VirtualBox

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Revision as of 14:12, 26 May 2009 by Satellit (talk | contribs) (→‎Sugar on a Stick: USB Boot Stick to run VirtualBox Images)
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VirtualBox is an x86 virtualization system available as either GPL or commercial software. It runs on either Win32 or Linux host machines, allowing you to run OLPC images within the virtual machine. The following instructions are mostly for VirtualBox OSE (Open Source Edition), which is available in packages in many Linux distributions. You can also download it and its documentation from the VirtualBox.org Web site.

Sugar on a Stick

These are instructions for using a copy of Sugar on a Stick, configured to run in a VirtualBox® virtual appliance (a virtual machine disc image ready to run in the VirtualBox host application).

Please be aware of the fact that this is still beta quality and not at all ready for production use. You might want to create your own VirtualBox disc image from another snapshot or iso disc file. Instructions to do so are located here, VirtualBox/Preparing a disk image.

You can also convert .img image files from qemu formats, such as qcow2, to vmdk format, which VirtualBox can open. The qemu-img command usually detects the source image format automatically.

$ qemu-img convert -O vmdk file.img file.vmdk
  • USB (2GB or larger) Boot Stick to run Virtual Disk Images:
see:http://wiki.sugarlabs.org/go/VMware#Running_VMPlayer_and_an_Appliance_using_a_Single_8_GB_USB_Boot_Stick
Download Virtual Disk program and install instead of VMPlayer
Boot PC from stick and run images on same or 2nd stick.

Install VirtualBox

OS X

  1. Download VirtualBox for OS X from here, http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads
  2. Install it by opening the DMG.
  3. Follow the instructions in the window
    1. Double click VirtualBox.mpkg
    2. If you see a warning about running a program from the internet click OK to run it.
    3. click continue until you see the license popup, click Agree.
    4. Choose location to install, probably something like Macintosh HD then click Continue.
    5. Click Continue, then Install. Enter password if required.
  4. Now you can run VirtualBox by opening the Applications folder and double clicking on the icon.

Windows

Download from http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads.

Linux

See http://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Linux_Downloads
For Ubuntu, it is available in Synaptic Package Manager, once you add the the URI, distribution & components to your 3rd-party software sources or enter the following in your /etc/apt/sources.list.
deb http://download.virtualbox.org/virtualbox/debian <distribution> non-free
Install dkms, as well, so upgrades will update the kernel modules.
Ubuntu 8.04 Hardy: Use downloaded file from link above, Synaptic does not load
Virtual Box that works [satellit 05/08/2009]

Setup a Virtual Machine for Sugar on a Stick

  1. In VirtualBox click New
  2. Click Next
  3. Enter a name "Sugar"
  4. Operating System: choose Linux
  5. Version: choose Fedora
  6. Click Next
  7. For memory leave 256 MB
  8. Click Next
  9. Virtual Hard Disk click Existing
    1. A new window pops up
    2. Click Add button in the toolbar
    3. Browse to the location where you extracted the .vdi disk image
    4. Click Open
    5. Click Select
  10. Click Next
  11. Click Finish
  12. Select Sugar on the left
  13. Click Start in the toolbar
  14. After a minute or two you should see the Sugar screen asking for you name
  15. Enter your name
  16. Click Next.
  17. From now on you can start VirtualBox and start the "Sugar" virtual machine

Mounting Drives

Hard Drives

When booting from a CD image, with a hard drive image attached, you can mount the hard drive by creating an empty directory to mount it on. The form of the command is

$ mount -t ext3 /dev/sda1 /mnt/drive

for the first hard drive. The mount point can be anywhere you have permission to create a directory, although /mnt and ~/mnt are the usual choices.

This gives you a place to save files that cannot be written to CDs.

USB

USB access is not available in the Open Source Edition of VirtualBox.

In order to access USB storage devices, the user must have access to the usbfs file system. The permissions for usbfs can be changed by editing the /etc/fstab file.

For example, most Linux distributions have a user group called usb or similar, of which the current user must be a member. To give all users of that group access to usbfs, make sure the following line is present in /etc/fstab:

# 85 is the USB group
none /proc/bus/usb usbfs devgid=85,devmode=664 0 0

Replace 85 with the group ID that matches your system (search /etc/group for "usb" or similar).

After this, you should be able to mount real USB drives in the normal manner.

Shared Directories

In order to access a directory on your real hard drive, VirtualBox needs the Guest Additions installed.

Mount the VBoxGuestAdditions.iso file

Change to the directory where your CD-ROM drive is mounted and execute as root:

sh ./VBoxLinuxAdditions-x86.run

In a 64-bit Linux guest, use VBoxLinuxAdditions-amd64.run instead.

After this installation, you can create a share in the VirtualBox GUI, and mount it in somewhat the normal way, but with the vboxsf file system type.

mount -t vboxsf [-o OPTIONS] sharename mountpoint

Resources