VirtualBox is installed on top of the existing operating system (host systems). Then, using the VirtualBox, many other operating systems (Guest OSs) can be loaded and run. VirtualBox supports Linux, Mac OS X, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 7, Solaris and OpenSolaris as the host operating system. Aug 28, 2012 - How to Run Mac OS X Inside Windows Using VirtualBox. For more info, check out the difference between 32-bit and 64-bit operating systems. To illustrate: let’s say you have installed Win XP on your Macbook via boot camp. As you have heard so much about Ubuntu and wanted to try it out, you installed Virtualbox and created an Ubuntu virtual machine in your Mac partition. One day, while doing your work in the Win XP partition, you found that you need to access some applications in the Ubuntu virtual machine. There is no way for you to open the Ubuntu virtual machine in Windows since you can’t access your Mac partition. Now, rather than rebooting into the Mac partition, wouldn’t it be great if you can access and open the Ubuntu virtual machine in the Windows partition? The above situation will happen even if you are running a Linux/Mac or Linux/Windows dual boot. Virtual windows environment for mac. The following tutorial will show you how you can have access to your Virtualbox virtual machine regardless of which OS you are in. The rule of thumb: Always create your Virtualbox virtual machine (the file with a vdi extension) in a NTFS partition. That is to say, if you are dual-booting Windows and Linux/Mac, always save the vdi file in your Windows partition. For those with Mac and Linux, you will have to create a new NTFS partition either on your existing hard disk or on an external hard disk (preferably). Here’s the complete tutorial to access the virtual machine from different OS •. For computer that dual-boot Windows and Mac/Linux • Boot into Windows • Download and install (if you have not done so). • Create your virtual machine as you always do. Note the file path where you save the virtual machine vdi file. Restart your computer and boot into the other OS. If you are in Mac OS • Download and install. It will prompt you to restart your computer. After the restart, you will see a new drive mounted on your desktop. That is the Windows partition. • Download and install (for Intel Macs only). Now, we are going to create an entry on your Virtualbox and make it point to the vdi file in the Windows partition. • Open the Virtualbox application. • On the top of the window, click New to create a new virtual machine. • Click Next and follow the instruction to create a new VM until you reach the point where it asks you to specify your hard drive • Click on Existing. In the next window, click on the Add and point the file path to the vdi file in the Windows partition. • You should now see an entry in the window. Highlight the entry and click Select. • On the next window, click Next follow by Finish. It will bring you back to the main window. • Highlight the new VM entry on the main window and click Start. You should see the same virtual machine that you have created in your Windows partition running in your Mac now. Dual-booting Linux and Windows Restart your computer and boot into the Linux partition. • Install ntfs-3g (if you are using Ubuntu Hardy, you can skip this step. Ntfs-3g is already pre-installed in your system) • Download and install for your Linux distro (if you have not done so). Now, we are going to repeat the same steps as we did in Mac (follow the above) to create an entry on Virtualbox to point to the virtual machine in the Windows partition. For computers that dual-boot Mac and Linux If you are dual-booting Mac and Linux, first boot into the Linux partition. • Follow this guide to. (You can also resize and create a new partition on your existing hard disk and format it to NTFS format. I will cover that in the future). • Download and install. Create a new virtual machine and follow the instructions until it asks you the location of your hard disk. • Click New to create a new virtual hard disk. Click Next until it asks you where to store your virtual hard disk • Click on the icon beside the Image File name field and select any folder in the external NTFS hard disk. This will save the vdi file in the external hard disk rather than its default location. • Proceed on with the standard installation of the guest OS. Once you are done creating the virtual machine, reboot into Mac and follow the to configure the Virtualbox in your Mac to access the VM on the external hard disk. Thanks for your tutorial, it’s working great. Nevertheless, I’m experiencing problems with snapshots shares. My hosts OS are Linux/WinXP.
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