Custom Query (16363 matches)
Results (247 - 249 of 16363)
| Ticket | Resolution | Summary | Owner | Reporter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| #253 | invalid | Guest Additions on Windows Host | ||
| Description |
Using a Win2k SP3 box with 512MB RAM. Windows = Host, Ubuntu 6.10 = Guest. Guest additions.iso mounts just fine in virtualbox. It's when you try to run it that it fails. After changing directory to the cd (per vb manual) and after executing the cmd "sudo sh ./vboxadditions.run" as root, the exact error is "sh: Can't open ./vboxadditions" I have mounted/unmounted the vboxguestadditions.iso both manually as well as using the vb device settings interface with the identical results. I have also switched out "vboxguestadditions" for "vboxlinuxguestadditions, as is listed in the VB user manual to no avail. I'm new to Linux/Ubuntu so I don't have a clue as to what needs to be done to workaround this problem in order to install linux guest additions on a Win2k host using VirtualBox. |
|||
| #254 | worksforme | Disk reported full | ||
| Description |
Hello, Everytime I try to use virtual box it pauses with the message "disk full" this is incorrect as their is 2 1/2 gb free! The guest o/s cant be restarted unless i shutdown and then restart which just repeats the problem. I'm using gentoo. i have virtualbox on a 6gb partition. the xp installation takes up 3 1/2 gb so there is plenty os space. thanks |
|||
| #255 | obsolete | Allow audio buffer size to be adjusted | ||
| Description |
I am using VirtualBox 1.3.8 with Ubuntu Edgy Eft (6.10) as host and Windows XP SP2 as guest. When I attempt to play music (or run any application producing continuous sound) in the Windows XP guest, the sound plays continuously as long as I only interact with the Windows guest. Whenever I interact with the Ubuntu host (even simply maximizing/minimizing a browser window), the sound coming from the guest will skip. It seems that the sound only skips when the host takes any CPU time away from the guest, which would make sense. While searching for more information about this problem, I found that VMware allows you to modify the size of the audio buffer for its virtual sound card (see http://www.vmware.com/support/ws3/doc/ws32_vidsound4.html). I believe that having the ability to adjust the audio buffer size in VirtualBox could effectively minimize this problem, since the guest could potentially go much longer without CPU time before the audio buffer would empty. Ticket #167 may also be caused by this problem, although the situation described there is not completely the same. |
|||

