Menu
VirtualBox is an open source cross-platform virtualization software which allows you to run multiple guest operating systems (virtual machines) simultaneously. This tutorial covers how to install the latest VirtualBox 6.0 on Debian 9.
- Oracle License Terms
- Oracle Vm Virtualbox Enterprise
- Oracle Virtualbox License Terms 2017
- Oracle Virtualbox License Terms Free
Administrator's Guide for Release 6.0
- Mar 05, 2016 The license that Oracle has granted you with the GPL is perpetual and cannot be taken back. Even if Oracle were to change the license again, this could only affect future versions, and anybody would still be permitted to redistribute the existing VirtualBox code under the terms of the GPL.
- Jul 20, 2017 The license that applies to the VirtualBox base package is perpetual and cannot be taken back unless you violate the license. Even if Oracle were to change the license again, this would only affect future versions, and anybody still in compliance would still be permitted to redistribute the existing VirtualBox code under the terms of the GPLv2.
- Oracle VM VirtualBox is the world's most popular open source cross-platform virtualization software, with over 63 million downloads. There is a vibrant user community at virtualbox.org, where users of all types congregate and provide support for each other, with participation from Oracle development.
F12469-03 Design basics 8th edition pdf.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1 Audience
- 2 Related Documents
- 3 Conventions
- 4 Documentation Accessibility
- 5 Access to Oracle Support
- 1 Remote Virtual Machines
- 1.1 Remote Display (VRDP Support)
- 1.1.1 Common Third-Party RDP Viewers
- 1.1.2 VBoxHeadless, the Remote Desktop Server
- 1.1.3 Step by Step: Creating a Virtual Machine on a Headless Server
- 1.1.4 Remote USB
- 1.1.5 RDP Authentication
- 1.1.6 RDP Encryption
- 1.1.7 Multiple Connections to the VRDP Server
- 1.1.8 Multiple Remote Monitors
- 1.1.9 VRDP Video Redirection
- 1.1.10 VRDP Customization
- 1.2 Teleporting
- 2 Advanced Topics
- 2.1 Automated Guest Logins
- 2.1.1 Automated Windows Guest Logins
- 2.1.2 Automated Linux and UNIX Guest Logins
- 2.2 Advanced Configuration for Windows Guests
- 2.2.1 Automated Windows System Preparation
- 2.3 Advanced Configuration for Linux and Oracle Solaris Guests
- 2.3.1 Manual Setup of Selected Guest Services on Linux
- 2.3.2 Guest Graphics and Mouse Driver Setup in Depth
- 2.4 CPU Hot-Plugging
- 2.5 PCI Passthrough
- 2.6 Webcam Passthrough
- 2.6.1 Using a Host Webcam in the Guest
- 2.6.2 Windows Hosts
- 2.6.3 Mac OS X Hosts
- 2.6.4 Linux and Oracle Solaris Hosts
- 2.7 Advanced Display Configuration
- 2.7.1 Custom VESA Resolutions
- 2.7.2 Configuring the Maximum Resolution of Guests When Using the Graphical Frontend
- 2.8 Advanced Storage Configuration
- 2.8.1 Using a Raw Host Hard Disk From a Guest
- 2.8.2 Configuring the Hard Disk Vendor Product Data (VPD)
- 2.8.3 Access iSCSI Targets Using Internal Networking
- 2.9 Legacy Commands for Using Serial Ports
- 2.10 Fine Tuning the Oracle VM VirtualBox NAT Engine
- 2.10.1 Configuring the Address of a NAT Network Interface
- 2.10.2 Configuring the Boot Server (Next Server) of a NAT Network Interface
- 2.10.3 Tuning TCP/IP Buffers for NAT
- 2.10.4 Binding NAT Sockets to a Specific Interface
- 2.10.5 Enabling DNS Proxy in NAT Mode
- 2.10.6 Using the Host's Resolver as a DNS Proxy in NAT Mode
- 2.10.7 Configuring Aliasing of the NAT Engine
- 2.11 Configuring the BIOS DMI Information
- 2.12 Configuring Custom ACPI Tables
- 2.13 Fine Tuning Timers and Time Synchronization
- 2.13.1 Configuring the Guest Time Stamp Counter (TSC) to Reflect Guest Execution
- 2.13.2 Accelerate or Slow Down the Guest Clock
- 2.13.3 Tuning the Guest Additions Time Synchronization Parameters
- 2.13.4 Disabling the Guest Additions Time Synchronization
- 2.14 Installing the Alternate Bridged Networking Driver on Oracle Solaris 11 Hosts
- 2.15 Oracle VM VirtualBox VNIC Templates for VLANs on Oracle Solaris 11 Hosts
- 2.16 Configuring Multiple Host-Only Network Interfaces on Oracle Solaris Hosts
- 2.17 Configuring the Oracle VM VirtualBox CoreDumper on Oracle Solaris Hosts
- 2.18 Oracle VM VirtualBox and Oracle Solaris Kernel Zones
- 2.19 Locking Down the Oracle VM VirtualBox GUI
- 2.19.1 Customizing the VirtualBox Manager
- 2.19.2 VM Selector Customization
- 2.19.3 Configure VM Selector Menu Entries
- 2.19.4 Configure VM Window Menu Entries
- 2.19.5 Configure VM Window Status Bar Entries
- 2.19.6 Configure VM Window Visual Modes
- 2.19.7 Host Key Customization
- 2.19.8 Action when Terminating the VM
- 2.19.9 Default Action when Terminating the VM
- 2.19.10 Action for Handling a Guru Meditation
- 2.19.11 Configuring Automatic Mouse Capturing
- 2.19.12 Requesting Legacy Full-Screen Mode
- 2.20 Starting the Oracle VM VirtualBox Web Service Automatically
- 2.20.1 Linux: Starting the Web Service With init
- 2.20.2 Oracle Solaris: Starting the Web Service With SMF
- 2.20.3 Mac OS X: Starting the Web Service With launchd
- 2.21 Oracle VM VirtualBox Watchdog
- 2.21.1 Memory Ballooning Control
- 2.21.2 Host Isolation Detection
- 2.21.3 More Information
- 2.21.4 Linux: Starting the Watchdog Service With init
- 2.21.5 Oracle Solaris: Starting the Watchdog Service With SMF
- 2.22 Other Extension Packs
- 2.23 Starting Virtual Machines During System Boot
- 2.23.1 Linux: Starting the Autostart Service With init
- 2.23.2 Oracle Solaris: Starting the Autostart Service With SMF
- 2.23.3 Mac OS X: Starting the Autostart Service With launchd
- 2.24 Oracle VM VirtualBox Expert Storage Management
- 2.25 Handling of Host Power Management Events
- 2.26 Passing Through SSE4.1/SSE4.2 Instructions
- 2.27 Support for Keyboard Indicator Synchronization
- 2.28 Capturing USB Traffic for Selected Devices
- 2.29 Configuring the Heartbeat Service
- 2.30 Encryption of Disk Images
- 2.30.1 Limitations of Disk Encryption
- 2.30.2 Encrypting Disk Images
- 2.30.3 Starting a VM with Encrypted Images
- 2.30.4 Decrypting Encrypted Images
- 2.31 Paravirtualized Debugging
- 2.31.1 Hyper-V Debug Options
- 2.32 PC Speaker Passthrough
- 2.33 Accessing USB devices Exposed Over the Network with USB/IP
- 2.33.1 Setting up USB/IP Support on a Linux System
- 2.33.2 Security Considerations
- 2.34 Using Hyper-V with Oracle VM VirtualBox
- 2.35 Nested Virtualization
- 2.36 VISO file format / RTIsoMaker
- 2.36.1 Synopsis
- 2.36.2 Description
- 2.36.3 Options
- 3 Technical Background
- 3.1 Where Oracle VM VirtualBox Stores its Files
- 3.1.1 Machines Created by Oracle VM VirtualBox Version 4.0 or Later
- 3.1.2 Machines Created by Oracle VM VirtualBox Versions Before 4.0
- 3.1.3 Global Configuration Data
- 3.1.4 Summary of 4.0 Configuration Changes
- 3.1.5 Oracle VM VirtualBox XML Files
- 3.2 Oracle VM VirtualBox Executables and Components
- 3.3 Hardware vs. Software Virtualization
- 3.4 Paravirtualization Providers
- 3.5 Details About Software Virtualization
- 3.6 Details About Hardware Virtualization
- 3.7 Nested Paging and VPIDs
- 4 Oracle VM VirtualBox Programming Interfaces
- 5 Troubleshooting
- 5.1 Procedures and Tools
- 5.1.1 Categorizing and Isolating Problems
- 5.1.2 Collecting Debugging Information
- 5.1.3 The Built-In VM Debugger
- 5.1.4 VM Core Format
- 5.2 General Troubleshooting
- 5.2.1 Guest Shows IDE/SATA Errors for File-Based Images on Slow Host File System
- 5.2.2 Responding to Guest IDE/SATA Flush Requests
- 5.2.3 Performance Variation with Frequency Boosting
- 5.2.4 Frequency Scaling Effect on CPU Usage
- 5.2.5 Inaccurate Windows CPU Usage Reporting
- 5.2.6 Poor Performance Caused by Host Power Management
- 5.2.7 GUI: 2D Video Acceleration Option is Grayed Out
- 5.3 Windows Guests
- 5.3.1 No USB 3.0 Support in Windows 7 Guests
- 5.3.2 Windows Bluescreens After Changing VM Configuration
- 5.3.3 Windows 0x101 Bluescreens with SMP Enabled (IPI Timeout)
- 5.3.4 Windows 2000 Installation Failures
- 5.3.5 How to Record Bluescreen Information from Windows Guests
- 5.3.6 PCnet Driver Failure in 32-bit Windows Server 2003 Guests
- 5.3.7 No Networking in Windows Vista Guests
- 5.3.8 Windows Guests may Cause a High CPU Load
- 5.3.9 Long Delays When Accessing Shared Folders
- 5.3.10 USB Tablet Coordinates Wrong in Windows 98 Guests
- 5.3.11 Windows Guests are Removed From an Active Directory Domain After Restoring a Snapshot
- 5.3.12 Restoring d3d8.dll and d3d9.dll
- 5.3.13 Windows 3.x Limited to 64 MB RAM
- 5.4 Linux and X11 Guests
- 5.4.1 Linux Guests May Cause a High CPU load
- 5.4.2 AMD Barcelona CPUs
- 5.4.3 Buggy Linux 2.6 Kernel Versions
- 5.4.4 Shared Clipboard, Auto-Resizing, and Seamless Desktop in X11 Guests
- 5.5 Oracle Solaris Guests
- 5.5.1 Older Oracle Solaris 10 Releases Crash in 64-bit Mode
- 5.5.2 Certain Oracle Solaris 10 Releases May Take a Long Time to Boot with SMP
- 5.5.3 Solaris 8 5/01 and Earlier May Crash on Startup
- 5.6 FreeBSD Guests
- 5.6.1 FreeBSD 10.0 May Hang with xHCI
- 5.7 Windows Hosts
- 5.7.1 VBoxSVC Out-of-Process COM Server Issues
- 5.7.2 CD/DVD Changes Not Recognized
- 5.7.3 Sluggish Response When Using Microsoft RDP Client
- 5.7.4 Running an iSCSI Initiator and Target on a Single System
- 5.7.5 Bridged Networking Adapters Missing
- 5.7.6 Host-Only Networking Adapters Cannot be Created
- 5.8 Linux Hosts
- 5.8.1 Linux Kernel Module Refuses to Load
- 5.8.2 Linux Host CD/DVD Drive Not Found
- 5.8.3 Linux Host CD/DVD Drive Not Found (Older Distributions)
- 5.8.4 Linux Host Floppy Not Found
- 5.8.5 Strange Guest IDE Error Messages When Writing to CD/DVD
- 5.8.6 VBoxSVC IPC Issues
- 5.8.7 USB Not Working
- 5.8.8 PAX/grsec Kernels
- 5.8.9 Linux Kernel vmalloc Pool Exhausted
- 5.9 Oracle Solaris Hosts
- 5.9.1 Cannot Start VM, Not Enough Contiguous Memory
- 5.9.2 VM Aborts With Out of Memory Errors on Oracle Solaris 10 Hosts
- 6 Security Guide
- 6.1 General Security Principles
- 6.2 Secure Installation and Configuration
- 6.2.1 Installation Overview
- 6.2.2 Post Installation Configuration
- 6.3 Security Features
- 6.3.1 The Security Model
- 6.3.2 Secure Configuration of Virtual Machines
- 6.3.3 Configuring and Using Authentication
- 6.3.4 Potentially Insecure Operations
- 6.3.5 Encryption
- 6.4 Security Recommendations
- 6.4.1 CVE-2018-3646
- 7 Known Limitations
- 7.1 Experimental Features
- 7.2 Known Issues
- A Third-Party Materials and Licenses
- A.1 Third-Party Materials
- A.2 Third-Party Licenses
- A.2.1 GNU General Public License (GPL)
- A.2.2 GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL)
- A.2.3 Mozilla Public License (MPL)
- A.2.4 MIT License
- A.2.5 X Consortium License (X11)
- A.2.6 zlib License
- A.2.7 OpenSSL License
- A.2.8 Slirp License
- A.2.9 liblzf License
- A.2.10 libpng License
- A.2.11 lwIP License
- A.2.12 libxml License
- A.2.13 libxslt Licenses
- A.2.14 gSOAP Public License Version 1.3a
- A.2.15 Chromium Licenses
- A.2.16 curl License
- A.2.17 libgd License
- A.2.18 BSD License from Intel
- A.2.19 libjpeg License
- A.2.20 x86 SIMD Extension for IJG JPEG Library License
- A.2.21 FreeBSD License
- A.2.22 NetBSD License
- A.2.23 PCRE License
- A.2.24 libffi License
- A.2.25 FLTK License
- A.2.26 Expat License
- A.2.27 Fontconfig License
- A.2.28 Freetype License
- A.2.29 VPX License
- A.2.30 Opus License
- A.2.31 FUSE for macOS License
- B Oracle VM VirtualBox Privacy Information
Copyright © 2004, 2019 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. Legal Notices
Oracle License Terms
Oracle VM VirtualBox
The latest release is version 6.0.10.
On this page you can download:
Oracle VM VirtualBox Base Packages - 6.0.10
Freely available for Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and Solaris x86 platforms under GPLv2:
Platform | 64-bit |
---|---|
Windows | |
Mac OS X | |
Solaris 10 5/08 and later or Solaris 11 | |
Linux Platforms | |
Ubuntu 18.04 (Bionic) / Ubuntu 18.10 (Cosmic) / Ubuntu 19.04 (Disco) / Debian 10.0 (Buster) | |
Ubuntu 16.04 (Xenial) | |
Ubuntu 14.04 (Trusty), 14.10 (Utopic), 15.04 (Vivid) | |
Debian 9.0 (Stretch) | |
Debian 8.0 (Jessie) | |
openSUSE 15.0 | |
openSUSE 13.2 / 42.3 | |
Fedora 29 / 30 | |
Fedora 26 / 27 / 28 | |
Oracle Linux 7 / EL7 | |
Oracle Linux 6 / EL6 | |
All distributions |
Oracle Vm Virtualbox Enterprise
You might want to compare the SHA256 checksum or the MD5 checksum to verify the integrity of downloaded packages.
Oracle VM VirtualBox Extension Pack
Free for personal, educational or evaluation use under the terms of the VirtualBox Personal Use and Evaluation License on Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and Solaris x-86 platforms:
Platform | File |
---|---|
For use with Version 6.0.10 only All Platforms (Windows, Mac OS X, Solaris and Linux) |
Oracle Virtualbox License Terms 2017
Depending on your browser, you may need to right click and 'Save As..' this file.
You might want to compare the SHA256 checksum or the MD5 checksum to verify the integrity of downloaded packages.
Source Code for Oracle VM VirtualBox Base Packages
Depending on your browser, you may need to right click and 'Save As..' this file.
Oracle Virtualbox License Terms Free
You might want to compare the SHA256 checksum or the MD5 checksum to verify the integrity of downloaded packages.