wa4chq Posted February 11, 2019 Share Posted February 11, 2019 Greetings all..... I haven't had that much experience using Virtual Box. The first time was maybe 10 years ago. I instalIed VB and an iso I had saved in my download directory for a test. With some googling I found enough info to get the iso "installed" and booted. Last year I played around with it more, again using intalled iso's. I never felt comfortable trying something that required "virtual partitioning". OK, I was scared ....I didn't want to mess up the real hard drive. Anyway, I thought I'd give it a go. I installed VB on MX-17 and put my new Slack14.2 disk in and using a really good youtube video as my guide, I started the "install". Setting up VB for partitioning a virtual HD turned out to be really easy. After that I was in familiar territory. I normally don't do a full Slack install ie: no KDE or emacs, maybe something else but I did the full install in VB.... Worked like magic. I'll have to do more research to see what all I can do using Virtual Box. Anyway, this is how I spent my morning. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 11, 2019 Share Posted February 11, 2019 BTW, virtual partitioning is just that...virtual. You allot a certain size to the VM and it cannot see anything outside the allocated space. It then treats the allocated space as a virtual hardrive. The VM cannot see outside its own virtual harddrive. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunrat Posted February 12, 2019 Share Posted February 12, 2019 On a slightly related note I recently tried KVM/QEMU after it was lauded by securitybreach. It was quite easy to set up with virt-manager although I made one basic mistake and put the 6GB VM on my OS partition which had only 6GB free. You can guess what happened. After starting again and putting the VM on the drive I actually meant it to go on, it worked extremely well. I was particularly enamoured with not having to mess with guest additions to get functions like full screen display and shared folders to work. I don't think I'll be using VirtualBox again. 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 12, 2019 Share Posted February 12, 2019 On a slightly related note I recently tried KVM/QEMU after it was lauded by securitybreach. It was quite easy to set up with virt-manager although I made one basic mistake and put the 6GB VM on my OS partition which had only 6GB free. You can guess what happened. After starting again and putting the VM on the drive I actually meant it to go on, it worked extremely well. I was particularly enamoured with not having to mess with guest additions to get functions like full screen display and shared folders to work. I don't think I'll be using VirtualBox again. Excellent, I'll a big fan of it as well. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 12, 2019 Author Share Posted February 12, 2019 BTW, virtual partitioning is just that...virtual. You allot a certain size to the VM and it cannot see anything outside the allocated space. It then treats the allocated space as a virtual hardrive. The VM cannot see outside its own virtual harddrive. Yes, in the back of my mind I knew partitioning in VB was virtual, but still....... lol 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 12, 2019 Share Posted February 12, 2019 BTW, virtual partitioning is just that...virtual. You allot a certain size to the VM and it cannot see anything outside the allocated space. It then treats the allocated space as a virtual hardrive. The VM cannot see outside its own virtual harddrive. Yes, in the back of my mind I knew partitioning in VB was virtual, but still....... lol Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 12, 2019 Author Share Posted February 12, 2019 On a slightly related note I recently tried KVM/QEMU after it was lauded by securitybreach. It was quite easy to set up with virt-manager although I made one basic mistake and put the 6GB VM on my OS partition which had only 6GB free. You can guess what happened. After starting again and putting the VM on the drive I actually meant it to go on, it worked extremely well. I was particularly enamoured with not having to mess with guest additions to get functions like full screen display and shared folders to work. I don't think I'll be using VirtualBox again. I did try KVM/QEMU...maybe last year? I remember hearing about it here. I got it to work but I did have some problems.... lol, who would have thought! I had better luck out of the box with VB. But I'll give it another go. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 12, 2019 Share Posted February 12, 2019 On a slightly related note I recently tried KVM/QEMU after it was lauded by securitybreach. It was quite easy to set up with virt-manager although I made one basic mistake and put the 6GB VM on my OS partition which had only 6GB free. You can guess what happened. After starting again and putting the VM on the drive I actually meant it to go on, it worked extremely well. I was particularly enamoured with not having to mess with guest additions to get functions like full screen display and shared folders to work. I don't think I'll be using VirtualBox again. I did try KVM/QEMU...maybe last year? I remember hearing about it here. I got it to work but I did have some problems.... lol, who would have thought! I had better luck out of the box with VB. But I'll give it another go. Well by itself KVM/QEMU is difficult to configure but virt-manager makes it as easy as virtualbox but without the needs for "extras" to get functionality. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 12, 2019 Author Share Posted February 12, 2019 On a slightly related note I recently tried KVM/QEMU after it was lauded by securitybreach. It was quite easy to set up with virt-manager although I made one basic mistake and put the 6GB VM on my OS partition which had only 6GB free. You can guess what happened. After starting again and putting the VM on the drive I actually meant it to go on, it worked extremely well. I was particularly enamoured with not having to mess with guest additions to get functions like full screen display and shared folders to work. I don't think I'll be using VirtualBox again. I did try KVM/QEMU...maybe last year? I remember hearing about it here. I got it to work but I did have some problems.... lol, who would have thought! I had better luck out of the box with VB. But I'll give it another go. Well by itself KVM/QEMU is difficult to configure but virt-manager makes it as easy as virtualbox but without the needs for "extras" to get functionality. Yes, I remember you mentioning virt-manager when I was checking into KVM/QEMU. A few seconds ago I finished grabbing some things I had saved on my old HD. Some of those things were iso's that I had saved when I was trying virt-manager. Let me see if I can find package for it.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 13, 2019 Author Share Posted February 13, 2019 OK...installed qemu/kvm and virt-manager but get an error when running virt-manager. It has something to do with libvirt. Unable to connect to libvirt. Verify that the 'libvirtd' daemon is running. Libvirt URI is: qemu:///system Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/share/virt-manager/virtManager/connection.py", line 904, in _do_open self._backend.open(self._do_creds_password) File "/usr/share/virt-manager/virtinst/connection.py", line 148, in open open_flags) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/libvirt.py", line 105, in openAuth if ret is None:raise libvirtError('virConnectOpenAuth() failed') libvirtError: Failed to connect socket to '/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock': No such file or directory I went to a youtube and found a vid where the fellow shows how to install using the cli. Pausing it, I looked to see what he was installing taking special note at the libraries.....but I could not find things similar in the repositories used with LX-17. I think I'll just settle for using VB while using MX-17. It's not like I use it a lot...but it's nice to have. Thanks sunrat and SB for the input above ^^^ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 OK...installed qemu/kvm and virt-manager but get an error when running virt-manager. It has something to do with libvirt. Unable to connect to libvirt. Verify that the 'libvirtd' daemon is running. Libvirt URI is: qemu:///system Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/share/virt-manager/virtManager/connection.py", line 904, in _do_open self._backend.open(self._do_creds_password) File "/usr/share/virt-manager/virtinst/connection.py", line 148, in open open_flags) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/libvirt.py", line 105, in openAuth if ret is None:raise libvirtError('virConnectOpenAuth() failed') libvirtError: Failed to connect socket to '/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock': No such file or directory I went to a youtube and found a vid where the fellow shows how to install using the cli. Pausing it, I looked to see what he was installing taking special note at the libraries.....but I could not find things similar in the repositories used with LX-17. I think I'll just settle for using VB while using MX-17. It's not like I use it a lot...but it's nice to have. Thanks sunrat and SB for the input above ^^^ You need to start the daemon as noted: systemctl start libvirtd && systemctl start virtlogd && systemctl enable libvirtd There is no need to enable virtlogd.service, since libvirtd.service, when enabled, also enables the virtlogd.socket and virtlockd.socket. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 13, 2019 Author Share Posted February 13, 2019 OK...installed qemu/kvm and virt-manager but get an error when running virt-manager. It has something to do with libvirt. Unable to connect to libvirt. Verify that the 'libvirtd' daemon is running. Libvirt URI is: qemu:///system Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/share/virt-manager/virtManager/connection.py", line 904, in _do_open self._backend.open(self._do_creds_password) File "/usr/share/virt-manager/virtinst/connection.py", line 148, in open open_flags) File "/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/libvirt.py", line 105, in openAuth if ret is None:raise libvirtError('virConnectOpenAuth() failed') libvirtError: Failed to connect socket to '/var/run/libvirt/libvirt-sock': No such file or directory I went to a youtube and found a vid where the fellow shows how to install using the cli. Pausing it, I looked to see what he was installing taking special note at the libraries.....but I could not find things similar in the repositories used with LX-17. I think I'll just settle for using VB while using MX-17. It's not like I use it a lot...but it's nice to have. Thanks sunrat and SB for the input above ^^^ You need to start the daemon as noted: systemctl start libvirtd && systemctl start virtlogd && systemctl enable libvirtd There is no need to enable virtlogd.service, since libvirtd.service, when enabled, also enables the virtlogd.socket and virtlockd.socket. OK SB...will give it a try later on today. Tnx Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 No problem Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 13, 2019 Author Share Posted February 13, 2019 OK.... gave systemctl start libvirtd && systemctl start virtlogd && systemctl enable libvirtd at try and got Failed to start libvirtd.service: Unknown unit: libvirtd.service lol..... Maybe it's not meant to be.... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 OK.... gave systemctl start libvirtd && systemctl start virtlogd && systemctl enable libvirtd at try and got Failed to start libvirtd.service: Unknown unit: libvirtd.service lol..... Maybe it's not meant to be.... Well Slackware is different: https://docs.slackware.com/howtos:general_admin:kvm_libvirt Slackware doesn't use systemd so the directions would be different for init. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 13, 2019 Author Share Posted February 13, 2019 (edited) OK.... gave systemctl start libvirtd && systemctl start virtlogd && systemctl enable libvirtd at try and got Failed to start libvirtd.service: Unknown unit: libvirtd.service lol..... Maybe it's not meant to be.... Well Slackware is different: https://docs.slackwa...min:kvm_libvirt Slackware doesn't use systemd so the directions would be different for init. When I was using it last year (not sure if 2018 or 2017) I was using Slack and it worked. ...but now I'm trying to use it with MX-17. I'm fine using VB. Tnx just the same. Edited February 13, 2019 by wa4chq Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 Well ok, I'm surprised that you give up so easy .. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 13, 2019 Author Share Posted February 13, 2019 Well ok, I'm surprised that you give up so easy .. lol....I don't know if you recall my recent hosing of Slackware.....problems with permissions....lol.....Have just recently install a new HD and new OS....tricked out to boot....maybe I should load MX-17 in VB and try from there! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 Plus, unless you're using virtualbox-OSE, it's closed source, as well as the guest-additions package. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/VirtualBox#Licensing Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wa4chq Posted February 13, 2019 Author Share Posted February 13, 2019 Hey, I appreciate all the help..... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 Hey, I appreciate all the help..... Not a problem 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sunrat Posted February 13, 2019 Share Posted February 13, 2019 MX doesn't use systemd as init, although it can if you select it at GRUB menu. This would probably be the issue with a service not starting. Also I did a little searching on this and there are several solutions to what appears to be several possible issues. One other one is that the convention of putting early runtime files in /var/run/ has changed to using /run/ instead. Maybe it just needs a symlink. If I get a chance I may try virt-manager on MX soon. This sounds like a school homework problem that needs to be solved! 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 14, 2019 Share Posted February 14, 2019 Cool 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raymac46 Posted February 14, 2019 Share Posted February 14, 2019 I am reading this thread with interest, but I'm probably going to stick with VirtualBox. My main interest in VMs is to run a Linux instance on Windows 10 and VBox works pretty well in Windows. I haven't had many problems with the Guest Additions lately as most mainstream distros are baking the utils into the kernel now. I haven't tried MX Linux in VBox though since I have it on the rails on an old laptop and desktop. I decided to archive my VBox installs of Sparky and Ubuntu to save some disk space, and I am just running Mageia on Windows as my Linux go-to distro. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 14, 2019 Share Posted February 14, 2019 I am reading this thread with interest, but I'm probably going to stick with VirtualBox. My main interest in VMs is to run a Linux instance on Windows 10 and VBox works pretty well in Windows. I haven't had many problems with the Guest Additions lately as most mainstream distros are baking the utils into the kernel now. I haven't tried MX Linux in VBox though since I have it on the rails on an old laptop and desktop. I decided to archive my VBox installs of Sparky and Ubuntu to save some disk space, and I am just running Mageia on Windows as my Linux go-to distro. Well KVM only works on linux so your only other option would be vmware. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hedon James Posted February 14, 2019 Share Posted February 14, 2019 I am reading this thread with interest, but I'm probably going to stick with VirtualBox. My main interest in VMs is to run a Linux instance on Windows 10 and VBox works pretty well in Windows. I haven't had many problems with the Guest Additions lately as most mainstream distros are baking the utils into the kernel now. I haven't tried MX Linux in VBox though since I have it on the rails on an old laptop and desktop. I decided to archive my VBox installs of Sparky and Ubuntu to save some disk space, and I am just running Mageia on Windows as my Linux go-to distro. You're doing it backwards Ray. You don't run a solid & stable guest on top of a quirky & buggy host. You run the quirky & buggy OS as a guest on your reliably solid & stable host! 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securitybreach Posted February 14, 2019 Share Posted February 14, 2019 I am reading this thread with interest, but I'm probably going to stick with VirtualBox. My main interest in VMs is to run a Linux instance on Windows 10 and VBox works pretty well in Windows. I haven't had many problems with the Guest Additions lately as most mainstream distros are baking the utils into the kernel now. I haven't tried MX Linux in VBox though since I have it on the rails on an old laptop and desktop. I decided to archive my VBox installs of Sparky and Ubuntu to save some disk space, and I am just running Mageia on Windows as my Linux go-to distro. You're doing it backwards Ray. You don't run a solid & stable guest on top of a quirky & buggy host. You run the quirky & buggy OS as a guest on your reliably solid & stable host! Correct. Windows should never live outside of a VM. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
raymac46 Posted February 18, 2019 Share Posted February 18, 2019 I have one machine which I use for Windows 10 train sims and I like to take a break from Windows so I have Linux in a VM there. Can't run the other way because games are lousy in VBox (graphics suck.) I have an instance of Windows in my Linux VBox but never use it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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