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  3. Anyone had any experience with VirtualBox

Anyone had any experience with VirtualBox

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  • Mike HankeyM Mike Hankey

    Good, bad, ugly??? I've taken a job where I will be doing C++ 6.0 development and was wanting to put it on a virtual machine. Any insight, gotchas or warnings? Thanks, Mike

    Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Mike Diack
    wrote on last edited by
    #15

    I've been using Virtual Box and a number of the other similar tools for a while now: Parallels Workstation VMWare Virtual PC. One of the reasons that Virtual Box is better than Virtual PC, is that Virtual PC is based on a fork of Virtual Box (back when it was owned by Innotek), but Virtual Box has been actively developed a lot since. There are typical updates to VBox every couple of months. Of the 4 tools, I'd rate them as follows (in descending order): VMWare Virtual Box Parallels Workstation Virtual PC. The only things that I've had problems with are USB support (but that has improved significantly in the latest release (1.6.2)) and bridged networking which is useful for me when I want to setup a simulated network of Virtual machines to simulate our distributed systems. Parallels and VMWare make bridged networks like that trivial, whereas Virtual Box makes it hard if not impossible. However it's quite rare to need that functionality for most people! So in short, as free software, Virtual Box takes some beating, and as others have said, it's speed is excellent. Mike

    Mike HankeyM 1 Reply Last reply
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    • M Mike Diack

      I've been using Virtual Box and a number of the other similar tools for a while now: Parallels Workstation VMWare Virtual PC. One of the reasons that Virtual Box is better than Virtual PC, is that Virtual PC is based on a fork of Virtual Box (back when it was owned by Innotek), but Virtual Box has been actively developed a lot since. There are typical updates to VBox every couple of months. Of the 4 tools, I'd rate them as follows (in descending order): VMWare Virtual Box Parallels Workstation Virtual PC. The only things that I've had problems with are USB support (but that has improved significantly in the latest release (1.6.2)) and bridged networking which is useful for me when I want to setup a simulated network of Virtual machines to simulate our distributed systems. Parallels and VMWare make bridged networks like that trivial, whereas Virtual Box makes it hard if not impossible. However it's quite rare to need that functionality for most people! So in short, as free software, Virtual Box takes some beating, and as others have said, it's speed is excellent. Mike

      Mike HankeyM Offline
      Mike HankeyM Offline
      Mike Hankey
      wrote on last edited by
      #16

      Mike

      Mike Diack wrote:

      The only things that I've had problems with are USB support

      I read quite a few reviews before deciding on VirtualBox and that was the main gripe. I installed it last night and haven't done a lot with it yet, just set up OS and C++ 6.0 but am impressed with the product as a whole. Plan to do some serious playing this evening after I get off. Thanks, Mike

      Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

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      • Mike HankeyM Mike Hankey

        Good, bad, ugly??? I've taken a job where I will be doing C++ 6.0 development and was wanting to put it on a virtual machine. Any insight, gotchas or warnings? Thanks, Mike

        Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

        B Offline
        B Offline
        bje990
        wrote on last edited by
        #17

        Virtual box is the way to go.... I have been using it for quite a while and have almost no problems at all.. very small, light weight (compared to others).. i would def. try it out..

        Keep Coding

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        • Mike HankeyM Mike Hankey

          Good, bad, ugly??? I've taken a job where I will be doing C++ 6.0 development and was wanting to put it on a virtual machine. Any insight, gotchas or warnings? Thanks, Mike

          Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

          F Offline
          F Offline
          Flynn Arrowstarr Regular Schmoe
          wrote on last edited by
          #18

          Hey, Mike. VirtualBox is definitely a winner. No problems setting up a couple of VMs for older OSs for testing and such. Runs Linux and Windows well (I have had SUSE, Win 2000, Win XP, Win 98 and Ubuntu guests). :) Flynn

          Mike HankeyM 1 Reply Last reply
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          • Mike HankeyM Mike Hankey

            Good, bad, ugly??? I've taken a job where I will be doing C++ 6.0 development and was wanting to put it on a virtual machine. Any insight, gotchas or warnings? Thanks, Mike

            Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

            F Offline
            F Offline
            Fuzzychaos
            wrote on last edited by
            #19

            Pretty good experience for certain development work. However some of the DOS stuff I do won't run at all with certain interrupts, simply crashes the NT/XP VirtualBox instance, so that kinda sucks :(

            Jeremy Props to the family: New Dawn Engineering

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            • Mike HankeyM Mike Hankey

              Good, bad, ugly??? I've taken a job where I will be doing C++ 6.0 development and was wanting to put it on a virtual machine. Any insight, gotchas or warnings? Thanks, Mike

              Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

              E Offline
              E Offline
              Emiliano Bo
              wrote on last edited by
              #20

              Virtual Box works fine. USB Support is very nice but i use it because i can't use shared folder. i visited forum and blog but i don't know what is my mistake. See u Emi

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              • Mike HankeyM Mike Hankey

                Good, bad, ugly??? I've taken a job where I will be doing C++ 6.0 development and was wanting to put it on a virtual machine. Any insight, gotchas or warnings? Thanks, Mike

                Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

                A Offline
                A Offline
                Amro Khasawneh
                wrote on last edited by
                #21

                Ive been using VirtualBox for a while now with Ubuntu on a WinXP host, the only problem for me is the fullscreen mode...

                Mike HankeyM 1 Reply Last reply
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                • A Amro Khasawneh

                  Ive been using VirtualBox for a while now with Ubuntu on a WinXP host, the only problem for me is the fullscreen mode...

                  Mike HankeyM Offline
                  Mike HankeyM Offline
                  Mike Hankey
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #22

                  Amro Khasawneh wrote:

                  the only problem for me is the fullscreen mode...

                  Yeah I can't set my to full mode either...I don't see the taskbar. But that is a minor problem! Thanks, Mike

                  Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

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                  • F Flynn Arrowstarr Regular Schmoe

                    Hey, Mike. VirtualBox is definitely a winner. No problems setting up a couple of VMs for older OSs for testing and such. Runs Linux and Windows well (I have had SUSE, Win 2000, Win XP, Win 98 and Ubuntu guests). :) Flynn

                    Mike HankeyM Offline
                    Mike HankeyM Offline
                    Mike Hankey
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #23

                    Flynn,

                    Flynn Arrowstarr wrote:

                    VirtualBox is definitely a winner. No problems setting up a couple of VMs for older OSs for testing and such. Runs Linux and Windows well (I have had SUSE, Win 2000, Win XP, Win 98 and Ubuntu guests)

                    Thanks, good to know. I'm running XP but an older development system on it and so far so good. Mike

                    Semper Fi http://www.hq4thmarinescomm.com[^] My Site

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                    • Richard Andrew x64R Richard Andrew x64

                      I found that Virtual Box would run Ubuntu just fine when Virtual PC was unable to render the screen correctly. So I'm pretty positive about Virtual Box.

                      “Cannot find REALITY.SYS...Universe Halted.” ~ God on phone with Microsoft Customer Support

                      Z Offline
                      Z Offline
                      Z Human
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #24

                      Just for future reference, the reason that VirtualPC doesn't like Ubuntu is because Ubuntu defaults to 24-bit color, which VirtualPC doesn't support out of performance reasons. You can get Ubuntu to work by editing a configuration file at the comand prompt. For more information, there is an article on their forum about it.

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