Custom Query (16363 matches)
Results (1411 - 1413 of 16363)
| Ticket | Resolution | Summary | Owner | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1310 | fixed | Support running systems with "hardware" clock on UTC => Fixed in SVN | ||
| Description |
As you probably know, linux mostly runs on systems with the hardware clock set to UTC; the timezone setting will correct that time to the correct local time. VirtualBox currently always takes the local time of the host system as its hardware clock, which means that when I use VirtualBox for my Debian linux installation tests, I always end up with the clock set wrong as the Debian installer sets the system clock to UTC during the installation if no other operating systems such as Windows are detected. However, when the virtual machine is restarted, it gets set back to local time. It would be great to have a per-machine config setting that lets the user choose between having the "hardware" clock of the virtual system in local time or in UTC (based on the host system's local time + its timezone setting). TIA, Frans Pop |
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| #1311 | fixed | Shared folders: Strange behaviour | ||
| Description |
Hello, I'm using a Fedora 7 as Host and a WinXP as Guest-system. I've defined 3 different shared folders (WORK, PRIVATE, GENERAL), which I want to access in XP as network drives. It should look like this: X: => WORK Y: => PRIVATE Z: => GENERAL All the virtual drives have now the same name (WORK), and I cannot change it inside Windows. Inside the command-prompt from windows they all have the same drive serial number. I still can access the different folders correctly, but they all have the same name... So that's a little bit confusing. suiyuan |
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| #1313 | fixed | virtualbox crash when using loaddskf.exe in os/2 warp 4 | ||
| Description |
On a plain OS/2 Warp 4 (unpatched, no service pack) install, if you try putting a floppy disk image on a CD (I put the fixpack floppies on the CD), and you do a loaddskf.exe to convert that floppy image to a real floppy, Virtualbox gets an exception and dies. Host is Windows 2000. |
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