Custom Query (16363 matches)
Results (1852 - 1854 of 16363)
| Ticket | Resolution | Summary | Owner | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #11785 | obsolete | Issue to start multiple machines | ||
| Description |
Hello, I have installed virtualbox 4.2.12 on widnows 7 professional 64 bit OS. I have installed about 5 virtual machines. When I start one machine and then try to start another machine I receive error. I have attached screen shots and log file. Thank you. |
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| #12348 | fixed | VBoxClient does not exit after Solaris 11 Gnome logout -> fixed in 4.3 and later releases after 28 Feb 2014 | ||
| Description |
Running VBox 4.3 on MacOS X host with Solaris 11.1 guest. Guest additions installed. VBoxClient continues running even after Gnome logout. Vbox processes should exit correctly. Login to gnome as user jlaurent.
Logout as jlaurent
Login as user test3
bash-4.1$ ps -elf |grep 2209
0 S jlaurent 2209 1 0 40 20 ? 3373 ? 12:22:20 ? 0:07 /usr/bin/VBoxClient --draganddrop
pkginfo SUNWvboxguest
application SUNWvboxguest Oracle VM VirtualBox Guest Additions
bash-4.1$ pkginfo -l SUNWvboxguest
PKGINST: SUNWvboxguest
NAME: Oracle VM VirtualBox Guest Additions
CATEGORY: application
ARCH: i386
VERSION: 4.3.0,REV=r89960.2013.10.15.13.49
BASEDIR: /
VENDOR: Oracle Corporation
DESC: Oracle VM VirtualBox Guest Additions for Solaris guests
PSTAMP: vboxguest20131015134949_r89960
INSTDATE: Oct 15 2013 12:58
HOTLINE: Please contact your local service provider
EMAIL: info@virtualbox.org
STATUS: completely installed
FILES: 77 installed pathnames
4 linked files
5 directories
20 executables
42967 blocks used (approx)
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| #7504 | wontfix | Feature request: Add attached to and locations columns in Virtual Media Manager | ||
| Description |
In order to quickly see which disks are assigned/attached to machines and which disks are empty, it seems like a good idea to have the "Attached to:" information and possibly the "Location:" information that is present in the details section below the grid available as columns in the grid as well. In this way, you can sort them and quickly see whether a disk is used by a vm, and where it physically resides. |
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