry>
127 <glossterm>EFI</glossterm>
128
129 <glossdef>
130 <para>Extensible Firmware Interface, a firmware built into computers
131 which is designed to replace the aging BIOS. Originally designed by
132 Intel, most modern operating systems can now boot on computers which
133 have EFI instead of a BIOS built into them; see <xref
134 linkend="efi" />.</para>
135 </glossdef>
136 </glossentry>
137
138 <glossentry>
139 <glossterm>EHCI</glossterm>
140
141 <glossdef>
142 <para>Enhanced Host Controller Interface, the interface that
143 implements the USB 2.0 standard.</para>
144 </glossdef>
145 </glossentry>
146 </glossdiv>
147
148 <glossdiv>
149 <title>G</title>
150
151 <glossentry>
152 <glossterm>GUI</glossterm>
153
154 <glossdef>
155 <para>Graphical User Interface. Commonly used as an antonym to a
156 "command line interface", in the context of VirtualBox, we sometimes
157 refer to the main graphical
158 <computeroutput>VirtualBox</computeroutput> program as the "GUI", to
159 differentiate it from the <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>
160 interface.</para>
161 </glossdef>
162 </glossentry>
163
164 <glossentry>
165 <glossterm>GUID</glossterm>
166
167 <glossdef>
168 <para>See UUID.</para>
169 </glossdef>
170 </glossentry>
171 </glossdiv>
172
173 <glossdiv>
174 <title>I</title>
175
176 <glossentry>
177 <glossterm>IDE</glossterm>
178
179 <glossdef>
180 <para>Integrated Drive Electronics, an industry standard for hard disk
181 interfaces. See <xref linkend="harddiskcontrollers" />.</para>
182 </glossdef>
183 </glossentry>
184
185 <glossentry>
186 <glossterm>I/O APIC</glossterm>
187
188 <glossdef>
189 <para>See APIC.</para>
190 </glossdef>
191 </glossentry>
192
193 <glossentry>
194 <glossterm>iSCSI</glossterm>
195
196 <glossdef>
197 <para>Internet SCSI; see <xref linkend="storage-iscsi" />.</para>
198 </glossdef>
199 </glossentry>
200 </glossdiv>
201
202 <glossdiv>
203 <title>M</title>
204
205 <glossentry>
206 <glossterm>MAC</glossterm>
207
208 <glossdef>
209 <para>Media Access Control, a part of an Ethernet network card. A MAC
210 address is a 6-byte number which identifies a network card. It is
211 typically written in hexadecimal notation where the bytes are
212 separated by colons, such as
213 <computeroutput>00:17:3A:5E:CB:08</computeroutput>.</para>
214 </glossdef>
215 </glossentry>
216
217 <glossentry>
218 <glossterm>MSI</glossterm>
219
220 <glossdef>
221 <para>Message Signaled Interrupts, as supported by modern chipsets
222 such as the ICH9; see <xref linkend="settings-motherboard" />. As
223 opposed to traditional pin-based interrupts, with MSI, a small amount
224 of data can accompany the actual interrupt message. This reduces the
225 amount of hardware pins required, allows for more interrupts and
226 better performance.</para>
227 </glossdef>
228 </glossentry>
229 </glossdiv>
230
231 <glossdiv>
232 <title>N</title>
233
234 <glossentry>
235 <glossterm>NAT</glossterm>
236
237 <glossdef>
238 <para>Network Address Translation. A technique to share networking
239 interfaces by which an interface modifies the source and/or target IP
240 addresses of network packets according to specific rules. Commonly
241 employed by routers and firewalls to shield an internal network from
242 the Internet, VirtualBox can use NAT to easily share a host's physical
243 networking hardware with its virtual machines. See <xref
244 linkend="network_nat" />.</para>
245 </glossdef>
246 </glossentry>
247 </glossdiv>
248
249 <glossdiv>
250 <title>O</title>
251
252 <glossentry>
253 <glossterm>OVF</glossterm>
254
255 <glossdef>
256 <para>Open Virtualization Format, a cross-platform industry standard
257 to exchange virtual appliances between virtualization products; see
258 <xref linkend="ovf" />.</para>
259 </glossdef>
260 </glossentry>
261 </glossdiv>
262
263 <glossdiv>
264 <title>P</title>
265
266 <glossentry>
267 <glossterm>PAE</glossterm>
268
269 <glossdef>
270 <para>Physical Address Extension. This allows accessing more than 4 GB
271 of RAM even in 32-bit environments; see <xref
272 linkend="settings-general-advanced" />.</para>
273 </glossdef>
274 </glossentry>
275
276 <glossentry>
277 <glossterm>PIC</glossterm>
278
279 <glossdef>
280 <para>See APIC.</para>
281 </glossdef>
282 </glossentry>
283
284 <glossentry>
285 <glossterm>PXE</glossterm>
286
287 <glossdef>
288 <para>Preboot Execution Environment, an industry standard for booting
289 PC systems from remote network locations. It includes DHCP for IP
290 configuration and TFTP for file transfer. Using UNDI, a hardware
291 independent driver stack for accessing the network card from bootstrap
292 code is available.</para>
293 </glossdef>
294 </glossentry>
295 </glossdiv>
296
297 <glossdiv>
298 <title>R</title>
299
300 <glossentry>
301 <glossterm>RDP</glossterm>
302
303 <glossdef>
304 <para>Remote Desktop Protocol, a protocol developed by Microsoft as an
305 extension to the ITU T.128 and T.124 video conferencing protocol. With
306 RDP, a PC system can be controlled from a remote location using a
307 network connection over which data is transferred in both directions.
308 Typically graphics updates and audio are sent from the remote machine
309 and keyboard and mouse input events are sent from the client. A
310 VirtualBox extension package by Oracle provides VRDP, an enhanced
311 implementation of the relevant standards which is largely compatible
312 with Microsoft's RDP implementation. See <xref linkend="vrde" /> for
313 details.</para>
314 </glossdef>
315 </glossentry>
316 </glossdiv>
317
318 <glossdiv>
319 <title>S</title>
320
321 <glossentry>
322 <glossterm>SAS</glossterm>
323
324 <glossdef>
325 <para>Serial Attached SCSI, an industry standard for hard disk
326 interfaces. See <xref linkend="harddiskcontrollers" />.</para>
327 </glossdef>
328 </glossentry>
329
330 <glossentry>
331 <glossterm>SATA</glossterm>
332
333 <glossdef>
334 <para>Serial ATA, an industry standard for hard disk interfaces. See
335 <xref linkend="harddiskcontrollers" />.</para>
336 </glossdef>
337 </glossentry>
338
339 <glossentry>
340 <glossterm>SCSI</glossterm>
341
342 <glossdef>
343 <para>Small Computer System Interface. An industry standard for data
344 transfer between devices, especially for storage. See <xref
345 linkend="harddiskcontrollers" />.</para>
346 </glossdef>
347 </glossentry>
348
349 <glossentry>
350 <glossterm>SMP</glossterm>
351
352 <glossdef>
353 <para>Symmetrical Multiprocessing, meaning that the resources of a
354 computer are shared between several processors. These can either be
355 several processor chips or, as is more common with modern hardware,
356 multiple CPU cores in one processor.</para>
357 </glossdef>
358 </glossentry>
359
360 <glossentry>
361 <glossterm>SSD</glossterm>
362
363 <glossdef>
364 <para>Solid-state drive, uses microchips for storing data in a computer
365 system. Compared to classical hard-disks they are having no mechanical
366 components like spinning disks.
367 </para>
368 </glossdef>
369 </glossentry>
370 </glossdiv>
371
372 <glossdiv>
373 <title>T</title>
374
375 <glossentry>
376 <glossterm>TAR</glossterm>
377
378 <glossdef>
379 <para>A widely used file format for archiving. Originally, this stood
380 for "Tape ARchive" and was already supported by very early Unix
381 versions for backing up data on tape. The file format is still widely
382 used today, for example, with OVF archives (with an
383 <computeroutput>.ova</computeroutput> file extension); see <xref
384 linkend="ovf" />.</para>
385 </glossdef>
386 </glossentry>
387 </glossdiv>
388
389 <glossdiv>
390 <title>U</title>
391
392 <glossentry>
393 <glossterm>UUID</glossterm>
394
395 <glossdef>
396 <para>A Universally Unique Identifier -- often also called GUID
397 (Globally Unique Identifier) -- is a string of numbers and letters
398 which can be computed dynamically and is guaranteed to be unique.
399 Generally, it is used as a global handle to identify entities.
400 VirtualBox makes use of UUIDs to identify VMs, Virtual Disk Images
401 (VDI files) and other entities.</para>
402 </glossdef>
403 </glossentry>
404 </glossdiv>
405
406 <glossdiv>
407 <title>V</title>
408
409 <glossentry>
410 <glossterm>VM</glossterm>
411
412 <glossdef>
413 <para>Virtual Machine -- a virtual computer that VirtualBox allows you
414 to run on top of your actual hardware. See <xref
415 linkend="virtintro" /> for details.</para>
416 </glossdef>
417 </glossentry>
418
419 <glossentry>
420 <glossterm>VMM</glossterm>
421
422 <glossdef>
423 <para>Virtual Machine Manager -- the component of VirtualBox that
424 controls VM execution. See <xref linkend="technical-components" /> for
425 a list of VirtualBox components.</para>
426 </glossdef>
427 </glossentry>
428
429 <glossentry>
430 <glossterm>VRDE</glossterm>
431
432 <glossdef>
433 <para>VirtualBox Remote Desktop Extension. This interface is built
434 into VirtualBox to allow VirtualBox extension packages to supply
435 remote access to virtual machines. A VirtualBox extension package by
436 Oracle provides VRDP support; see <xref linkend="vrde" /> for
437 details.</para>
438 </glossdef>
439 </glossentry>
440
441 <glossentry>
442 <glossterm>VRDP</glossterm>
443
444 <glossdef>
445 <para>See RDP.</para>
446 </glossdef>
447 </glossentry>
448
449 <glossentry>
450 <glossterm>VT-x</glossterm>
451
452 <glossdef>
453 <para>The hardware virtualization features built into modern Intel
454 processors. See <xref linkend="hwvirt" />.</para>
455 </glossdef>
456 </glossentry>
457 </glossdiv>
458
459 <glossdiv>
460 <title>X</title>
461
462 <glossentry>
463 <glossterm>xHCI</glossterm>
464
465 <glossdef>
466 <para>eXtended Host Controller Interface, the interface that
467 implements the USB 3.0 standard.</para>
468 </glossdef>
469 </glossentry>
470
471 <glossentry>
472 <glossterm>XML</glossterm>
473
474 <glossdef>
475 <para>The eXtensible Markup Language, a metastandard for all kinds of
476 textual information. XML only specifies how data in the document is
477 organized generally and does not prescribe how to semantically
478 organize content.</para>
479 </glossdef>
480 </glossentry>
481
482 <glossentry>
483 <glossterm>XPCOM</glossterm>
484
485 <glossdef>
486 <para>Mozilla Cross Platform Component Object Model, a programming
487 infrastructure developed by the Mozilla browser project which is
488 similar to Microsoft COM and allows applications to provide a modular
489 programming interface. VirtualBox makes use of XPCOM on Linux both
490 internally and externally to provide a comprehensive API to
491 third-party developers.</para>
492 </glossdef>
493 </glossentry>
494 </glossdiv>
495</glossary>
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