VirtualBox

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN"
3"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd">
4<chapter>
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, Linux and Solaris guests, you can
73 resize the virtual machine's window if the Guest Additions are
74 installed. The video resolution in the guest will be automatically
75 adjusted (as if you had manually entered an arbitrary resolution
76 in the guest's display settings). Please see <xref
77 linkend="intro-resize-window" /> also.</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 controlling 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
220 <listitem>
221 <para>Microsoft Windows 8 (all editions)</para>
222 </listitem>
223
224 <listitem>
225 <para>Microsoft Windows Server 2012</para>
226 </listitem>
227
228 </itemizedlist>
229
230 <sect3 id="mountingadditionsiso">
231 <title>Installation</title>
232
233 <para>In the "Devices" menu in the virtual machine's menu bar,
234 VirtualBox has a handy menu item named "Install guest additions",
235 which mounts the Guest Additions ISO file inside your virtual machine.
236 A Windows guest should then automatically start the Guest Additions
237 installer, which installs the Guest Additions into your Windows
238 guest. Other guest operating systems (or if automatic start of
239 software on CD is disabled) need manual start of the installer.</para>
240
241 <note>
242 <para>For the basic Direct3D acceleration to work in a Windows Guest, you
243 have to install the Guest Additions in "Safe Mode".
244 This does <emphasis role="bold">not</emphasis> apply to the experimental
245 WDDM Direct3D video driver available
246 for Vista and Windows 7 guests, see <xref linkend="KnownIssues" /> for
247 details.<footnote><para>The experimental WDDM driver was added with
248 VirtualBox 4.1.</para></footnote></para>
249 </note>
250
251 <para>If you prefer to mount the additions manually, you can perform
252 the following steps:</para>
253
254 <orderedlist>
255 <listitem>
256 <para>Start the virtual machine in which you have installed
257 Windows.</para>
258 </listitem>
259
260 <listitem>
261 <para>Select "Mount CD/DVD-ROM" from the "Devices" menu in the
262 virtual machine's menu bar and then "CD/DVD-ROM image". This
263 brings up the Virtual Media Manager described in <xref
264 linkend="vdis" />.</para>
265 </listitem>
266
267 <listitem>
268 <para>In the Virtual Media Manager, press the "Add" button and
269 browse your host file system for the
270 <computeroutput>VBoxGuestAdditions.iso</computeroutput>
271 file:<itemizedlist>
272 <listitem>
273 <para>On a Windows host, you can find this file in the
274 VirtualBox installation directory (usually under
275 <computeroutput>C:\Program
276 files\Oracle\VirtualBox</computeroutput> ).</para>
277 </listitem>
278
279 <listitem>
280 <para>On Mac OS X hosts, you can find this file in the
281 application bundle of VirtualBox. (Right click on the
282 VirtualBox icon in Finder and choose <emphasis>Show Package
283 Contents</emphasis>. There it is located in the
284 <computeroutput>Contents/MacOS</computeroutput>
285 folder.)</para>
286 </listitem>
287
288 <listitem>
289 <para>On a Linux host, you can find this file in the
290 <computeroutput>additions</computeroutput> folder under
291 where you installed VirtualBox (normally
292 <computeroutput>/opt/VirtualBox/</computeroutput>).</para>
293 </listitem>
294
295 <listitem>
296 <para>On Solaris hosts, you can find this file in the
297 <computeroutput>additions</computeroutput> folder under
298 where you installed VirtualBox (normally
299 <computeroutput>/opt/VirtualBox</computeroutput>).</para>
300 </listitem>
301 </itemizedlist></para>
302 </listitem>
303
304 <listitem>
305 <para>Back in the Virtual Media Manager, select that ISO file and
306 press the "Select" button. This will mount the ISO file and
307 present it to your Windows guest as a CD-ROM.</para>
308 </listitem>
309 </orderedlist>
310
311 <para>Unless you have the Autostart feature disabled in your Windows
312 guest, Windows will now autostart the VirtualBox Guest Additions
313 installation program from the Additions ISO. If the Autostart feature
314 has been turned off, choose
315 <computeroutput>VBoxWindowsAdditions.exe</computeroutput> from the
316 CD/DVD drive inside the guest to start the installer.</para>
317
318 <para>The installer will add several device drivers to the Windows
319 driver database and then invoke the hardware detection wizard.</para>
320
321 <para>Depending on your configuration, it might display warnings that
322 the drivers are not digitally signed. You must confirm these in order
323 to continue the installation and properly install the
324 Additions.</para>
325
326 <para>After installation, reboot your guest operating system to
327 activate the Additions.</para>
328 </sect3>
329
330 <sect3>
331 <title>Updating the Windows Guest Additions</title>
332
333 <para>Windows Guest Additions can be updated by running the
334 installation program again, as previously described. This will then
335 replace the previous Additions drivers with updated versions.</para>
336
337 <para>Alternatively, you may also open the Windows Device Manager and
338 select "Update driver..." for two devices:</para>
339
340 <orderedlist>
341 <listitem>
342 <para>the VirtualBox Graphics Adapter and</para>
343 </listitem>
344
345 <listitem>
346 <para>the VirtualBox System Device.</para>
347 </listitem>
348 </orderedlist>
349
350 <para>For each, choose to provide your own driver and use "Have Disk"
351 to point the wizard to the CD-ROM drive with the Guest
352 Additions.</para>
353 </sect3>
354
355 <sect3>
356 <title>Unattended Installation</title>
357
358 <para>As a prerequiste for performing an unattended installation of the
359 VirtualBox Guest Additions on a Windows guest, there need to be
360 Oracle CA (Certificate Authority)
361 certificates installed in order to prevent user intervention popus which
362 will undermine a silent installation.</para>
363
364 <note>On some Windows versions like Windows 2000 and Windows XP the user intervention
365 popups mentioned above always will be displayed, even after importing the Oracle certificates.</note>
366
367 <para>Since VirtualBox 4.2 installing those CA certificates on a Windows
368 guest can be done in an automated fashion using the
369 <computeroutput>VBoxCertUtil.exe</computeroutput> utility found on the Guest
370 Additions installation CD in the <computeroutput>cert</computeroutput>
371 folder:</para>
372
373 <itemizedlist>
374 <listitem>
375 <para>Log in as Administrator on the guest.</para>
376 </listitem>
377
378 <listitem>
379 <para>Mount the VirtualBox Guest Additions .ISO.</para>
380 </listitem>
381
382 <listitem>
383 <para>Open a command line window on the guest and change to
384 the <computeroutput>cert</computeroutput> folder on the VirtualBox
385 Guest Additions CD.</para>
386 </listitem>
387
388 <listitem>
389 <para>Do a <computeroutput>VBoxCertUtil add-trusted-publisher oracle-vbox.cer --root oracle-vbox.cer</computeroutput>.</para>
390 <para>This will install the certificates to the certificate store. When installing the same certificate
391 more than once, an appropriate error will be displayed.</para>
392 </listitem>
393 </itemizedlist>
394
395 <para>Prior to VirtualBox 4.2 the Oracle CA certificates need to be imported in more manual style
396 using the <computeroutput>certutil.exe</computeroutput> utility, which is shipped since Windows
397 Vista. For Windows versions before Vista you need to download and install <computeroutput>certutil.exe</computeroutput>
398 manually. Since the certificates are not accompanied on the VirtualBox Guest Additions CD-ROM
399 prior to 4.2, these need to get extracted from a signed VirtualBox executable first.</para>
400
401 <para>In the following example the needed certificates will be extracted from the VirtualBox
402 Windows Guest Additions installer on the CD-ROM:</para>
403
404 <sect4>
405 <title>VeriSign Code Signing CA</title>
406 <itemizedlist>
407 <listitem>
408 <para>In the Windows Explorer, right click on VBoxWindowsAdditions-&lt;Architecture&gt;.exe,
409 click on "Properties"</para>
410 </listitem>
411 <listitem>
412 <para>Go to tab "Digital Signatures", choose "Oracle Corporation" and click on "Details"</para>
413 </listitem>
414 <listitem>
415 <para>In tab "General" click on "View Certificate"</para>
416 </listitem>
417 <listitem>
418 <para>In tab "Certification Path" select "VeriSign Class 3 Public Primary CA"</para>
419 </listitem>
420 <listitem>
421 <para>Click on "View Certificate"</para>
422 </listitem>
423 <listitem>
424 <para>In tab "Details" click on "Copy to File ..."</para>
425 </listitem>
426 <listitem>
427 <para>In the upcoming wizard choose "DER encoded binary X.509 (.CER)"
428 and save the certificate file to a local path, finish the wizard</para>
429 </listitem>
430 <listitem>
431 <para>Close certificate dialog for "Verisign Class 3 Code Signing
432 2010 CA"</para>
433 </listitem>
434 </itemizedlist>
435 </sect4>
436
437 <sect4>
438 <title>Oracle Corporation</title>
439 <itemizedlist>
440 <listitem>
441 <para>In the Windows Explorer, right click on VBoxWindowsAdditions-&lt;Architecture&gt;.exe,
442 click on "Properties"</para>
443 </listitem>
444 <listitem>
445 <para>Go to tab "Digital Signatures", choose "Oracle Corporation" and click on "Details"</para>
446 </listitem>
447 <listitem>
448 <para>In tab "General" click on "View Certificate"</para>
449 </listitem>
450 <listitem>
451 <para>In tab "Details" click on "Copy to File ..."</para>
452 </listitem>
453 <listitem>
454 <para>In the upcoming wizard choose "DER encoded binary X.509 (.CER)"
455 and save the certificate file to a local path, finish the wizard</para>
456 </listitem>
457 <listitem>
458 <para>Close certificate dialog for "Oracle Corporation"</para>
459 </listitem>
460 </itemizedlist>
461 </sect4>
462
463 <para>After exporting the two certificates above they can be imported into the
464 certificate store using the <computeroutput>certutil.exe</computeroutput>
465 utility:</para>
466
467 <para><computeroutput>certutil -addstore -f Root "&lt;Path to exported
468 certificate file&gt;"</computeroutput></para>
469
470 <para>In order to allow for completely unattended guest installations,
471 you can specify a command line parameter to the install
472 launcher:</para>
473
474 <screen>VBoxWindowsAdditions.exe /S</screen>
475
476 <para>This automatically installs the right files and drivers for the
477 corresponding platform (32- or 64-bit).</para>
478
479 <note><para>By default on an unattended installation on a Windows 7 or 8
480 guest, there will be the XPDM graphics driver installed. This graphics
481 driver does not support Windows Aero / Direct3D on the guest - instead the
482 experimental WDDM graphics driver needs to be installed. To select this
483 driver by default, add the command line parameter
484 <computeroutput>/with_wddm</computeroutput> when invoking the Windows
485 Guest Additions installer.</para></note>
486 <note><para>For Windows Aero to run correctly on a guest, the guest's
487 VRAM size needs to be configured to at least 128 MB.</para></note>
488
489 <para>For more options regarding unattended guest installations,
490 consult the command line help by using the command:</para>
491
492 <screen>VBoxWindowsAdditions.exe /?</screen>
493 </sect3>
494
495 <sect3 id="windows-guest-file-extraction">
496 <title>Manual file extraction</title>
497
498 <para>If you would like to install the files and drivers manually, you
499 can extract the files from the Windows Guest Additions setup by
500 typing:</para>
501
502 <screen>VBoxWindowsAdditions.exe /extract</screen>
503
504 <para>To explicitly extract the Windows Guest Additions for another
505 platform than the current running one (e.g. 64-bit files on a 32-bit
506 system), you have to execute the appropriate platform installer
507 (<computeroutput>VBoxWindowsAdditions-x86.exe</computeroutput> or
508 <computeroutput>VBoxWindowsAdditions-amd64.exe</computeroutput>) with
509 the <computeroutput>/extract</computeroutput> parameter.</para>
510 </sect3>
511
512 </sect2>
513
514 <sect2>
515 <title>Guest Additions for Linux</title>
516
517 <para>Like the Windows Guest Additions, the VirtualBox Guest Additions
518 for Linux are a set of device drivers and system applications which may
519 be installed in the guest operating system.</para>
520
521 <para>The following Linux distributions are officially supported:</para>
522
523 <itemizedlist>
524 <listitem>
525 <para>Fedora as of Fedora Core 4;</para>
526 </listitem>
527
528 <listitem>
529 <para>Redhat Enterprise Linux as of version 3;</para>
530 </listitem>
531
532 <listitem>
533 <para>SUSE and openSUSE Linux as of version 9;</para>
534 </listitem>
535
536 <listitem>
537 <para>Ubuntu as of version 5.10.</para>
538 </listitem>
539 </itemizedlist>
540
541 <para>Many other distributions are known to work with the Guest
542 Additions.</para>
543
544 <para>The version of the Linux kernel supplied by default in SUSE and
545 openSUSE 10.2, Ubuntu 6.10 (all versions) and Ubuntu 6.06 (server
546 edition) contains a bug which can cause it to crash during startup when
547 it is run in a virtual machine. The Guest Additions work in those
548 distributions.</para>
549
550 <para>Note that some Linux distributions already come with all or part of
551 the VirtualBox Guest Additions. You may choose to keep the distribution's
552 version of the Guest Additions but these are often not up to date and
553 limited in functionality, so we recommend replacing them with the
554 Guest Additions that come with VirtualBox. The VirtualBox Linux Guest
555 Additions installer tries to detect existing installation and replace
556 them but depending on how the distribution integrates the Guest
557 Additions, this may require some manual interaction. It is highly
558 recommended to take a snapshot of the virtual machine before replacing
559 pre-installed Guest Additions.</para>
560
561 <sect3>
562 <title>Installing the Linux Guest Additions</title>
563
564 <para>The VirtualBox Guest Additions for Linux are provided on the
565 same virtual CD-ROM file as the Guest Additions for Windows described
566 above. They also come with an installation program guiding you through
567 the setup process, although, due to the significant differences between
568 Linux distributions, installation may be slightly more complex.</para>
569
570 <para>Installation generally involves the following steps:</para>
571
572 <orderedlist>
573 <listitem>
574 <para>Before installing the Guest Additions, you will have to
575 prepare your guest system for building external kernel modules.
576 This works similarly as described in <xref
577 linkend="externalkernelmodules" />, except that this step must now
578 be performed in your Linux <emphasis>guest</emphasis> instead of
579 on a Linux host system, as described there.</para>
580
581 <para>Again, as with Linux hosts, we recommend using DKMS if it is
582 available for the guest system. If it is not installed, use this
583 command for Ubuntu/Debian systems:
584 <screen>sudo apt-get install dkms</screen>
585 or for Fedora systems: <screen>yum install dkms</screen></para>
586
587 <para>Be sure to install DKMS <emphasis>before</emphasis>
588 installing the Linux Guest Additions. If DKMS is not available
589 or not installed, the guest kernel modules will need to be
590 recreated manually whenever the guest kernel is updated using
591 the command <screen>/etc/init.d/vboxadd setup</screen> as root.
592 </para>
593 </listitem>
594
595 <listitem>
596 <para>Insert the
597 <computeroutput>VBoxGuestAdditions.iso</computeroutput> CD file
598 into your Linux guest's virtual CD-ROM drive, exactly the same way
599 as described for a Windows guest in <xref
600 linkend="mountingadditionsiso" />.</para>
601 </listitem>
602
603 <listitem>
604 <para>Change to the directory where your CD-ROM drive is mounted
605 and execute as root:</para>
606
607 <screen>sh ./VBoxLinuxAdditions.run</screen>
608
609 </listitem>
610 </orderedlist>
611
612 <para>For your convenience, we provide the following step-by-step
613 instructions for freshly installed copies of recent versions of the most
614 popular Linux distributions. After these preparational steps, you can
615 execute the VirtualBox Guest Additions installer as described
616 above.</para>
617
618 <sect4>
619 <title>Ubuntu</title>
620
621 <para><orderedlist>
622 <listitem>
623 <para>In order to fully update your guest system, open a
624 terminal and run <screen>apt-get update</screen> as root
625 followed by <screen>apt-get upgrade</screen></para>
626 </listitem>
627
628 <listitem>
629 <para>Install DKMS using <screen>apt-get install dkms</screen></para>
630 </listitem>
631
632 <listitem>
633 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
634 updates and then proceed as described above.</para>
635 </listitem>
636 </orderedlist></para>
637 </sect4>
638
639 <sect4>
640 <title>Fedora</title>
641
642 <para><orderedlist>
643 <listitem>
644 <para>In order to fully update your guest system, open a
645 terminal and run <screen>yum update</screen></para> as root.
646 </listitem>
647
648 <listitem>
649 <para>Install DKMS and the GNU C compiler using <screen>yum install dkms</screen>
650 followed by <screen>yum install gcc</screen></para>
651 </listitem>
652
653 <listitem>
654 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
655 updates and then proceed as described above.</para>
656 </listitem>
657 </orderedlist></para>
658 </sect4>
659
660 <sect4>
661 <title>openSUSE</title>
662
663 <para><orderedlist>
664 <listitem>
665 <para>In order to fully update your guest system, open a
666 terminal and run <screen>zypper update</screen></para> as root.
667 </listitem>
668
669 <listitem>
670 <para>Install the make tool and the GNU C compiler using
671 <screen>zypper install make gcc</screen></para>
672 </listitem>
673
674 <listitem>
675 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
676 updates.</para>
677 </listitem>
678
679 <listitem>
680 <para>Find out which kernel you are running using <screen>uname -a</screen>
681 An example would be
682 <computeroutput>2.6.31.12-0.2-default</computeroutput> which
683 refers to the "default" kernel. Then install the correct
684 kernel development package. In the above example this would be
685 <screen>zypper install kernel-default-devel</screen></para>
686 </listitem>
687
688 <listitem>
689 <para>Make sure that your running kernel
690 (<computeroutput>uname -a</computeroutput>) and the kernel
691 packages you have installed (<computeroutput>rpm -qa
692 kernel\*</computeroutput>) have the exact same version number.
693 Proceed with the installation as described above.</para>
694 </listitem>
695 </orderedlist></para>
696 </sect4>
697
698 <sect4>
699 <title>SuSE Linux Enterprise Desktop (SLED)</title>
700
701 <para><orderedlist>
702 <listitem>
703 <para>In order to fully update your guest system, open a
704 terminal and run <screen>zypper update</screen></para> as root.
705 </listitem>
706
707 <listitem>
708 <para>Install the GNU C compiler using <screen>zypper install gcc</screen></para>
709 </listitem>
710
711 <listitem>
712 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
713 updates.</para>
714 </listitem>
715
716 <listitem>
717 <para>Find out which kernel you are running using <screen>uname -a</screen>
718 An example would be
719 <computeroutput>2.6.27.19-5.1-default</computeroutput> which
720 refers to the "default" kernel. Then install the correct
721 kernel development package. In the above example this would be
722 <screen>zypper install kernel-syms kernel-source</screen></para>
723 </listitem>
724
725 <listitem>
726 <para>Make sure that your running kernel
727 (<computeroutput>uname -a</computeroutput>) and the kernel
728 packages you have installed (<computeroutput>rpm -qa
729 kernel\*</computeroutput>) have the exact same version number.
730 Proceed with the installation as described above.</para>
731 </listitem>
732 </orderedlist></para>
733 </sect4>
734
735 <sect4>
736 <title>Mandrake</title>
737
738 <para><orderedlist>
739 <listitem>
740 <para>Mandrake ships with the VirtualBox Guest Additions which
741 will be replaced if you follow these steps.</para>
742 </listitem>
743
744 <listitem>
745 <para>In order to fully update your guest system, open a
746 terminal and run <screen>urpmi --auto-update</screen></para>
747 as root.
748 </listitem>
749
750 <listitem>
751 <para>Reboot your system in order to activate the
752 updates.</para>
753 </listitem>
754
755 <listitem>
756 <para>Install DKMS using <screen>urpmi dkms</screen> and make
757 sure to choose the correct kernel-devel package when asked by
758 the installer (use <computeroutput>uname -a</computeroutput>
759 to compare).</para>
760 </listitem>
761 </orderedlist></para>
762 </sect4>
763
764 <sect4>
765 <title>CentOS, Red Hat Enterprise Linux and Oracle
766 Enterprise Linux</title>
767
768 <para><orderedlist>
769 <listitem>
770 <para>For versions prior to 6, add <computeroutput>divider=10</computeroutput>
771 to the kernel boot options in
772 <computeroutput>/etc/grub.conf</computeroutput> to reduce the
773 idle CPU load.</para>
774 </listitem>
775
776 <listitem>
777 <para>In order to fully update your guest system, open a
778 terminal and run <screen>yum update</screen></para> as root.
779 </listitem>
780
781 <listitem>
782 <para>Install the GNU C compiler and the kernel development
783 packages using <screen>yum install gcc</screen> followed by
784 <screen>yum install kernel-devel</screen></para>
785 </listitem>
786
787 <listitem>
788 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
789 updates and then proceed as described above.</para>
790 </listitem>
791
792 <listitem>
793 <para>In case Oracle Enterprise Linux does not find the
794 required packages, you either have to install them from a
795 different source (e.g. DVD) or use Oracle's public Yum server
796 located at <ulink
797 url="http://public-yum.oracle.com/">http://public-yum.oracle.com</ulink>.</para>
798 </listitem>
799 </orderedlist></para>
800 </sect4>
801
802 <sect4>
803 <title>Debian</title>
804
805 <para><orderedlist>
806 <listitem>
807 <para>In order to fully update your guest system, open a
808 terminal and run <screen>apt-get update</screen> as root
809 followed by <screen>apt-get upgrade</screen></para>
810 </listitem>
811
812 <listitem>
813 <para>Install the make tool and the GNU C compiler using
814 <screen>apt-get install make gcc</screen></para>
815 </listitem>
816
817 <listitem>
818 <para>Reboot your guest system in order to activate the
819 updates.</para>
820 </listitem>
821
822 <listitem>
823 <para>Determine the exact version of your kernel using
824 <computeroutput>uname -a</computeroutput> and install the
825 correct version of the linux-headers package, e.g. using
826 <screen>apt-get install linux-headers-2.6.26-2-686</screen></para>
827 </listitem>
828 </orderedlist></para>
829 </sect4>
830 </sect3>
831
832 <sect3>
833 <title>Graphics and mouse integration</title>
834
835 <para>In Linux and Solaris guests, VirtualBox graphics and mouse
836 integration goes through the X Window System. VirtualBox can use
837 the X.Org variant of the system (or XFree86 version 4.3 which is
838 identical to the first X.Org release). During the installation process,
839 the X.Org display server will be set up to use the graphics and mouse
840 drivers which come with the Guest Additions.</para>
841
842 <para>After installing the Guest Additions into a fresh installation of
843 a supported Linux distribution or Solaris system (many unsupported
844 systems will work correctly too), the guest's graphics
845 mode will change to fit the size of the VirtualBox window
846 on the host when it is resized. You can also ask the guest system to
847 switch to a particular resolution by sending a "video mode hint" using
848 the <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> tool.</para>
849
850 <para>Multiple guest monitors are supported in guests using the X.Org
851 server version 1.3 (which is part of release 7.3 of the X Window System
852 version 11) or a later version. The layout of the guest screens can
853 be adjusted as needed using the tools which come with the guest
854 operating system.</para>
855
856 <para>If you want to understand more about the details of how the
857 X.Org drivers are set up (in particular if you wish to use them in a
858 setting which our installer doesn't handle correctly), you should read
859 <xref linkend="guestxorgsetup" />.</para>
860 </sect3>
861
862 <sect3>
863 <title>Updating the Linux Guest Additions</title>
864
865 <para>The Guest Additions can simply be updated by going through the
866 installation procedure again with an updated CD-ROM image. This will
867 replace the drivers with updated versions. You should reboot after
868 updating the Guest Additions.</para>
869 </sect3>
870
871 <sect3>
872 <title>Uninstalling the Linux Guest Additions</title>
873
874 <para>If you have a version of the Guest Additions installed on your
875 virtual machine and wish to remove it without installing new ones, you
876 can do so by inserting the Guest Additions CD image into the virtual
877 CD-ROM drive as described above and running the installer for the
878 current Guest Additions with the "uninstall" parameter from the path
879 that the CD image is mounted on in the guest: <screen>sh ./VBoxLinuxAdditions.run uninstall</screen></para>
880
881 <para>While this will normally work without issues, you may need to do some
882 manual cleanup of the guest (particularly of the XFree86Config or
883 xorg.conf file) in some cases, particularly if the Additions version
884 installed or the guest operating system were very old, or if you made
885 your own changes to the Guest Additions setup after you installed
886 them.</para>
887
888 <para>Starting with version 3.1.0, you can uninstall the Additions by
889 invoking <screen>/opt/VBoxGuestAdditions-$VBOX_VERSION_STRING/uninstall.sh</screen>Please
890 replace
891 <computeroutput>/opt/VBoxGuestAdditions-$VBOX_VERSION_STRING</computeroutput>
892 with the correct Guest Additions installation directory.</para>
893 </sect3>
894 </sect2>
895
896 <sect2>
897 <title>Guest Additions for Solaris</title>
898
899 <para>Like the Windows Guest Additions, the VirtualBox Guest Additions
900 for Solaris take the form of a set of device drivers and system
901 applications which may be installed in the guest operating
902 system.</para>
903
904 <para>The following Solaris distributions are officially
905 supported:</para>
906
907 <itemizedlist>
908 <listitem>
909 <para>Solaris 11 including Solaris 11 Express;</para>
910 </listitem>
911
912 <listitem>
913 <para>Solaris 10 (u5 and higher);</para>
914 </listitem>
915 </itemizedlist>
916
917 <para>Other distributions may work if they are based on comparable
918 software releases.</para>
919
920 <sect3>
921 <title>Installing the Solaris Guest Additions</title>
922
923 <para>The VirtualBox Guest Additions for Solaris are provided on the
924 same ISO CD-ROM as the Additions for Windows and Linux described
925 above. They also come with an installation program guiding you through
926 the setup process.</para>
927
928 <para>Installation involves the following steps:</para>
929
930 <orderedlist>
931 <listitem>
932 <para>Mount the
933 <computeroutput>VBoxGuestAdditions.iso</computeroutput> file as
934 your Solaris guest's virtual CD-ROM drive, exactly the same way as
935 described for a Windows guest in <xref
936 linkend="mountingadditionsiso" />.</para>
937
938 <para>If in case the CD-ROM drive on the guest doesn't get mounted
939 (observed on some versions of Solaris 10), execute as root:</para>
940
941 <screen>svcadm restart volfs</screen>
942 </listitem>
943
944 <listitem>
945 <para>Change to the directory where your CD-ROM drive is mounted
946 and execute as root:</para>
947
948 <screen>pkgadd -G -d ./VBoxSolarisAdditions.pkg</screen>
949 </listitem>
950
951 <listitem>
952 <para>Choose "1" and confirm installation of the Guest Additions
953 package. After the installation is complete, re-login to X server
954 on your guest to activate the X11 Guest Additions.</para>
955 </listitem>
956 </orderedlist>
957 </sect3>
958
959 <sect3>
960 <title>Uninstalling the Solaris Guest Additions</title>
961
962 <para>The Solaris Guest Additions can be safely removed by removing
963 the package from the guest. Open a root terminal session and
964 execute:</para>
965
966 <para><screen>pkgrm SUNWvboxguest</screen></para>
967 </sect3>
968
969 <sect3>
970 <title>Updating the Solaris Guest Additions</title>
971
972 <para>The Guest Additions should be updated by first uninstalling the
973 existing Guest Additions and then installing the new ones. Attempting
974 to install new Guest Additions without removing the existing ones is
975 not possible.</para>
976 </sect3>
977 </sect2>
978
979 <sect2>
980 <title>Guest Additions for OS/2</title>
981
982 <para>VirtualBox also ships with a set of drivers that improve running
983 OS/2 in a virtual machine. Due to restrictions of OS/2 itself, this
984 variant of the Guest Additions has a limited feature set; see <xref
985 linkend="KnownIssues" /> for details.</para>
986
987 <para>The OS/2 Guest Additions are provided on the same ISO CD-ROM as
988 those for the other platforms. As a result, mount the ISO in OS/2 as
989 described previously. The OS/2 Guest Additions are located in the
990 directory <computeroutput>\32bit\OS2</computeroutput>.</para>
991
992 <para>As we do not provide an automatic installer at this time, please
993 refer to the <computeroutput>readme.txt</computeroutput> file in that
994 directory, which describes how to install the OS/2 Guest Additions
995 manually.</para>
996 </sect2>
997 </sect1>
998
999 <sect1 id="sharedfolders">
1000 <title>Shared folders</title>
1001
1002 <para>With the "shared folders" feature of VirtualBox, you can access
1003 files of your host system from within the guest system. This is similar
1004 how you would use network shares in Windows networks -- except that shared
1005 folders do not need require networking, only the Guest Additions. Shared
1006 Folders are supported with Windows (2000 or newer), Linux and Solaris
1007 guests.</para>
1008
1009 <para>Shared folders must physically reside on the
1010 <emphasis>host</emphasis> and are then shared with the guest, which uses a
1011 special file system driver in the Guest Addition to talk to the host. For
1012 Windows guests, shared folders are implemented as a pseudo-network
1013 redirector; for Linux and Solaris guests, the Guest Additions provide a
1014 virtual file system.</para>
1015
1016 <para>To share a host folder with a virtual machine in VirtualBox, you
1017 must specify the path of that folder and choose for it a "share name" that
1018 the guest can use to access it. Hence, first create the shared folder on
1019 the host; then, within the guest, connect to it.</para>
1020
1021 <para>There are several ways in which shared folders can be set up for a
1022 particular virtual machine:<itemizedlist>
1023 <listitem>
1024 <para>In the window of a running VM, you can select "Shared folders"
1025 from the "Devices" menu, or click on the folder icon on the status
1026 bar in the bottom right corner.</para>
1027 </listitem>
1028
1029 <listitem>
1030 <para>If a VM is not currently running, you can configure shared
1031 folders in each virtual machine's "Settings" dialog.</para>
1032 </listitem>
1033
1034 <listitem>
1035 <para>From the command line, you can create shared folders using
1036 VBoxManage, as follows: <screen>VBoxManage sharedfolder add "VM name" --name "sharename" --hostpath "C:\test"</screen></para>
1037
1038 <para>See <xref linkend="vboxmanage-sharedfolder" /> for
1039 details.</para>
1040 </listitem>
1041 </itemizedlist></para>
1042
1043 <para>There are two types of shares:</para>
1044
1045 <orderedlist>
1046 <listitem>
1047 <para>VM shares which are only available to the VM for which they have
1048 been defined;</para>
1049 </listitem>
1050
1051 <listitem>
1052 <para>transient VM shares, which can be added and removed at runtime
1053 and do not persist after a VM has stopped; for these, add the
1054 <computeroutput>--transient</computeroutput> option to the above
1055 command line.</para>
1056 </listitem>
1057 </orderedlist>
1058
1059 <para>Shared folders have read/write access to the files at the host path
1060 by default. To restrict the guest to have read-only access, create a
1061 read-only shared folder. This can either be achieved using the GUI or by
1062 appending the parameter <computeroutput>--readonly</computeroutput> when
1063 creating the shared folder with VBoxManage.</para>
1064
1065 <para>Starting with version 4.0, VirtualBox shared folders also support
1066 symbolic links (<emphasis role="bold">symlinks</emphasis>), under the
1067 following conditions:<orderedlist>
1068 <listitem>
1069 <para>The host operating system must support symlinks (i.e. a Mac,
1070 Linux or Solaris host is required).</para>
1071 </listitem>
1072
1073 <listitem>
1074 <para>Currently only Linux and Solaris Guest Additions support
1075 symlinks.</para>
1076 </listitem>
1077 </orderedlist></para>
1078
1079 <sect2 id="sf_mount_manual">
1080 <title>Manual mounting</title>
1081
1082 <para>You can mount the shared folder from inside a VM the same way as
1083 you would mount an ordinary network share:</para>
1084
1085 <para><itemizedlist>
1086 <listitem>
1087 <para>In a Windows guest, shared folders are browseable and
1088 therefore visible in Windows Explorer. So, to attach the host's
1089 shared folder to your Windows guest, open Windows Explorer and
1090 look for it under "My Networking Places" -&gt; "Entire Network"
1091 -&gt; "VirtualBox Shared Folders". By right-clicking on a shared
1092 folder and selecting "Map network drive" from the menu that pops
1093 up, you can assign a drive letter to that shared folder.</para>
1094
1095 <para>Alternatively, on the Windows command line, use the
1096 following:</para>
1097
1098 <screen>net use x: \\vboxsvr\sharename</screen>
1099
1100 <para>While <computeroutput>vboxsvr</computeroutput> is a fixed
1101 name (note that <computeroutput>vboxsrv</computeroutput> would
1102 also work), replace "x:" with the drive letter that you want to
1103 use for the share, and <computeroutput>sharename</computeroutput>
1104 with the share name specified with
1105 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>.</para>
1106 </listitem>
1107
1108 <listitem>
1109 <para>In a Linux guest, use the following command:</para>
1110
1111 <screen>mount -t vboxsf [-o OPTIONS] sharename mountpoint</screen>
1112
1113 <para>To mount a shared folder during boot, add the following
1114 entry to /etc/fstab:</para>
1115
1116 <screen>sharename mountpoint vboxsf defaults 0 0</screen>
1117 </listitem>
1118
1119 <listitem>
1120 <para>In a Solaris guest, use the following command:</para>
1121
1122 <screen>mount -F vboxfs [-o OPTIONS] sharename mountpoint</screen>
1123
1124 <para>Replace <computeroutput>sharename</computeroutput> (use
1125 lowercase) with the share name specified with
1126 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> or the GUI, and
1127 <computeroutput>mountpoint</computeroutput> with the path where
1128 you want the share to be mounted on the guest (e.g.
1129 <computeroutput>/mnt/share</computeroutput>). The usual mount
1130 rules apply, that is, create this directory first if it does not
1131 exist yet.</para>
1132
1133 <para>Here is an example of mounting the shared folder for the
1134 user "jack" on Solaris:</para>
1135
1136 <screen>$ id
1137uid=5000(jack) gid=1(other)
1138$ mkdir /export/home/jack/mount
1139$ pfexec mount -F vboxfs -o uid=5000,gid=1 jackshare /export/home/jack/mount
1140$ cd ~/mount
1141$ ls
1142sharedfile1.mp3 sharedfile2.txt
1143$</screen>
1144
1145 <para>Beyond the standard options supplied by the
1146 <computeroutput>mount</computeroutput> command, the following are
1147 available:</para>
1148
1149 <screen>iocharset CHARSET</screen>
1150
1151 <para>to set the character set used for I/O operations. Note that
1152 on Linux guests, if the "iocharset" option is not specified then
1153 the Guest Additions driver will attempt to use the character set
1154 specified by the CONFIG_NLS_DEFAULT kernel option. If this option
1155 is not set either then UTF-8 will be used. Also,</para>
1156
1157 <screen>convertcp CHARSET</screen>
1158
1159 <para>is available in order to specify the character set used for
1160 the shared folder name (utf8 by default).</para>
1161
1162 <para>The generic mount options (documented in the mount manual
1163 page) apply also. Especially useful are the options
1164 <computeroutput>uid</computeroutput>,
1165 <computeroutput>gid</computeroutput> and
1166 <computeroutput>mode</computeroutput>, as they allow access by
1167 normal users (in read/write mode, depending on the settings) even
1168 if root has mounted the filesystem.</para>
1169 </listitem>
1170 </itemizedlist></para>
1171 </sect2>
1172
1173 <sect2 id="sf_mount_auto">
1174 <title>Automatic mounting</title>
1175
1176 <para>Starting with version 4.0, VirtualBox can mount shared folders
1177 automatically, at your option. If automatic mounting is enabled for a
1178 specific shared folder, the Guest Additions will automatically mount
1179 that folder as soon as a user logs into the guest OS. The details depend
1180 on the guest OS type:<itemizedlist>
1181 <listitem>
1182 <para>With <emphasis role="bold">Windows guests,</emphasis> any
1183 auto-mounted shared folder will receive its own drive letter (e.g.
1184 <computeroutput>E:</computeroutput>) depending on the free drive
1185 letters remaining in the guest.</para>
1186
1187 <para>If there no free drive letters left, auto-mounting will
1188 fail; as a result, the number of auto-mounted shared folders is
1189 typically limited to 22 or less with Windows guests.</para>
1190 </listitem>
1191
1192 <listitem>
1193 <para>With <emphasis role="bold">Linux guests,</emphasis>
1194 auto-mounted shared folders are mounted into the
1195 <computeroutput>/media</computeroutput> directory, along with the
1196 prefix <computeroutput>sf_</computeroutput>. For example, the
1197 shared folder <computeroutput>myfiles</computeroutput> would be
1198 mounted to <computeroutput>/media/sf_myfiles</computeroutput> on
1199 Linux and <computeroutput>/mnt/sf_myfiles</computeroutput> on
1200 Solaris.</para>
1201
1202 <para>The guest property
1203 <computeroutput>/VirtualBox/GuestAdd/SharedFolders/MountPrefix</computeroutput>
1204 determines the prefix that is used. Change that guest property to
1205 a value other than "sf" to change that prefix; see <xref
1206 linkend="guestadd-guestprops" /> for details.<note>
1207 <para>Access to auto-mounted shared folders is only
1208 granted to the user group
1209 <computeroutput>vboxsf</computeroutput>, which is created by
1210 the VirtualBox Guest Additions installer. Hence guest users
1211 have to be member of that group to have read/write
1212 access or to have read-only access in case the folder is not
1213 mapped writable.</para>
1214 </note></para>
1215
1216 <para>To change the mount directory to something other than
1217 <computeroutput>/media</computeroutput>, you can set the guest
1218 property
1219 <computeroutput>/VirtualBox/GuestAdd/SharedFolders/MountDir</computeroutput>.</para>
1220 </listitem>
1221
1222 <listitem>
1223 <para><emphasis role="bold">Solaris guests</emphasis> behave like
1224 Linux guests except that <computeroutput>/mnt</computeroutput> is
1225 used as the default mount directory instead of
1226 <computeroutput>/media</computeroutput>.</para>
1227 </listitem>
1228 </itemizedlist></para>
1229
1230 <para>To have any changes to auto-mounted shared folders applied while a
1231 VM is running, the guest OS needs to be rebooted. (This applies only to
1232 auto-mounted shared folders, not the ones which are mounted
1233 manually.)</para>
1234 </sect2>
1235 </sect1>
1236
1237 <sect1 id="guestadd-video">
1238 <title>Hardware-accelerated graphics</title>
1239
1240 <sect2 id="guestadd-3d">
1241 <title>Hardware 3D acceleration (OpenGL and Direct3D 8/9)</title>
1242
1243 <para>The VirtualBox Guest Additions contain experimental hardware 3D
1244 support for Windows, Linux and Solaris guests.<footnote>
1245 <para>OpenGL support for Windows guests was added with VirtualBox
1246 2.1; support for Linux and Solaris followed with VirtualBox 2.2.
1247 With VirtualBox 3.0, Direct3D 8/9 support was added for Windows
1248 guests. OpenGL 2.0 is now supported as well.
1249 With VirtualBox 4.1 Windows Aero theme support is added for
1250 Windows Vista and Windows 7 guests (experimental)</para>
1251 </footnote></para>
1252
1253 <para>With this feature, if an application inside your virtual machine
1254 uses 3D features through the OpenGL or Direct3D 8/9 programming
1255 interfaces, instead of emulating them in software (which would be slow),
1256 VirtualBox will attempt to use your host's 3D hardware. This works for
1257 all supported host platforms (Windows, Mac, Linux, Solaris), provided
1258 that your host operating system can make use of your accelerated 3D
1259 hardware in the first place.</para>
1260
1261 <para>The 3D acceleration currently has the following
1262 preconditions:<orderedlist>
1263 <listitem>
1264 <para>It is only available for certain Windows, Linux and Solaris
1265 guests. In particular:<itemizedlist>
1266 <listitem>
1267 <para>3D acceleration with Windows guests requires Windows
1268 2000, Windows XP, Vista or Windows 7. Both OpenGL and
1269 Direct3D 8/9 (not with Windows 2000) are supported
1270 (experimental).</para>
1271 </listitem>
1272
1273 <listitem>
1274 <para>OpenGL on Linux requires kernel 2.6.27 and higher as
1275 well as X.org server version 1.5 and higher. Ubuntu 10.10
1276 and Fedora 14 have been tested and confirmed as
1277 working.</para>
1278 </listitem>
1279
1280 <listitem>
1281 <para>OpenGL on Solaris guests requires X.org server version
1282 1.5 and higher.</para>
1283 </listitem>
1284 </itemizedlist></para>
1285 </listitem>
1286
1287 <listitem>
1288 <para>The Guest Additions must be installed.<note>
1289 <para>For the basic Direct3D acceleration to work in a Windows Guest,
1290 VirtualBox needs to replace Windows system files in the
1291 virtual machine. As a result, the Guest Additions installation
1292 program offers Direct3D acceleration as an option that must
1293 be explicitly enabled. Also, you must install the Guest
1294 Additions in "Safe Mode". This does <emphasis role="bold">not</emphasis>
1295 apply to the experimental WDDM Direct3D video
1296 driver available for Vista and Windows 7 guests,
1297 see <xref linkend="KnownIssues" />
1298 for details.</para></note>
1299 </para>
1300 </listitem>
1301
1302 <listitem>
1303 <para>Because 3D support is still experimental at this time, it is
1304 disabled by default and must be <emphasis role="bold">manually
1305 enabled</emphasis> in the VM settings (see <xref
1306 linkend="generalsettings" />).<note>
1307 <para>
1308 Untrusted guest systems should not be allowed to use
1309 VirtualBox's 3D acceleration features, just as untrusted host
1310 software should not be allowed to use 3D acceleration. Drivers
1311 for 3D hardware are generally too complex to be made properly
1312 secure and any software which is allowed to access them may be
1313 able to compromise the operating system running them. In
1314 addition, enabling 3D acceleration gives the guest direct access
1315 to a large body of additional program code in the VirtualBox
1316 host process which it might conceivably be able to use to crash
1317 the virtual machine.
1318 </para>
1319 </note></para>
1320 </listitem>
1321 </orderedlist></para>
1322
1323 <para>With VirtualBox 4.1, Windows Aero theme support is added for
1324 Windows Vista and Windows 7 guests. To enable Aero theme support,
1325 the experimental VirtualBox WDDM video driver must be installed,
1326 which is available with the Guest Additions installation.
1327 Since the WDDM video driver is still experimental at this time, it is
1328 not installed by default and must be <emphasis role="bold">manually
1329 selected</emphasis> in the Guest Additions installer by answering "No"
1330 int the "Would you like to install basic Direct3D support" dialog
1331 displayed when the Direct3D feature is selected.
1332 <note><para>Unlike the current basic Direct3D support, the WDDM video
1333 driver installation does <emphasis role="bold">not</emphasis> require
1334 the "Safe Mode".</para></note>
1335 <para>The Aero theme is not enabled by default. To enable it<itemizedlist>
1336 <listitem>
1337 <para>In Windows Vista guest: right-click on the desktop, in the
1338 contect menu select "Personalize", then select "Windows Color and Appearance"
1339 in the "Personalization" window, in the "Appearance Settings" dialog select
1340 "Windows Aero" and press "OK"</para></listitem>
1341 <listitem>
1342 <para>In Windows 7 guest: right-click on the desktop, in the
1343 contect menu select "Personalize" and select any Aero theme
1344 in the "Personalization" window</para></listitem>
1345 </itemizedlist>
1346 </para>
1347 </para>
1348
1349 <para>Technically, VirtualBox implements this by installing an
1350 additional hardware 3D driver inside your guest when the Guest Additions
1351 are installed. This driver acts as a hardware 3D driver and reports to
1352 the guest operating system that the (virtual) hardware is capable of 3D
1353 hardware acceleration. When an application in the guest then requests
1354 hardware acceleration through the OpenGL or Direct3D programming
1355 interfaces, these are sent to the host through a special communication
1356 tunnel implemented by VirtualBox, and then the <emphasis>host</emphasis>
1357 performs the requested 3D operation via the host's programming
1358 interfaces.</para>
1359 </sect2>
1360
1361 <sect2 id="guestadd-2d">
1362 <title>Hardware 2D video acceleration for Windows guests</title>
1363
1364 <para>Starting with version 3.1, the VirtualBox Guest Additions contain
1365 experimental hardware 2D video acceleration support for Windows
1366 guests.</para>
1367
1368 <para>With this feature, if an application (e.g. a video player) inside
1369 your Windows VM uses 2D video overlays to play a movie clip, then
1370 VirtualBox will attempt to use your host's video acceleration hardware
1371 instead of performing overlay stretching and color conversion in
1372 software (which would be slow). This currently works for Windows, Linux
1373 and Mac host platforms, provided that your host operating system can
1374 make use of 2D video acceleration in the first place.</para>
1375
1376 <para>The 2D video acceleration currently has the following
1377 preconditions:<orderedlist>
1378 <listitem>
1379 <para>It is only available for Windows guests (XP or
1380 later).</para>
1381 </listitem>
1382
1383 <listitem>
1384 <para>The Guest Additions must be installed.</para>
1385 </listitem>
1386
1387 <listitem>
1388 <para>Because 2D support is still experimental at this time, it is
1389 disabled by default and must be <emphasis role="bold">manually
1390 enabled</emphasis> in the VM settings (see <xref
1391 linkend="generalsettings" />).</para>
1392 </listitem>
1393 </orderedlist></para>
1394
1395 <para>Technically, VirtualBox implements this by exposing video overlay
1396 DirectDraw capabilities in the Guest Additions video driver. The driver
1397 sends all overlay commands to the host through a special communication
1398 tunnel implemented by VirtualBox. On the host side, OpenGL is then used
1399 to implement color space transformation and scaling</para>
1400 </sect2>
1401 </sect1>
1402
1403 <sect1 id="seamlesswindows">
1404 <title>Seamless windows</title>
1405
1406 <para>With the "seamless windows" feature of VirtualBox, you can have the
1407 windows that are displayed within a virtual machine appear side by side
1408 next to the windows of your host. This feature is supported for the
1409 following guest operating systems (provided that the Guest Additions are
1410 installed):<itemizedlist>
1411 <listitem>
1412 <para>Windows guests (support added with VirtualBox 1.5);</para>
1413 </listitem>
1414
1415 <listitem>
1416 <para>Supported Linux or Solaris guests running the X Window System
1417 (added with VirtualBox 1.6).</para>
1418 </listitem>
1419 </itemizedlist></para>
1420
1421 <para>After seamless windows are enabled (see below), VirtualBox
1422 suppresses the display of the Desktop background of your guest, allowing
1423 you to run the windows of your guest operating system seamlessly next to
1424 the windows of your host:</para>
1425
1426 <para><mediaobject>
1427 <imageobject>
1428 <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/seamless.png" width="14cm" />
1429 </imageobject>
1430 </mediaobject>To enable seamless mode, after starting the virtual
1431 machine, press the Host key (normally the right control key) together with
1432 "L". This will enlarge the size of the VM's display to the size of your
1433 host screen and mask out the guest operating system's background. To go
1434 back to the "normal" VM display (i.e. to disable seamless windows), press
1435 the Host key and "L" again.</para>
1436 </sect1>
1437
1438 <sect1 id="guestadd-guestprops">
1439 <title>Guest properties</title>
1440
1441 <para>Starting with version 2.1, VirtualBox allows for requesting certain
1442 properties from a running guest, provided that the VirtualBox Guest
1443 Additions are installed and the VM is running. This is good for two
1444 things:<orderedlist>
1445 <listitem>
1446 <para>A number of predefined VM characteristics are automatically
1447 maintained by VirtualBox and can be retrieved on the host, e.g. to
1448 monitor VM performance and statistics.</para>
1449 </listitem>
1450
1451 <listitem>
1452 <para>In addition, arbitrary string data can be exchanged between
1453 guest and host. This works in both directions.</para>
1454 </listitem>
1455 </orderedlist></para>
1456
1457 <para>To accomplish this, VirtualBox establishes a private communication
1458 channel between the VirtualBox Guest Additions and the host, and software
1459 on both sides can use this channel to exchange string data for arbitrary
1460 purposes. Guest properties are simply string keys to which a value is
1461 attached. They can be set (written to) by either the host and the guest,
1462 and they can also be read from both sides.</para>
1463
1464 <para>In addition to establishing the general mechanism of reading and
1465 writing values, a set of predefined guest properties is automatically
1466 maintained by the VirtualBox Guest Additions to allow for retrieving
1467 interesting guest data such as the guest's exact operating system and
1468 service pack level, the installed version of the Guest Additions, users
1469 that are currently logged into the guest OS, network statistics and more.
1470 These predefined properties are all prefixed with
1471 <computeroutput>/VirtualBox/</computeroutput> and organized into a
1472 hierarchical tree of keys.</para>
1473
1474 <para>Some of this runtime information is shown when you select "Session
1475 Information Dialog" from a virtual machine's "Machine" menu.</para>
1476
1477 <para>A more flexible way to use this channel is via the
1478 <computeroutput>VBoxManage guestproperty</computeroutput> command set; see
1479 <xref linkend="vboxmanage-guestproperty" /> for details. For example, to
1480 have <emphasis>all</emphasis> the available guest properties for a given
1481 running VM listed with their respective values, use this:<screen>$ VBoxManage guestproperty enumerate "Windows Vista III"
1482VirtualBox Command Line Management Interface Version $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD
1483(C) 2005-$VBOX_C_YEAR $VBOX_VENDOR
1484All rights reserved.
1485
1486Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Product, value: Windows Vista Business Edition,
1487 timestamp: 1229098278843087000, flags:
1488Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Release, value: 6.0.6001,
1489 timestamp: 1229098278950553000, flags:
1490Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/ServicePack, value: 1,
1491 timestamp: 1229098279122627000, flags:
1492Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/InstallDir,
1493 value: C:/Program Files/Oracle/VirtualBox
1494 Guest Additions, timestamp: 1229098279269739000, flags:
1495Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Revision, value: 40720,
1496 timestamp: 1229098279345664000, flags:
1497Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Version, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD,
1498 timestamp: 1229098279479515000, flags:
1499Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxControl.exe, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1500 timestamp: 1229098279651731000, flags:
1501Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxHook.dll, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1502 timestamp: 1229098279804835000, flags:
1503Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxDisp.dll, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1504 timestamp: 1229098279880611000, flags:
1505Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxMRXNP.dll, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1506 timestamp: 1229098279882618000, flags:
1507Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxService.exe, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1508 timestamp: 1229098279883195000, flags:
1509Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxTray.exe, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1510 timestamp: 1229098279885027000, flags:
1511Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxGuest.sys, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1512 timestamp: 1229098279886838000, flags:
1513Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxMouse.sys, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1514 timestamp: 1229098279890600000, flags:
1515Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxSF.sys, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1516 timestamp: 1229098279893056000, flags:
1517Name: /VirtualBox/GuestAdd/Components/VBoxVideo.sys, value: $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILDr40720,
1518 timestamp: 1229098279895767000, flags:
1519Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/LoggedInUsers, value: 1,
1520 timestamp: 1229099826317660000, flags:
1521Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/NoLoggedInUsers, value: false,
1522 timestamp: 1229098455580553000, flags:
1523Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/Count, value: 1,
1524 timestamp: 1229099826299785000, flags:
1525Name: /VirtualBox/HostInfo/GUI/LanguageID, value: C,
1526 timestamp: 1229098151272771000, flags:
1527Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/0/V4/IP, value: 192.168.2.102,
1528 timestamp: 1229099826300088000, flags:
1529Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/0/V4/Broadcast, value: 255.255.255.255,
1530 timestamp: 1229099826300220000, flags:
1531Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/0/V4/Netmask, value: 255.255.255.0,
1532 timestamp: 1229099826300350000, flags:
1533Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/Net/0/Status, value: Up,
1534 timestamp: 1229099826300524000, flags:
1535Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/LoggedInUsersList, value: username,
1536 timestamp: 1229099826317386000, flags:</screen></para>
1537
1538 <para>To query the value of a single property, use the "get" subcommand
1539 like this:<screen>$ VBoxManage guestproperty get "Windows Vista III"
1540 "/VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Product"
1541VirtualBox Command Line Management Interface Version $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD
1542(C) 2005-$VBOX_C_YEAR $VBOX_VENDOR
1543All rights reserved.
1544
1545Value: Windows Vista Business Edition
1546</screen></para>
1547
1548 <para>To add or change guest properties from the guest, use the tool
1549 <computeroutput>VBoxControl</computeroutput>. This tool is included in the
1550 Guest Additions of VirtualBox 2.2 or later. When started from a Linux
1551 guest, this tool requires root privileges for security reasons:<screen>$ sudo VBoxControl guestproperty enumerate
1552VirtualBox Guest Additions Command Line Management Interface Version $VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR.$VBOX_VERSION_MINOR.$VBOX_VERSION_BUILD
1553(C) 2009-$VBOX_C_YEAR $VBOX_VENDOR
1554All rights reserved.
1555
1556Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Release, value: 2.6.28-18-generic,
1557 timestamp: 1265813265835667000, flags: &lt;NULL&gt;
1558Name: /VirtualBox/GuestInfo/OS/Version, value: #59-Ubuntu SMP Thu Jan 28 01:23:03 UTC 2010,
1559 timestamp: 1265813265836305000, flags: &lt;NULL&gt;
1560 ...</screen></para>
1561
1562 <para>For more complex needs, you can use the VirtualBox programming
1563 interfaces; see <xref linkend="VirtualBoxAPI" />.</para>
1564 </sect1>
1565
1566 <sect1 id="guestadd-guestcontrol">
1567 <title>Guest control</title>
1568
1569 <para>Starting with version 3.2, the Guest Additions of VirtualBox allow
1570 starting applications inside a VM from the host system.</para>
1571
1572 <para>For this to work, the application needs to be installed inside the
1573 guest; no additional software needs to be installed on the host.
1574 Additionally, text mode output (to stdout and stderr) can be shown on the
1575 host for further processing along with options to specify user credentials
1576 and a timeout value (in milliseconds) to limit time the application is
1577 able to run.</para>
1578
1579 <para>This feature can be used to automate deployment of software within
1580 the guest.</para>
1581
1582 <para>Starting with version 4.0, the Guest Additions for Windows allow for
1583 automatic updating (only already installed Guest Additions 4.0 or later).
1584 Also, copying files from host to the guest as well as remotely creating
1585 guest directories is available.</para>
1586
1587 <para>To use these features, use the VirtualBox command line, see <xref
1588 linkend="vboxmanage-guestcontrol" />.</para>
1589 </sect1>
1590
1591 <sect1>
1592 <title>Memory overcommitment</title>
1593
1594 <para>In server environments with many VMs; the Guest Additions can be
1595 used to share physical host memory between several VMs, reducing the total
1596 amount of memory in use by the VMs. If memory usage is the limiting factor
1597 and CPU resources are still available, this can help with packing more VMs
1598 on each host.</para>
1599
1600 <sect2 id="guestadd-balloon">
1601 <title>Memory ballooning</title>
1602
1603 <para>Starting with version 3.2, the Guest Additions of VirtualBox can
1604 change the amount of host memory that a VM uses while the machine is
1605 running. Because of how this is implemented, this feature is called
1606 "memory ballooning".</para>
1607
1608 <note>
1609 <para>VirtualBox supports memory ballooning only on 64-bit hosts, and
1610 it is not supported on Mac OS X hosts.</para>
1611 </note>
1612
1613 <para>Normally, to change the amount of memory allocated to a virtual
1614 machine, one has to shut down the virtual machine entirely and modify
1615 its settings. With memory ballooning, memory that was allocated for a
1616 virtual machine can be given to another virtual machine without having
1617 to shut the machine down.</para>
1618
1619 <para>When memory ballooning is requested, the VirtualBox Guest
1620 Additions (which run inside the guest) allocate physical memory from the
1621 guest operating system on the kernel level and lock this memory down in
1622 the guest. This ensures that the guest will not use that memory any
1623 longer: no guest applications can allocate it, and the guest kernel will
1624 not use it either. VirtualBox can then re-use this memory and give it to
1625 another virtual machine.</para>
1626
1627 <para>The memory made available through the ballooning mechanism is only
1628 available for re-use by VirtualBox. It is <emphasis>not</emphasis>
1629 returned as free memory to the host. Requesting balloon memory from a
1630 running guest will therefore not increase the amount of free,
1631 unallocated memory on the host. Effectively, memory ballooning is
1632 therefore a memory overcommitment mechanism for multiple virtual
1633 machines while they are running. This can be useful to temporarily start
1634 another machine, or in more complicated environments, for sophisticated
1635 memory management of many virtual machines that may be running in
1636 parallel depending on how memory is used by the guests.</para>
1637
1638 <para>At this time, memory ballooning is only supported through
1639 VBoxManage. Use the following command to increase or decrease the size
1640 of the memory balloon within a running virtual machine that has Guest
1641 Additions installed: <screen>VBoxManage controlvm "VM name" guestmemoryballoon &lt;n&gt;</screen>where
1642 <computeroutput>"VM name"</computeroutput> is the name or UUID of the
1643 virtual machine in question and
1644 <computeroutput>&lt;n&gt;</computeroutput> is the amount of memory to
1645 allocate from the guest in megabytes. See <xref
1646 linkend="vboxmanage-controlvm" /> for more information.</para>
1647
1648 <para>You can also set a default balloon that will automatically be
1649 requested from the VM every time after it has started up with the
1650 following command: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --guestmemoryballoon &lt;n&gt;</screen></para>
1651
1652 <para>By default, no balloon memory is allocated. This is a VM setting,
1653 like other <computeroutput>modifyvm</computeroutput> settings, and
1654 therefore can only be set while the machine is shut down; see <xref
1655 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" />.</para>
1656 </sect2>
1657
1658 <sect2 id="guestadd-pagefusion">
1659 <title>Page Fusion</title>
1660
1661 <para>Whereas memory ballooning simply reduces the amount of RAM that is
1662 available to a VM, Page Fusion works differently: it avoids memory
1663 duplication between several similar running VMs.</para>
1664
1665 <para>In a server environment running several similar VMs (e.g. with
1666 identical operating systems) on the same host, lots of memory pages are
1667 identical. VirtualBox's Page Fusion technology, introduced with
1668 VirtualBox 3.2, is a novel technique to efficiently identify these
1669 identical memory pages and share them between multiple VMs.<note>
1670 <para>VirtualBox supports Page Fusion only on 64-bit hosts, and it
1671 is not supported on Mac OS X hosts. Page Fusion currently works only
1672 with Windows guests (2000 and later).</para>
1673 </note></para>
1674
1675 <para>The more similar the VMs on a given host are, the more efficiently
1676 Page Fusion can reduce the amount of host memory that is in use. It
1677 therefore works best if all VMs on a host run identical operating
1678 systems (e.g. Windows XP Service Pack 2). Instead of having a complete
1679 copy of each operating system in each VM, Page Fusion identifies the
1680 identical memory pages in use by these operating systems and eliminates
1681 the duplicates, sharing host memory between several machines
1682 ("deduplication"). If a VM tries to modify a page that has been shared
1683 with other VMs, a new page is allocated again for that VM with a copy of
1684 the shared page ("copy on write"). All this is fully transparent to the
1685 virtual machine.</para>
1686
1687 <para>You may be familiar with this kind of memory overcommitment from
1688 other hypervisor products, which call this feature "page sharing" or
1689 "same page merging". However, Page Fusion differs significantly from
1690 those other solutions, whose approaches have several
1691 drawbacks:<orderedlist>
1692 <listitem>
1693 <para>Traditional hypervisors scan <emphasis>all</emphasis> guest
1694 memory and compute checksums (hashes) for every single memory
1695 page. Then, they look for pages with identical hashes and compare
1696 the entire content of those pages; if two pages produce the same
1697 hash, it is very likely that the pages are identical in content.
1698 This, of course, can take rather long, especially if the system is
1699 not idling. As a result, the additional memory only becomes
1700 available after a significant amount of time (this can be hours or
1701 even days!). Even worse, this kind of page sharing algorithm
1702 generally consumes significant CPU resources and increases the
1703 virtualization overhead by 10-20%.</para>
1704
1705 <para>Page Fusion in VirtualBox uses logic in the VirtualBox Guest
1706 Additions to quickly identify memory cells that are most likely
1707 identical across VMs. It can therefore achieve most of the
1708 possible savings of page sharing almost immediately and with
1709 almost no overhead.</para>
1710 </listitem>
1711
1712 <listitem>
1713 <para>Page Fusion is also much less likely to be confused by
1714 identical memory that it will eliminate just to learn seconds
1715 later that the memory will now change and having to perform a
1716 highly expensive and often service-disrupting reallocation.</para>
1717 </listitem>
1718 </orderedlist></para>
1719
1720 <para>At this time, Page Fusion can only be controlled with VBoxManage,
1721 and only while a VM is shut down. To enable Page Fusion for a VM, use
1722 the following command:<screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --pagefusion on</screen></para>
1723
1724 <para>You can observe Page Fusion operation using some metrics.
1725 <computeroutput>RAM/VMM/Shared</computeroutput> shows the total amount
1726 of fused pages, whereas the per-VM metric
1727 <computeroutput>Guest/RAM/Usage/Shared</computeroutput> will return the
1728 amount of fused memory for a given VM. Please refer to <xref
1729 linkend="metrics" /> for information on how to query metrics.</para>
1730 </sect2>
1731 </sect1>
1732</chapter>
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