Custom Query (16363 matches)
Results (1690 - 1692 of 16363)
| Ticket | Resolution | Summary | Owner | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #1727 | worksforme | VboxManager corrupts VirtualBox | ||
| Description |
I ran "VBoxManage list usbhost" from the command line. It returned: [!] FAILED calling Host->GetUSBDevices(CollPtr.asOutParam()) at line 2794! [!] Primary RC = 0x80004001 [!] Full error info present: false, basic error info present: false Now, when I try to start VirtualBox, I get the following critical error: Failed to create the VirtualBox COM object. Callee RC: 0x80040154 Uninstalling and re-installing VirtualBox has no effect: the same error occurs. My host system in Mandriva Linux 2008.1 |
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| #1728 | fixed | Slow performance of shared folders XP guest | ||
| Description |
Upgraded from 1.5.4 to 1.6.2 a couple days ago. I have been running a script that automatically runs "net use x: \vboxsvr\Documents" on XP Pro SP2 boot. I upgraded guest additions and after upgrade this script did not work at all and I could not mount it using the net use command. I then reinstalled guest additions again and the net use command sprang back into action properly mounting the volume. Next I found that using the share was excruciatingly slow! Up to 15 seconds to open the mounted drive and another 30-45 seconds to open a small excel document. Disabled antivirus and turned off the firewall etc. still slow. I then found that after sharing the folder (smb) on my host and using net use x: \10.0.2.2\Documents I was back at full speed. I would not like to do this however due to security concerns. Keep up the great work. |
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| #1729 | fixed | Video display corrupts when using shared folders -> Fixed in 2.1.2 | ||
| Description |
I have configured shared folders to work with my $host_os:~ however, whenever I try to access it from my WinXP Pro guest, within a few seconds of access, the video display of the guest will get corrupt. I have attached an example of this corruption. As soon as the display corrupts the VBox.log says: 00:01:23.286 Display::handleDisplayResize(): uScreenId = 0, pvVRAM=b22d0000 w=1312 h=890 bpp=0 cbLine=0x480 00:01:23.286 VBVA: Disabled. Of course there is no actual display resize at this point. It was simply trying to access a shared folder. I will attach the VBox.log as well. |
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