Re: Windows virtual machine on linux help

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Hi.
Yeah, I've read this already about the guest editions.

I'll try and create a virtual machine, and try all this things.
Because it is much easier to read .chm files in windows than in linux, and that is why I want the virtual machine, and for playing some games maybe.
/Kristoffer
----- Original Message ----- From: "marbux" <marbux@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "Linux for blind general discussion" <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, June 28, 2010 10:16 PM
Subject: Re: Windows virtual machine on linux help


On Mon, Jun 28, 2010 at 11:31 AM, Kristoffer Gustafsson
<kg84@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi.
Ok, now I've read some documentation and I am planning to try it.
but I can't find any package for debian squeeze I'm running at the moment.
Do you think I can take the packages for lenny?

Don't run pure Debian so don't know. But I'd say it's worth a try. You
can always purge Virtual Box from the system if it doesn't work. But
if you encounter dependency issues when installing, I'd advise getting
better advice than I can offer before trying to force the
installation.

Also, as a blind user, can I install guest editions by myself in any way?

I'm sighted so don't know for sure. I have seen others on this list
discussing Virtual Box usage, so I suspect you can.

After installing both virtual box and the OS, boot the virtual OS.
When it's running, push Right Control+D. (The Right Control key is the
default "Host" key that is used in combination with other keys to
perform various actions involving the host operating system.)

That combination launches a dialog to select and install the guest
additions for the guest operating system.

The guest additions are installed by the Virtual Box installer as ISO
images for each major operating system supported. I.e., if  your guest
OS is Windows, then select the Windows Guest Additions ISO. Then tab
to the control for proceeding to the next step.

After the guest additions are installed, you have a bunch more
configuration options.

Best regards,

Paul


/Kristoffer
----- Original Message ----- From: "marbux" <marbux@xxxxxxxxx>
To: "Linux for blind general discussion" <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, June 28, 2010 6:41 PM
Subject: Re: Windows virtual machine on linux help


On Mon, Jun 28, 2010 at 7:38 AM, Kristoffer Gustafsson
<kg84@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Hi.
I'm planning too to try windows on virtualbox.

Using Virtual Box, I've got Windows 7 64-bit running as a virtual
guest on a Ubuntu 9.10 64-bit host for purposes of testing software I
help develop. The machine itself is pretty fast and everything happens
quickly in Ubuntu.

But Win7 runs like very slow molasses this way, not suitable at all
for production work.

I've tried it the other way around (Win7 host; Ubuntu 9.10 virtual
guest) and didn't notice any performance loss at all in Ubuntu. But
since I do almost all of my work in Ubuntu and don't need Win7 except
for testing, and because I have several virtual machines for different
operating environments for testing purposes (our software is
multi-platform), I reverted to running Ubuntu as the host and Win7 as
the guest.

So based on this experience, I'd recommend that if you want to use
Windows for production, run it on bare metal and run Ubuntu on Virtual
Box.

[more]

But I've searched and searched, and can't find any good examples and
such,
how to use vboxmanage and so.
Can you give me step by step guide on how to do it? I've got an iso with
unattended installation.
I want to enable sound, cd rom support, and usb.

The open source version of Virtual Box in the Ubuntu repositories does
not support USB.

For that you'll need the binary version available from
<http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads>. Unlike the open source
version, it has user documentation. The Help file documentation is
adequate and is also online in both HTML and PDF formats at
<http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/End-user_documentation>.

A critical step in configuring a Virtual Box virtual machine after
installing the guest operating system is to install the "guest
additions" for that operating system. Without the guest additions, you
will lack a lot of expected features such as sound and USB support.

If you hit any problems, you'd be far better off asking on the Virtual
Box forums or mailing list than asking me.
<http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Community>. There are people there who
know far more about Virtual Box than I do.

Also, is virtualbox better than qemu?

I haven't tried qemu for years but didn't care for it back then.
Likely, it has improved. I left VMWare for Virtual Box because
creating and configuring a virtual machine on Virtual Box was far
easier for me. But I do know people who much prefer VMWare, so your
mileage may vary.

Hope this helps and good luck!

Paul

--
Universal Interoperability Council
<http:www.universal-interop-council.org>

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--
Universal Interoperability Council
<http:www.universal-interop-council.org>

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