VirtualBox

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doc: some words about NAT configuration via GUI.

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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 id="networkingdetails">
5 <title>Virtual networking</title>
6
7 <para>As briefly mentioned in <xref linkend="settings-network" />,
8 VirtualBox provides up to eight virtual PCI Ethernet cards for each virtual
9 machine. For each such card, you can individually select<orderedlist>
10 <listitem>
11 <para>the hardware that will be virtualized as well as</para>
12 </listitem>
13
14 <listitem>
15 <para>the virtualization mode that the virtual card will be operating
16 in with respect to your physical networking hardware on the
17 host.</para>
18 </listitem>
19 </orderedlist></para>
20
21 <para>Four of the network cards can be configured in the "Network" section
22 of the settings dialog in the graphical user interface of VirtualBox. You
23 can configure all eight network cards on the command line via VBoxManage
24 modifyvm; see <xref linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" />.</para>
25
26 <para>This chapter explains the various networking settings in more
27 detail.</para>
28
29 <sect1 id="nichardware">
30 <title>Virtual networking hardware</title>
31
32 <para>For each card, you can individually select what kind of
33 <emphasis>hardware</emphasis> will be presented to the virtual machine.
34 VirtualBox can virtualize the following six types of networking
35 hardware:<itemizedlist>
36 <listitem>
37 <para>AMD PCNet PCI II (Am79C970A);</para>
38 </listitem>
39
40 <listitem>
41 <para>AMD PCNet FAST III (Am79C973, the default);</para>
42 </listitem>
43
44 <listitem>
45 <para>Intel PRO/1000 MT Desktop (82540EM);</para>
46 </listitem>
47
48 <listitem>
49 <para>Intel PRO/1000 T Server (82543GC);</para>
50 </listitem>
51
52 <listitem>
53 <para>Intel PRO/1000 MT Server (82545EM);</para>
54 </listitem>
55
56 <listitem>
57 <para>Paravirtualized network adapter (virtio-net).</para>
58 </listitem>
59 </itemizedlist></para>
60
61 <para>The PCNet FAST III is the default because it is supported by nearly
62 all operating systems out of the box, as well as the GNU GRUB boot
63 manager. As an exception, the Intel PRO/1000 family adapters are chosen
64 for some guest operating system types that no longer ship with drivers for
65 the PCNet card, such as Windows Vista.</para>
66
67 <para>The Intel PRO/1000 MT Desktop type works with Windows Vista and
68 later versions. The T Server variant of the Intel PRO/1000 card is
69 recognized by Windows XP guests without additional driver installation.
70 The MT Server variant facilitates OVF imports from other platforms.</para>
71
72 <para>The <emphasis role="bold">"Paravirtualized network adapter
73 (virtio-net)"</emphasis> is special. If you select this, then VirtualBox
74 does <emphasis>not</emphasis> virtualize common networking hardware (that
75 is supported by common guest operating systems out of the box). Instead,
76 VirtualBox then expects a special software interface for virtualized
77 environments to be provided by the guest, thus avoiding the complexity of
78 emulating networking hardware and improving network performance. Starting
79 with version 3.1, VirtualBox provides support for the industry-standard
80 "virtio" networking drivers, which are part of the open-source KVM
81 project.</para>
82
83 <para>The "virtio" networking drivers are available for the following
84 guest operating systems:</para>
85
86 <para><itemizedlist>
87 <listitem>
88 <para>Linux kernels version 2.6.25 or later can be configured to
89 provide virtio support; some distributions also back-ported virtio
90 to older kernels.</para>
91 </listitem>
92
93 <listitem>
94 <para>For Windows 2000, XP and Vista, virtio drivers can be
95 downloaded and installed from the KVM project web page.<footnote>
96 <para><ulink
97 url="http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/WindowsGuestDrivers">http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/WindowsGuestDrivers</ulink>.</para>
98 </footnote></para>
99 </listitem>
100 </itemizedlist></para>
101
102 <para>VirtualBox also has limited support for so-called <emphasis
103 role="bold">jumbo frames</emphasis>, i.e. networking packets with more
104 than 1500 bytes of data, provided that you use the Intel card
105 virtualization and bridged networking. In other words, jumbo frames are
106 not supported with the AMD networking devices; in those cases, jumbo
107 packets will silently be dropped for both the transmit and the receive
108 direction. Guest operating systems trying to use this feature will observe
109 this as a packet loss, which may lead to unexpected application behavior
110 in the guest. This does not cause problems with guest operating systems in
111 their default configuration, as jumbo frames need to be explicitly
112 enabled.</para>
113 </sect1>
114
115 <sect1 id="networkingmodes">
116 <title>Introduction to networking modes</title>
117
118 <para>Each of the eight networking adapters can be separately configured
119 to operate in one of the following modes:<glosslist>
120 <glossentry>
121 <glossterm>Not attached</glossterm>
122
123 <glossdef>
124 <para>In this mode, VirtualBox reports to the guest that a network
125 card is present, but that there is no connection -- as if no
126 Ethernet cable was plugged into the card. This way it is possible
127 to "pull" the virtual Ethernet cable and disrupt the connection,
128 which can be useful to inform a guest operating system that no
129 network connection is available and enforce a
130 reconfiguration.</para>
131 </glossdef>
132 </glossentry>
133
134 <glossentry>
135 <glossterm>Network Address Translation (NAT)</glossterm>
136
137 <glossdef>
138 <para>If all you want is to browse the Web, download files and
139 view e-mail inside the guest, then this default mode should be
140 sufficient for you, and you can safely skip the rest of this
141 section. Please note that there are certain limitations when using
142 Windows file sharing (see <xref linkend="nat-limitations" /> for
143 details).</para>
144 </glossdef>
145 </glossentry>
146
147 <glossentry>
148 <glossterm>Bridged networking</glossterm>
149
150 <glossdef>
151 <para>This is for more advanced networking needs such as network
152 simulations and running servers in a guest. When enabled,
153 VirtualBox connects to one of your installed network cards and
154 exchanges network packets directly, circumventing your host
155 operating system's network stack.</para>
156 </glossdef>
157 </glossentry>
158
159 <glossentry>
160 <glossterm>Internal networking</glossterm>
161
162 <glossdef>
163 <para>This can be used to create a different kind of
164 software-based network which is visible to selected virtual
165 machines, but not to applications running on the host or to the
166 outside world.</para>
167 </glossdef>
168 </glossentry>
169
170 <glossentry>
171 <glossterm>Host-only networking</glossterm>
172
173 <glossdef>
174 <para>This can be used to create a network containing the host and
175 a set of virtual machines, without the need for the host's
176 physical network interface. Instead, a virtual network interface
177 (similar to a loopback interface) is created on the host,
178 providing connectivity among virtual machines and the host.</para>
179 </glossdef>
180 </glossentry>
181
182 <glossentry>
183 <glossterm>Generic networking</glossterm>
184
185 <glossdef>
186 <para>Rarely used modes share the same generic network interface,
187 by allowing the user to select a driver which can be included with
188 VirtualBox or be distributed in an extension pack.</para>
189
190 <para>At the moment there are potentially two available
191 sub-modes:</para>
192
193 <para><glosslist>
194 <glossentry>
195 <glossterm>UDP Tunnel</glossterm>
196
197 <glossdef>
198 <para>This can be used to interconnect virtual machines
199 running on different hosts directly, easily and
200 transparently, over existing network
201 infrastructure.</para>
202 </glossdef>
203 </glossentry>
204
205 <glossentry>
206 <glossterm>VDE (Virtual Distributed Ethernet)
207 networking</glossterm>
208
209 <glossdef>
210 <para>This option can be used to connect to a Virtual
211 Distributed Ethernet switch on a Linux or a FreeBSD host.
212 At the moment this needs compiling VirtualBox from
213 sources, as the Oracle packages do not include it.</para>
214 </glossdef>
215 </glossentry>
216 </glosslist></para>
217 </glossdef>
218 </glossentry>
219 </glosslist></para>
220
221 <para>The following sections describe the available network modes in more
222 detail.</para>
223 </sect1>
224
225 <sect1 id="network_nat">
226 <title>Network Address Translation (NAT)</title>
227
228 <para>Network Address Translation (NAT) is the simplest way of accessing
229 an external network from a virtual machine. Usually, it does not require
230 any configuration on the host network and guest system. For this reason,
231 it is the default networking mode in VirtualBox.</para>
232
233 <para>A virtual machine with NAT enabled acts much like a real computer
234 that connects to the Internet through a router. The "router", in this
235 case, is the VirtualBox networking engine, which maps traffic from and to
236 the virtual machine transparently. In VirtualBox this router is placed
237 between each virtual machine and the host. This separation maximizes
238 security since by default virtual machines cannot talk to each
239 other.</para>
240
241 <para>The disadvantage of NAT mode is that, much like a private network
242 behind a router, the virtual machine is invisible and unreachable from the
243 outside internet; you cannot run a server this way unless you set up port
244 forwarding (described below).</para>
245
246 <para>The network frames sent out by the guest operating system are
247 received by VirtualBox's NAT engine, which extracts the TCP/IP data and
248 resends it using the host operating system. To an application on the host,
249 or to another computer on the same network as the host, it looks like the
250 data was sent by the VirtualBox application on the host, using an IP
251 address belonging to the host. VirtualBox listens for replies to the
252 packages sent, and repacks and resends them to the guest machine on its
253 private network.</para>
254
255 <para>The virtual machine receives its network address and configuration
256 on the private network from a DHCP server integrated into VirtualBox. The
257 IP address thus assigned to the virtual machine is usually on a completely
258 different network than the host. As more than one card of a virtual
259 machine can be set up to use NAT, the first card is connected to the
260 private network 10.0.2.0, the second card to the network 10.0.3.0 and so
261 on. If you need to change the guest-assigned IP range for some reason,
262 please refer to <xref linkend="changenat" />.</para>
263
264 <sect2 id="natforward">
265 <title>Configuring port forwarding with NAT</title>
266
267 <para>As the virtual machine is connected to a private network internal
268 to VirtualBox and invisible to the host, network services on the guest
269 are not accessible to the host machine or to other computers on the same
270 network. However, like a physical router, VirtualBox can make selected
271 services available to the world outside the guest through <emphasis
272 role="bold">port forwarding.</emphasis> This means that VirtualBox
273 listens to certain ports on the host and resends all packets which
274 arrive there to the guest, on the same or a different port.</para>
275
276 <para>To an application on the host or other physical (or virtual)
277 machines on the network, it looks as though the service being proxied is
278 actually running on the host. This also means that you cannot run the
279 same service on the same ports on the host. However, you still gain the
280 advantages of running the service in a virtual machine -- for example,
281 services on the host machine or on other virtual machines cannot be
282 compromised or crashed by a vulnerability or a bug in the service, and
283 the service can run in a different operating system than the host
284 system.</para>
285
286 <para>You can set up a guest service which you wish to proxy using "Port Forwardng" editor in
287 "Settings" dialog at VirtualBox's graphical under "Networkng" category in "Advanced" properties
288 of interface attached to NAT-networking.</para>
289
290 <para>Alternatively command line tool <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> could be used;
291 for details, please refer to <xref linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" />.</para>
292
293 <para>You will need to know which ports on the guest the service uses
294 and to decide which ports to use on the host (often but not always you
295 will want to use the same ports on the guest and on the host). You can
296 use any ports on the host which are not already in use by a service. For
297 example, to set up incoming NAT connections to an
298 <computeroutput>ssh</computeroutput> server in the guest, use the
299 following command: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --natpf1 "guestssh,tcp,,2222,,22"</screen>With
300 the above example, all TCP traffic arriving on port 2222 on any host
301 interface will be forwarded to port 22 in the guest. The protocol name
302 <computeroutput>tcp</computeroutput> is a mandatory attribute defining
303 which protocol should be used for forwarding
304 (<computeroutput>udp</computeroutput> could also be used). The name
305 <computeroutput>guestssh</computeroutput> is purely descriptive and will
306 be auto-generated if omitted. The number after
307 <computeroutput>--natpf</computeroutput> denotes the network card, like
308 in other parts of VBoxManage.</para>
309
310 <para>To remove this forwarding rule again, use the following command:
311 <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --natpf1 delete "guestssh"</screen></para>
312
313 <para>If for some reason the guest uses a static assigned IP address not
314 leased from the built-in DHCP server, it is required to specify the
315 guest IP when registering the forwarding rule: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --natpf1 "guestssh,tcp,,2222,10.0.2.19,22"</screen>This
316 example is identical to the previous one, except that the NAT engine is
317 being told that the guest can be found at the 10.0.2.19 address.</para>
318
319 <para>To forward <emphasis>all</emphasis> incoming traffic from a
320 specific host interface to the guest, specify the IP of that host
321 interface like this:<screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --natpf1 "guestssh,tcp,127.0.0.1,2222,,22"</screen>This
322 forwards all TCP traffic arriving on the localhost interface (127.0.0.1)
323 via port 2222 to port 22 in the guest.</para>
324
325 <para>It is possible to configure incoming NAT connections while the
326 VM is running<xref linkend="vboxmanage-controlvm"/>.</para>
327 </sect2>
328
329 <sect2 id="nat-tftp">
330 <title>PXE booting with NAT</title>
331
332 <para>PXE booting is now supported in NAT mode. The NAT DHCP server
333 provides a boot file name of the form
334 <computeroutput>vmname.pxe</computeroutput> if the directory
335 <computeroutput>TFTP</computeroutput> exists in the directory where the
336 user's <computeroutput>VirtualBox.xml</computeroutput> file is kept. It
337 is the responsibility of the user to provide
338 <computeroutput>vmname.pxe</computeroutput>.</para>
339 </sect2>
340
341 <sect2 id="nat-limitations">
342 <title>NAT limitations</title>
343
344 <para>There are four <emphasis role="bold">limitations</emphasis> of NAT
345 mode which users should be aware of:</para>
346
347 <glosslist>
348 <glossentry>
349 <glossterm>ICMP protocol limitations:</glossterm>
350
351 <glossdef>
352 <para>Some frequently used network debugging tools (e.g.
353 <computeroutput>ping</computeroutput> or tracerouting) rely on the
354 ICMP protocol for sending/receiving messages. While ICMP support
355 has been improved with VirtualBox 2.1
356 (<computeroutput>ping</computeroutput> should now work), some
357 other tools may not work reliably.</para>
358 </glossdef>
359 </glossentry>
360
361 <glossentry>
362 <glossterm>Receiving of UDP broadcasts is not reliable:</glossterm>
363
364 <glossdef>
365 <para>The guest does not reliably receive broadcasts, since, in
366 order to save resources, it only listens for a certain amount of
367 time after the guest has sent UDP data on a particular port. As a
368 consequence, NetBios name resolution based on broadcasts does not
369 always work (but WINS always works). As a workaround, you can use
370 the numeric IP of the desired server in the
371 <computeroutput>\\server\share</computeroutput> notation.</para>
372 </glossdef>
373 </glossentry>
374
375 <glossentry>
376 <glossterm>Protocols such as GRE are unsupported:</glossterm>
377
378 <glossdef>
379 <para>Protocols other than TCP and UDP are not supported. This
380 means some VPN products (e.g. PPTP from Microsoft) cannot be used.
381 There are other VPN products which use simply TCP and UDP.</para>
382 </glossdef>
383 </glossentry>
384
385 <glossentry>
386 <glossterm>Forwarding host ports &lt; 1024 impossible:</glossterm>
387
388 <glossdef>
389 <para>On Unix-based hosts (e.g. Linux, Solaris, Mac OS X) it is
390 not possible to bind to ports below 1024 from applications that
391 are not run by <computeroutput>root</computeroutput>. As a result,
392 if you try to configure such a port forwarding, the VM will refuse
393 to start.</para>
394 </glossdef>
395 </glossentry>
396 </glosslist>
397
398 <para>These limitations normally don't affect standard network use. But
399 the presence of NAT has also subtle effects that may interfere with
400 protocols that are normally working. One example is NFS, where the
401 server is often configured to refuse connections from non-privileged
402 ports (i.e. ports not below 1024).</para>
403 </sect2>
404 </sect1>
405
406 <sect1>
407 <title id="network_bridged">Bridged networking</title>
408
409 <para>With bridged networking, VirtualBox uses a device driver on your
410 <emphasis>host</emphasis> system that filters data from your physical
411 network adapter. This driver is therefore called a "net filter" driver.
412 This allows VirtualBox to intercept data from the physical network and
413 inject data into it, effectively creating a new network interface in
414 software. When a guest is using such a new software interface, it looks to
415 the host system as though the guest were physically connected to the
416 interface using a network cable: the host can send data to the guest
417 through that interface and receive data from it. This means that you can
418 set up routing or bridging between the guest and the rest of your
419 network.</para>
420
421 <para>For this to work, VirtualBox needs a device driver on your host
422 system. The way bridged networking works has been completely rewritten
423 with VirtualBox 2.0 and 2.1, depending on the host operating system. From
424 the user perspective, the main difference is that complex configuration is
425 no longer necessary on any of the supported host operating
426 systems.<footnote>
427 <para>For Mac OS X and Solaris hosts, net filter drivers were already
428 added in VirtualBox 2.0 (as initial support for Host Interface
429 Networking on these platforms). With VirtualBox 2.1, net filter
430 drivers were also added for the Windows and Linux hosts, replacing the
431 mechanisms previously present in VirtualBox for those platforms;
432 especially on Linux, the earlier method required creating TAP
433 interfaces and bridges, which was complex and varied from one
434 distribution to the next. None of this is necessary anymore. Bridged
435 network was formerly called "Host Interface Networking" and has been
436 renamed with version 2.2 without any change in functionality.</para>
437 </footnote></para>
438
439 <para><note>
440 <para>Even though TAP is no longer necessary on Linux with bridged
441 networking, you <emphasis>can</emphasis> still use TAP interfaces for
442 certain advanced setups, since you can connect a VM to any host
443 interface -- which could also be a TAP interface.</para>
444 </note>To enable bridged networking, all you need to do is to open the
445 Settings dialog of a virtual machine, go to the "Network" page and select
446 "Bridged network" in the drop down list for the "Attached to" field.
447 Finally, select desired host interface from the list at the bottom of the
448 page, which contains the physical network interfaces of your systems. On a
449 typical MacBook, for example, this will allow you to select between "en1:
450 AirPort" (which is the wireless interface) and "en0: Ethernet", which
451 represents the interface with a network cable.</para>
452
453 <note><para>Bridging to a wireless interface is done differently from
454 bridging to a wired interface, because most wireless adapters do not
455 support promiscuous mode. All traffic has to use the MAC address of the
456 host's wireless adapter, and therefore VirtualBox needs to replace the
457 source MAC address in the Ethernet header of an outgoing packet to make
458 sure the reply will be sent to the host interface. When VirtualBox sees
459 an incoming packet with a destination IP address that belongs to one of
460 the virtual machine adapters it replaces the destination MAC address in
461 the Ethernet header with the VM adapter's MAC address and passes it on.
462 VirtualBox examines ARP and DHCP packets in order to learn the IP
463 addresses of virtual machines.</para></note>
464
465 <para>Depending on your host operating system, the following limitations
466 should be kept in mind:<itemizedlist>
467 <listitem>
468 <para>On <emphasis role="bold">Macintosh</emphasis> hosts,
469 functionality is limited when using AirPort (the Mac's wireless
470 networking) for bridged networking. Currently, VirtualBox supports
471 only IPv4 over AirPort. For other protocols such as IPv6 and IPX,
472 you must choose a wired interface.</para>
473 </listitem>
474
475 <listitem>
476 <para>On <emphasis role="bold">Linux</emphasis> hosts, functionality
477 is limited when using wireless interfaces for bridged networking.
478 Currently, VirtualBox supports only IPv4 over wireless. For other
479 protocols such as IPv6 and IPX, you must choose a wired
480 interface.</para>
481
482 <para>Also, setting the MTU to less than 1500 bytes on wired
483 interfaces provided by the sky2 driver on the Marvell Yukon II EC
484 Ultra Ethernet NIC is known to cause packet losses under certain
485 conditions.</para>
486
487 <para>Some adapters strip VLAN tags in hardware. This does not allow
488 to use VLAN trunking between VM and the external network with
489 pre-2.6.27 Linux kernels nor with host operating systems other than
490 Linux.</para>
491 </listitem>
492
493 <listitem>
494 <para>On <emphasis role="bold">Solaris</emphasis> hosts, there is no
495 support for using wireless interfaces. Filtering guest traffic using
496 IPFilter is also not completely supported due to technical
497 restrictions of the Solaris networking subsystem. These issues would
498 be addressed in a future release of Solaris 11.</para>
499
500 <para>Starting with VirtualBox 4.1, on Solaris 11 hosts (build 159
501 and above), it is possible to use Solaris' Crossbow Virtual Network
502 Interfaces (VNICs) directly with VirtualBox without any additional
503 configuration other than each VNIC must be exclusive for every guest
504 network interface. With VirtualBox 2.0.4 and above, VNICs can be
505 used but with the following caveats:</para>
506
507 <itemizedlist>
508 <listitem>
509 <para>A VNIC cannot be shared between multiple guest network
510 interfaces, i.e. each guest network interface must have its own,
511 exclusive VNIC.</para>
512 </listitem>
513
514 <listitem>
515 <para>The VNIC and the guest network interface that uses the
516 VNIC must be assigned identical MAC addresses.</para>
517 </listitem>
518 </itemizedlist>
519
520 <para>When using VLAN interfaces with VirtualBox, they must be named
521 according to the PPA-hack naming scheme (e.g. "e1000g513001"), as
522 otherwise the guest may receive packets in an unexpected
523 format.</para>
524 </listitem>
525 </itemizedlist></para>
526 </sect1>
527
528 <sect1 id="network_internal">
529 <title>Internal networking</title>
530
531 <para>Internal Networking is similar to bridged networking in that the VM
532 can directly communicate with the outside world. However, the "outside
533 world" is limited to other VMs on the same host which connect to the same
534 internal network.</para>
535
536 <para>Even though technically, everything that can be done using internal
537 networking can also be done using bridged networking, there are security
538 advantages with internal networking. In bridged networking mode, all
539 traffic goes through a physical interface of the host system. It is
540 therefore possible to attach a packet sniffer (such as Wireshark) to the
541 host interface and log all traffic that goes over it. If, for any reason,
542 you prefer two or more VMs on the same machine to communicate privately,
543 hiding their data from both the host system and the user, bridged
544 networking therefore is not an option.</para>
545
546 <para>Internal networks are created automatically as needed, i.e. there is
547 no central configuration. Every internal network is identified simply by
548 its name. Once there is more than one active virtual network card with the
549 same internal network ID, the VirtualBox support driver will automatically
550 "wire" the cards and act as a network switch. The VirtualBox support
551 driver implements a complete Ethernet switch and supports both
552 broadcast/multicast frames and promiscuous mode.</para>
553
554 <para>In order to attach a VM's network card to an internal network, set
555 its networking mode to "internal networking". There are two ways to
556 accomplish this:</para>
557
558 <para><itemizedlist>
559 <listitem>
560 <para>You can use a VM's "Settings" dialog in the VirtualBox
561 graphical user interface. In the "Networking" category of the
562 settings dialog, select "Internal Networking" from the drop-down
563 list of networking modes. Now select the name of an existing
564 internal network from the drop-down below or enter a new name into
565 the entry field.</para>
566 </listitem>
567
568 <listitem>
569 <para>You can use <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --nic&lt;x&gt; intnet</screen>
570 Optionally, you can specify a network name with the command <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --intnet&lt;x&gt; "network name"</screen>
571 If you do not specify a network name, the network card will be
572 attached to the network <computeroutput>intnet</computeroutput> by
573 default.</para>
574 </listitem>
575 </itemizedlist></para>
576
577 <para>Unless you configure the (virtual) network cards in the guest
578 operating systems that are participating in the internal network to use
579 static IP addresses, you may want to use the DHCP server that is built
580 into VirtualBox to manage IP addresses for the internal network. Please
581 see <xref linkend="vboxmanage-dhcpserver" /> for details.</para>
582
583 <para>As a security measure, the Linux implementation of internal
584 networking only allows VMs running under the same user ID to establish an
585 internal network.</para>
586 </sect1>
587
588 <sect1 id="network_hostonly">
589 <title>Host-only networking</title>
590
591 <para>Host-only networking is another networking mode that was added with
592 version 2.2 of VirtualBox. It can be thought of as a hybrid between the
593 bridged and internal networking modes: as with bridged networking, the
594 virtual machines can talk to each other and the host as if they were
595 connected through a physical ethernet switch. Similarly, as with internal
596 networking however, a physical networking interface need not be present,
597 and the virtual machines cannot talk to the world outside the host since
598 they are not connected to a physical networking interface.</para>
599
600 <para>Instead, when host-only networking is used, VirtualBox creates a new
601 software interface on the host which then appears next to your existing
602 network interfaces. In other words, whereas with bridged networking an
603 existing physical interface is used to attach virtual machines to, with
604 host-only networking a new "loopback" interface is created on the host.
605 And whereas with internal networking, the traffic between the virtual
606 machines cannot be seen, the traffic on the "loopback" interface on the
607 host can be intercepted.</para>
608
609 <para>Host-only networking is particularly useful for preconfigured
610 virtual appliances, where multiple virtual machines are shipped together
611 and designed to cooperate. For example, one virtual machine may contain a
612 web server and a second one a database, and since they are intended to
613 talk to each other, the appliance can instruct VirtualBox to set up a
614 host-only network for the two. A second (bridged) network would then
615 connect the web server to the outside world to serve data to, but the
616 outside world cannot connect to the database.</para>
617
618 <para>To change a virtual machine's virtual network interface to "host
619 only" mode:<itemizedlist>
620 <listitem>
621 <para>either go to the "Network" page in the virtual machine's
622 settings notebook in the graphical user interface and select
623 "Host-only networking", or</para>
624 </listitem>
625
626 <listitem>
627 <para>on the command line, type <computeroutput>VBoxManage modifyvm
628 "VM name" --nic&lt;x&gt; hostonly</computeroutput>; see <xref
629 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" /> for details.</para>
630 </listitem>
631 </itemizedlist></para>
632
633 <para>For host-only networking, like with internal networking, you may
634 find the DHCP server useful that is built into VirtualBox. This can be
635 enabled to then manage the IP addresses in the host-only network since
636 otherwise you would need to configure all IP addresses
637 statically.<itemizedlist>
638 <listitem>
639 <para>In the VirtualBox graphical user interface, you can configure
640 all these items in the global settings via "File" -&gt; "Settings"
641 -&gt; "Network", which lists all host-only networks which are
642 presently in use. Click on the network name and then on the "Edit"
643 button to the right, and you can modify the adapter and DHCP
644 settings.</para>
645 </listitem>
646
647 <listitem>
648 <para>Alternatively, you can use <computeroutput>VBoxManage
649 dhcpserver</computeroutput> on the command line; please see <xref
650 linkend="vboxmanage-dhcpserver" /> for details.</para>
651 </listitem>
652 </itemizedlist></para>
653 <para><note>On Linux and Mac OS X hosts the number of host-only interfaces is
654 limited to 128. There is no such limit for Solaris and Windows hosts.</note></para>
655 </sect1>
656
657 <sect1 id="network_udp_tunnel">
658 <title>UDP Tunnel networking</title>
659
660 <para>This networking mode allows to interconnect virtual machines running
661 on different hosts.</para>
662
663 <para>Technically this is done by encapsulating Ethernet frames sent or
664 received by the guest network card into UDP/IP datagrams, and sending them
665 over any network available to the host.</para>
666
667 <para>UDP Tunnel mode has three parameters:<glosslist>
668 <glossentry>
669 <glossterm>Source UDP port</glossterm>
670
671 <glossdef>
672 <para>The port on which the host listens. Datagrams arriving on
673 this port from any source address will be forwarded to the
674 receiving part of the guest network card.</para>
675 </glossdef>
676 </glossentry>
677
678 <glossentry>
679 <glossterm>Destination address</glossterm>
680
681 <glossdef>
682 <para>IP address of the target host of the transmitted
683 data.</para>
684 </glossdef>
685 </glossentry>
686
687 <glossentry>
688 <glossterm>Destination UDP port</glossterm>
689
690 <glossdef>
691 <para>Port number to which the transmitted data is sent.</para>
692 </glossdef>
693 </glossentry>
694 </glosslist></para>
695
696 <para>When interconnecting two virtual machines on two different hosts,
697 their IP addresses must be swapped. On single host, source and destination
698 UDP ports must be swapped.</para>
699
700 <para>In the following example host 1 uses the IP address 10.0.0.1 and
701 host 2 uses IP address 10.0.0.2. Configuration via command-line:<screen> VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 01 on host 1" --nic&lt;x&gt; generic
702 VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 01 on host 1" --nicgenericdrv&lt;x&gt; UDPTunnel
703 VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 01 on host 1" --nicproperty&lt;x&gt; dest=10.0.0.2
704 VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 01 on host 1" --nicproperty&lt;x&gt; sport=10001
705 VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 01 on host 1" --nicproperty&lt;x&gt; dport=10002</screen>
706 and <screen> VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 02 on host 2" --nic&lt;y&gt; generic
707 VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 02 on host 2" --nicgenericdrv&lt;y&gt; UDPTunnel
708 VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 02 on host 2" --nicproperty&lt;y&gt; dest=10.0.0.1
709 VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 02 on host 2" --nicproperty&lt;y&gt; sport=10002
710 VBoxManage modifyvm "VM 02 on host 2" --nicproperty&lt;y&gt; dport=10001</screen></para>
711
712 <para>Of course, you can always interconnect two virtual machines on the
713 same host, by setting the destination address parameter to 127.0.0.1 on
714 both. It will act similarly to "Internal network" in this case, however
715 the host can see the network traffic which it could not in the normal
716 Internal network case.</para>
717
718 <para><note>
719 On Unix-based hosts (e.g. Linux, Solaris, Mac OS X) it is not possible to bind to ports below 1024 from applications that are not run by
720
721 <computeroutput>root</computeroutput>
722
723 . As a result, if you try to configure such a source UDP port, the VM will refuse to start.
724 </note></para>
725 </sect1>
726
727 <sect1 id="network_vde">
728 <title>VDE networking</title>
729
730 <para>Virtual Distributed Ethernet (VDE<footnote>
731 <para>VDE is a project developed by Renzo Davoli, Associate Professor
732 at the University of Bologna, Italy.</para>
733 </footnote>) is a flexible, virtual network infrastructure system,
734 spanning across multiple hosts in a secure way. It allows for L2/L3
735 switching, including spanning-tree protocol, VLANs, and WAN emulation. It
736 is an optional part of VirtualBox which is only included in the source
737 code.</para>
738
739 <para>The basic building blocks of the infrastructure are VDE switches,
740 VDE plugs and VDE wires which inter-connect the switches.</para>
741
742 <para>The VirtualBox VDE driver has one parameter:<glosslist>
743 <glossentry>
744 <glossterm>VDE network</glossterm>
745
746 <glossdef>
747 <para>The name of the VDE network switch socket to which the VM
748 will be connected.</para>
749 </glossdef>
750 </glossentry>
751 </glosslist></para>
752
753 <para>The following basic example shows how to connect a virtual machine
754 to a VDE switch:</para>
755
756 <para><orderedlist>
757 <listitem>
758 <para>Create a VDE switch: <screen>vde_switch -s /tmp/switch1</screen></para>
759 </listitem>
760
761 <listitem>
762 <para>Configuration via command-line: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --nic&lt;x&gt; generic</screen>
763 <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --nicgenericdrv&lt;x&gt; VDE</screen>
764 To connect to automatically allocated switch port, use: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --nicproperty&lt;x&gt; network=/tmp/switch1</screen>
765 To connect to specific switch port &lt;n&gt;, use: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --nicproperty&lt;x&gt; network=/tmp/switch1[&lt;n&gt;]</screen>
766 The latter option can be useful for VLANs.</para>
767 </listitem>
768
769 <listitem>
770 <para>Optionally map between VDE switch port and VLAN: (from switch
771 CLI) <screen>vde$ vlan/create &lt;VLAN&gt;</screen> <screen>vde$ port/setvlan &lt;port&gt; &lt;VLAN&gt;</screen></para>
772 </listitem>
773 </orderedlist></para>
774
775 <para>VDE is available on Linux and FreeBSD hosts only. It is only
776 available if the VDE software and the VDE plugin library from the
777 VirtualSquare project are installed on the host system<footnote>
778 <para>For Linux hosts, the shared library libvdeplug.so must be
779 available in the search path for shared libraries</para>
780 </footnote>. For more information on setting up VDE networks, please see
781 the documentation accompanying the software.<footnote>
782 <para><ulink
783 url="http://wiki.virtualsquare.org/wiki/index.php/VDE_Basic_Networking">http://wiki.virtualsquare.org/wiki/index.php/VDE_Basic_Networking</ulink>.</para>
784 </footnote></para>
785 </sect1>
786
787 <sect1 id="network_bandwidth_limit">
788 <title>Limiting bandwidth for network I/O</title>
789
790 <para>Starting with version 4.2, VirtualBox allows for limiting the
791 maximum bandwidth used for network transmission. Several network adapters
792 of one VM may share limits through bandwidth groups. It is possible
793 to have more than one such limit.</para>
794 <note><para>VirtualBox shapes VM traffic only in the transmit direction,
795 delaying the packets being sent by virtual machines. It does not limit
796 the traffic being received by virtual machines.</para>
797 </note>
798
799 <para>Limits are configured through
800 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>. The example below creates a
801 bandwidth group named "Limit", sets the limit to 20 Mbit/s and assigns the
802 group to the first and second adapters of the VM:<screen>VBoxManage bandwidthctl "VM name" add Limit --type network --limit 20m
803VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --nicbandwidthgroup1 Limit
804VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --nicbandwidthgroup2 Limit</screen></para>
805
806 <para>All adapters in a group share the bandwidth limit, meaning that in the
807 example above the bandwidth of both adapters combined can never exceed 20
808 Mbit/s. However, if one adapter doesn't require bandwidth the other can use the
809 remaining bandwidth of its group.</para>
810
811 <para>The limits for each group can be changed while the VM is running,
812 with changes being picked up immediately. The example below changes the
813 limit for the group created in the example above to 100 Kbit/s:<screen>VBoxManage bandwidthctl "VM name" set Limit --limit 100k</screen></para>
814
815 <para>To completely disable shaping for the first adapter of VM use the
816 following command:
817 <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --nicbandwidthgroup1 none</screen></para>
818
819 <para>It is also possible to disable shaping for all adapters assigned to a
820 bandwidth group while VM is running, by specifying the zero limit for the
821 group. For example, for the bandwidth group named "Limit" use:
822 <screen>VBoxManage bandwidthctl "VM name" set Limit --limit 0</screen></para>
823 </sect1>
824 <sect1 id="network_performance">
825 <title>Improving network performance</title>
826
827 <para>VirtualBox provides a variety of virtual network adapters that can be
828 "attached" to the host's network in a number of ways. Depending on which
829 types of adapters and attachments are used the network performance will
830 be different. Performance-wise the <emphasis>virtio</emphasis> network
831 adapter is preferrable over <emphasis>Intel PRO/1000</emphasis> emulated
832 adapters, which are preferred over <emphasis>PCNet</emphasis> family of
833 adapters. Both <emphasis>virtio</emphasis> and <emphasis>Intel PRO/1000
834 </emphasis> adapters enjoy the benefit of segmentation and checksum
835 offloading. Segmentation offloading is essential for high performance as
836 it allows for less context switches, drammatically increasing the sizes
837 of packets that cross VM/host bondary.</para>
838 <note><para>Neither <emphasis>virtio</emphasis> nor <emphasis>Intel PRO/1000
839 </emphasis> drivers for Windows XP do not support segmentation
840 offloading. Therefore Windows XP guests never reach the same
841 transmission rates as other guest types. Refer to MS Knowledge base
842 article 842264 for additional information.</para>
843 </note>
844 <para>Three attachment types: <emphasis>internal</emphasis>,
845 <emphasis>bridged</emphasis> and <emphasis>host-only</emphasis>, have
846 nearly identical performance, the <emphasis>internal</emphasis> type
847 being a little bit faster and using less CPU cycles as the packets never
848 reach the host's network stack. The <emphasis>NAT</emphasis> attachment
849 is the slowest (and safest) of all attachment types as it provides
850 network address translation. The generic driver attachment is special and
851 cannot be considered as an alternative to other attachment types.</para>
852 <para>The number of CPUs assigned to VM does not improve network
853 performance and in some cases may hurt it due to increased concurency in
854 the guest.</para>
855 <para>Here is the short summary of things to check in order to improve
856 network performance:</para>
857 <para><orderedlist>
858 <listitem>
859 <para>Whenever possible use <emphasis>virtio</emphasis> network
860 adapter, otherwise use one of <emphasis>Intel PRO/1000</emphasis>
861 adapters;</para>
862 </listitem>
863 <listitem>
864 <para>Use <emphasis>bridged</emphasis> attachment instead of
865 <emphasis>NAT</emphasis></para>;
866 </listitem>
867 <listitem>
868 <para>Make sure segmentation offloading is enabled in the guest OS.
869 Usually it will be enabled by default. You can check and modify
870 offloading settings using <computeroutput>ethtool</computeroutput>
871 command in Linux guests.</para>
872 </listitem>
873 </orderedlist></para>
874 </sect1>
875</chapter>
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