VirtualBox

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
2<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.4//EN"
3"http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.4/docbookx.dtd">
4<chapter>
5 <title>Remote virtual machines</title>
6
7 <sect1>
8 <title id="vrde">Remote display (VRDP support)</title>
9
10 <para>VirtualBox can display virtual machines remotely, meaning that a
11 virtual machine can execute on one machine even though the machine will be
12 displayed on a second computer, and the machine will be controlled from
13 there as well, as if the virtual machine was running on that second
14 computer.</para>
15
16 <para>For maximum flexibility, starting with VirtualBox 4.0, VirtualBox
17 implements remote machine display through a generic extension interface,
18 the VirtualBox Remote Desktop Extension (VRDE). The base open-source
19 VirtualBox package only provides this interface, while implementations can
20 be supplied by third parties with VirtualBox extension packages, which
21 must be installed separately from the base package. See <xref
22 linkend="intro-installing" /> for more information.</para>
23
24 <para>Oracle provides support for the <emphasis role="bold">VirtualBox
25 Remote Display Protocol (VRDP)</emphasis> in such a VirtualBox extension
26 package. When this package is installed, VirtualBox versions 4.0 and later
27 support VRDP the same way as binary (non-open-source) versions of
28 VirtualBox before 4.0 did.</para>
29
30 <para>VRDP is a backwards-compatible extension to Microsoft's Remote
31 Desktop Protocol (RDP). Typically graphics updates and audio are sent from
32 the remote machine to the client, while keyboard and mouse events are sent
33 back. As a result, you can use any standard RDP client to control the
34 remote VM.</para>
35
36 <para>Even when the extension is installed, the VRDP server is disabled by
37 default. It can easily be enabled on a per-VM basis either in the
38 VirtualBox Manager in the "Display" settings (see <xref
39 linkend="settings-display" />) or with
40 <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>:<screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrde on</screen></para>
41
42 <para>If you use <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput> (described
43 further below), VRDP support will be automatically enabled since
44 VBoxHeadless has no other means of output.</para>
45
46 <sect2 id="rdp-viewers">
47 <title>Common third-party RDP viewers</title>
48
49 <para>Since VRDP is backwards-compatible to RDP, you can use any
50 standard RDP viewer to connect to such a remote virtual machine
51 (examples follow below). For this to work, you must specify the
52 <emphasis role="bold">IP address</emphasis> of your
53 <emphasis>host</emphasis> system (not of the virtual machine!) as the
54 server address to connect to, as well as the <emphasis role="bold">port
55 number</emphasis> that the RDP server is using.</para>
56
57 <para>By default, VRDP uses TCP port
58 <computeroutput>3389</computeroutput>. You will need to change the
59 default port if you run more than one VRDP server, since the port can
60 only be used by one server at a time; you might also need to change it
61 on Windows hosts since the default port might already be used by the RDP
62 server that is built into Windows itself. Ports 5000 through 5050 are
63 typically not used and might be a good choice.</para>
64
65 <para>The port can be changed either in the "Display" settings of the
66 graphical user interface or with
67 <computeroutput>--vrdeport</computeroutput> option of the
68 <computeroutput>VBoxManage modifyvm</computeroutput> command. You can
69 specify a comma-separated list of ports or ranges of ports. Use a dash
70 between two port numbers to specify a range. The VRDP server will bind
71 to <emphasis role="bold">one</emphasis> of available ports from the
72 specified list. For example, <computeroutput>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM
73 name" --vrdeport 5000,5010-5012</computeroutput> will configure the
74 server to bind to one of the ports 5000, 5010, 5011 or 5012. See <xref
75 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" /> for details.</para>
76
77 <para>The actual port used by a running VM can be either queried with
78 <computeroutput>VBoxManage showvminfo</computeroutput> command or seen
79 in the GUI on the "Runtime" tab of the "Session Information Dialog",
80 which is accessible via the "Machine" menu of the VM window.</para>
81
82 <para>Here follow examples for the most common RDP viewers:<itemizedlist>
83 <listitem>
84 <para>On Windows, you can use the Microsoft Terminal Services
85 Connector (<computeroutput>mstsc.exe</computeroutput>) that ships
86 with Windows. You can start it by bringing up the "Run" dialog
87 (press the Windows key and "R") and typing "mstsc". You can also
88 find it under "Start" -&gt; "All Programs" -&gt; "Accessories"
89 -&gt; "Remote Desktop Connection". If you use the "Run" dialog,
90 you can type in options directly:<screen>mstsc 1.2.3.4[:3389]</screen></para>
91
92 <para>Replace "1.2.3.4" with the host IP address, and 3389 with a
93 different port if necessary.</para>
94
95 <note>
96 <para>When connecting to localhost in order to test the
97 connection, the addresses
98 <computeroutput>localhost</computeroutput> and
99 <computeroutput>127.0.0.1</computeroutput> might not work using
100 <computeroutput>mstsc.exe</computeroutput>. Instead, the address
101 <computeroutput>127.0.0.2[:3389]</computeroutput> has to be
102 used.</para>
103 </note>
104 </listitem>
105
106 <listitem>
107 <para>On other systems, you can use the standard open-source
108 <computeroutput>rdesktop</computeroutput> program. This ships with
109 most Linux distributions, but VirtualBox also comes with a
110 modified variant of rdesktop for remote USB support (see <xref
111 linkend="usb-over-rdp" /> below).</para>
112
113 <para>With rdesktop, use a command line such as the
114 following:<screen>rdesktop -a 16 -N 1.2.3.4:3389</screen></para>
115
116 <para>As said for the Microsoft viewer above, replace "1.2.3.4"
117 with the host IP address, and 3389 with a different port if
118 necessary. The <computeroutput>-a 16</computeroutput> option
119 requests a color depth of 16 bits per pixel, which we recommend.
120 (For best performance, after installation of the guest operating
121 system, you should set its display color depth to the same value).
122 The <computeroutput>-N</computeroutput> option enables use of the
123 NumPad keys.</para>
124 </listitem>
125
126 <listitem>
127 <para>If you run the KDE desktop, you might prefer
128 <computeroutput>krdc</computeroutput>, the KDE RDP viewer. The
129 command line would look like this:<screen>krdc --window --high-quality rdp:/1.2.3.4[:3389]</screen></para>
130
131 <para>Again, replace "1.2.3.4" with the host IP address, and 3389
132 with a different port if necessary. The "rdp:/" bit is required
133 with krdc to switch it into RDP mode.</para>
134 </listitem>
135
136 <listitem>
137 <para>With Sun Ray thin clients you can use
138 <computeroutput>uttsc</computeroutput>, which is part of the
139 Sun Ray Windows Connector package. See the corresponding
140 documentation for details.</para>
141 </listitem>
142 </itemizedlist></para>
143 </sect2>
144
145 <sect2 id="vboxheadless">
146 <title>VBoxHeadless, the remote desktop server</title>
147
148 <para>While any VM started from the VirtualBox Manager is capable of
149 running virtual machines remotely, it is not convenient to have to run
150 the full-fledged GUI if you never want to have VMs displayed locally in
151 the first place. In particular, if you are running server hardware whose
152 only purpose is to host VMs, and all your VMs are supposed to run
153 remotely over VRDP, then it is pointless to have a graphical user
154 interface on the server at all -- especially since, on a Linux or
155 Solaris host, the VirtualBox manager comes with dependencies on the Qt
156 and SDL libraries. This is inconvenient if you would rather not have the
157 X Window system on your server at all.</para>
158
159 <para>VirtualBox therefore comes with yet another front-end called
160 <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput>, which produces no visible
161 output on the host at all, but instead only delivers VRDP data. This
162 front-end has no dependencies on the X Window system on Linux and
163 Solaris hosts.<footnote>
164 <para>Before VirtualBox 1.6, the headless server was called
165 <computeroutput>VBoxVRDP</computeroutput>. For the sake of backwards
166 compatibility, the VirtualBox installation still installs an
167 executable with that name as well.</para>
168 </footnote></para>
169
170 <para>To start a virtual machine with
171 <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput>, you have two
172 options:</para>
173
174 <itemizedlist>
175 <listitem>
176 <para>You can use <screen>VBoxManage startvm "VM name" --type headless</screen>The
177 extra <computeroutput>--type</computeroutput> option causes
178 VirtualBox to use <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput> as
179 the front-end to the internal virtualization engine instead of the
180 Qt front-end.</para>
181 </listitem>
182
183 <listitem>
184 <para>The alternative is to use
185 <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput> directly, as
186 follows:<screen>VBoxHeadless --startvm &lt;uuid|name&gt;</screen></para>
187
188 <para>This way of starting the VM helps troubleshooting problems
189 reported by <computeroutput>VBoxManage startvm ...</computeroutput>
190 because you can see sometimes more detailed error messages,
191 especially for early failures before the VM execution is started.
192 In normal situations <computeroutput>VBoxManage startvm</computeroutput>
193 is preferred since it runs the VM directly as a background process
194 which has to be done explicitly when directly starting
195 <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput>.</para>
196 </listitem>
197 </itemizedlist>
198
199 <para>Note that when you use
200 <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput> to start a VM, since the
201 headless server has no other means of output, the VRDP server will
202 <emphasis>always</emphasis> be enabled, regardless of whether you had
203 enabled the VRDP server in the VM's settings. If this is undesirable
204 (for example because you want to access the VM via
205 <computeroutput>ssh</computeroutput> only), start the VM like
206 this:<screen>VBoxHeadless --startvm &lt;uuid|name&gt; --vrde off</screen>To
207 have the VRDP server enabled depending on the VM configuration, as the
208 other front-ends would, use this:<screen>VBoxHeadless --startvm &lt;uuid|name&gt; --vrde config</screen></para>
209
210 <para>If you start the VM with <computeroutput>VBoxManage startvm ...</computeroutput>
211 then the configuration settings of the VM are always used.</para>
212 </sect2>
213
214 <sect2>
215 <title>Step by step: creating a virtual machine on a headless
216 server</title>
217
218 <para>The following instructions may give you an idea how to create a
219 virtual machine on a headless server over a network connection. We will
220 create a virtual machine, establish an RDP connection and install a
221 guest operating system -- all without having to touch the headless
222 server. All you need is the following:</para>
223
224 <para><orderedlist>
225 <listitem>
226 <para>VirtualBox on a server machine with a supported host
227 operating system. The VirtualBox extension pack for the VRDP
228 server must be installed (see the previous section). For the
229 following example, we will assume a Linux server.</para>
230 </listitem>
231
232 <listitem>
233 <para>An ISO file accessible from the server, containing the
234 installation data for the guest operating system to install (we
235 will assume Windows XP in the following example).</para>
236 </listitem>
237
238 <listitem>
239 <para>A terminal connection to that host through which you can
240 access a command line (e.g. via
241 <computeroutput>ssh</computeroutput>).</para>
242 </listitem>
243
244 <listitem>
245 <para>An RDP viewer on the remote client; see <xref
246 linkend="rdp-viewers" /> above for examples.</para>
247 </listitem>
248 </orderedlist>Note again that on the server machine, since we will
249 only use the headless server, neither Qt nor SDL nor the X Window system
250 will be needed.</para>
251
252 <para><orderedlist>
253 <listitem>
254 <para>On the headless server, create a new virtual machine:</para>
255
256 <screen>VBoxManage createvm --name "Windows XP" --ostype WindowsXP --register</screen>
257
258 <para>Note that if you do not specify
259 <computeroutput>--register</computeroutput>, you will have to
260 manually use the <computeroutput>registervm</computeroutput>
261 command later.</para>
262
263 <para>Note further that you do not need to specify
264 <computeroutput>--ostype</computeroutput>, but doing so selects
265 some sane default values for certain VM parameters, for example
266 the RAM size and the type of the virtual network device. To get a
267 complete list of supported operating systems you can use</para>
268
269 <screen>VBoxManage list ostypes</screen>
270 </listitem>
271
272 <listitem>
273 <para>Make sure the settings for this VM are appropriate for the
274 guest operating system that we will install. For example:<screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "Windows XP" --memory 256 --acpi on --boot1 dvd --nic1 nat</screen></para>
275 </listitem>
276
277 <listitem>
278 <para>Create a virtual hard disk for the VM (in this case, 10GB in
279 size):<screen>VBoxManage createhd --filename "WinXP.vdi" --size 10000</screen></para>
280 </listitem>
281
282 <listitem>
283 <para>Add an IDE Controller to the new VM:<screen>VBoxManage storagectl "Windows XP" --name "IDE Controller"
284 --add ide --controller PIIX4</screen></para>
285 </listitem>
286
287 <listitem>
288 <para>Set the VDI file created above as the first virtual hard
289 disk of the new VM:<screen>VBoxManage storageattach "Windows XP" --storagectl "IDE Controller"
290 --port 0 --device 0 --type hdd --medium "WinXP.vdi"</screen></para>
291 </listitem>
292
293 <listitem>
294 <para>Attach the ISO file that contains the operating system
295 installation that you want to install later to the virtual
296 machine, so the machine can boot from it:<screen>VBoxManage storageattach "Windows XP" --storagectl "IDE Controller"
297 --port 0 --device 1 --type dvddrive --medium /full/path/to/iso.iso</screen></para>
298 </listitem>
299
300 <listitem>
301 <para>Start the virtual machine using VBoxHeadless:<screen>VBoxHeadless --startvm "Windows XP"</screen></para>
302
303 <para>If everything worked, you should see a copyright notice. If,
304 instead, you are returned to the command line, then something went
305 wrong.</para>
306 </listitem>
307
308 <listitem>
309 <para>On the client machine, fire up the RDP viewer and try to
310 connect to the server (see <xref linkend="rdp-viewers" /> above
311 for how to use various common RDP viewers).</para>
312
313 <para>You should now be seeing the installation routine of your
314 guest operating system remotely in the RDP viewer.</para>
315 </listitem>
316 </orderedlist></para>
317 </sect2>
318
319 <sect2 id="usb-over-rdp">
320 <title>Remote USB</title>
321
322 <para>As a special feature on top of the VRDP support, VirtualBox
323 supports remote USB devices over the wire as well. That is, the
324 VirtualBox guest that runs on one computer can access the USB devices of
325 the remote computer on which the VRDP data is being displayed the same
326 way as USB devices that are connected to the actual host. This allows
327 for running virtual machines on a VirtualBox host that acts as a server,
328 where a client can connect from elsewhere that needs only a network
329 adapter and a display capable of running an RDP viewer. When USB devices
330 are plugged into the client, the remote VirtualBox server can access
331 them.</para>
332
333 <para>For these remote USB devices, the same filter rules apply as for
334 other USB devices, as described with <xref linkend="settings-usb" />.
335 All you have to do is specify "Remote" (or "Any") when setting up these
336 rules.</para>
337
338 <para>Accessing remote USB devices is only possible if the RDP client
339 supports this extension. On Linux and Solaris hosts, the VirtualBox
340 installation provides a suitable VRDP client called
341 <computeroutput>rdesktop-vrdp</computeroutput>. Recent versions of
342 <computeroutput>uttsc</computeroutput>, a client tailored for the use
343 with Sun Ray thin clients, also support accessing remote USB devices.
344 RDP clients for other platforms will be provided in future VirtualBox
345 versions.</para>
346
347 <para>To make a remote USB device available to a VM,
348 <computeroutput>rdesktop-vrdp</computeroutput> should be started as
349 follows:<screen>rdesktop-vrdp -r usb -a 16 -N my.host.address</screen>Note
350 that <computeroutput>rdesktop-vrdp</computeroutput> can access USB
351 devices only through <computeroutput>/proc/bus/usb</computeroutput>.
352 Please refer to <xref linkend="ts_usb-linux" /> for further details on how
353 to properly set up the permissions. Furthermore it is advisable to
354 disable automatic loading of any host driver on the remote host which
355 might work on USB devices to ensure that the devices are accessible by
356 the RDP client. If the setup was properly done on the remote host,
357 plug/unplug events are visible on the VBox.log file of the VM.</para>
358 </sect2>
359
360 <sect2 id="vbox-auth">
361 <title>RDP authentication</title>
362
363 <para>For each virtual machine that is remotely accessible via RDP, you
364 can individually determine if and how client connections are
365 authenticated. For this, use <computeroutput>VBoxManage
366 modifyvm</computeroutput> command with the
367 <computeroutput>--vrdeauthtype</computeroutput> option; see <xref
368 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm" /> for a general introduction. Three
369 methods of authentication are available:<itemizedlist>
370 <listitem>
371 <para>The "null" method means that there is no authentication at
372 all; any client can connect to the VRDP server and thus the
373 virtual machine. This is, of course, very insecure and only to be
374 recommended for private networks.</para>
375 </listitem>
376
377 <listitem>
378 <para>The "external" method provides external authentication
379 through a special authentication library. VirtualBox ships with
380 two such authentication libraries:<orderedlist>
381 <listitem>
382 <para>The default authentication library,
383 <computeroutput>VBoxAuth</computeroutput>, authenticates
384 against user credentials of the hosts. Depending on the host
385 platform, this means:<itemizedlist>
386 <listitem>
387 <para>On Linux hosts,
388 <computeroutput>VBoxAuth.so</computeroutput>
389 authenticates users against the host's PAM
390 system.</para>
391 </listitem>
392
393 <listitem>
394 <para>On Windows hosts,
395 <computeroutput>VBoxAuth.dll</computeroutput>
396 authenticates users against the host's WinLogon
397 system.</para>
398 </listitem>
399
400 <listitem>
401 <para>On Mac OS X hosts,
402 <computeroutput>VBoxAuth.dylib</computeroutput>
403 authenticates users against the host's directory
404 service.<footnote>
405 <para>Support for Mac OS X was added in version
406 3.2.</para>
407 </footnote></para>
408 </listitem>
409 </itemizedlist></para>
410
411 <para>In other words, the "external" method per default
412 performs authentication with the user accounts that exist on
413 the host system. Any user with valid authentication
414 credentials is accepted, i.e. the username does not have to
415 correspond to the user running the VM.</para>
416 </listitem>
417
418 <listitem>
419 <para>An additional library called
420 <computeroutput>VBoxAuthSimple</computeroutput> performs
421 authentication against credentials configured in the
422 "extradata" section of a virtual machine's XML settings
423 file. This is probably the simplest way to get
424 authentication that does not depend on a running and
425 supported guest (see below). The following steps are
426 required:<orderedlist>
427 <listitem>
428 <para>Enable
429 <computeroutput>VBoxAuthSimple</computeroutput> with
430 the following command:</para>
431
432 <para><screen>VBoxManage setproperty vrdeauthlibrary "VBoxAuthSimple"</screen></para>
433 </listitem>
434
435 <listitem>
436 <para>To enable the library for a particular VM, you
437 must then switch authentication to external:<screen>VBoxManage modifyvm &lt;vm&gt; --vrdeauthtype external</screen></para>
438
439 <para>Replace
440 <computeroutput>&lt;vm&gt;</computeroutput> with the
441 VM name or UUID.</para>
442 </listitem>
443
444 <listitem>
445 <para>You will then need to configure users and
446 passwords by writing items into the machine's
447 extradata. Since the XML machine settings file, into
448 whose "extradata" section the password needs to be
449 written, is a plain text file, VirtualBox uses hashes
450 to encrypt passwords. The following command must be
451 used:<screen>VBoxManage setextradata &lt;vm&gt; "VBoxAuthSimple/users/&lt;user&gt;" &lt;hash&gt;</screen></para>
452
453 <para>Replace
454 <computeroutput>&lt;vm&gt;</computeroutput> with the
455 VM name or UUID,
456 <computeroutput>&lt;user&gt;</computeroutput> with the
457 user name who should be allowed to log in and
458 <computeroutput>&lt;hash&gt;</computeroutput> with the
459 encrypted password. As an example, to obtain the hash
460 value for the password "secret", you can use the
461 following command:<screen>VBoxManage internalcommands passwordhash "secret"</screen></para>
462
463 <para>This will print
464 <screen>2bb80d537b1da3e38bd30361aa855686bde0eacd7162fef6a25fe97bf527a25b</screen>
465 You can then use VBoxManage setextradata to store this
466 value in the machine's "extradata" section.</para>
467
468 <para>As example, combined together, to set the
469 password for the user "john" and the machine "My VM"
470 to "secret", use this command:<screen>VBoxManage setextradata "My VM" "VBoxAuthSimple/users/john"
471 2bb80d537b1da3e38bd30361aa855686bde0eacd7162fef6a25fe97bf527a25b</screen></para>
472 </listitem>
473 </orderedlist></para>
474 </listitem>
475 </orderedlist></para>
476 </listitem>
477
478 <listitem>
479 <para>Finally, the "guest" authentication method performs
480 authentication with a special component that comes with the Guest
481 Additions; as a result, authentication is not performed on the
482 host, but with the <emphasis>guest</emphasis> user
483 accounts.</para>
484
485 <para>This method is currently still in testing and not yet
486 supported.</para>
487 </listitem>
488 </itemizedlist></para>
489
490 <para>In addition to the methods described above, you can replace the
491 default "external" authentication module with any other module. For
492 this, VirtualBox provides a well-defined interface that allows you to
493 write your own authentication module. This is described in detail in the
494 VirtualBox Software Development Kit (SDK) reference; please see <xref
495 linkend="VirtualBoxAPI" /> for details.</para>
496 </sect2>
497
498 <sect2 id="vrde-crypt">
499 <title>RDP encryption</title>
500
501 <para>RDP features data stream encryption, which is based on the RC4
502 symmetric cipher (with keys up to 128bit). The RC4 keys are being
503 replaced in regular intervals (every 4096 packets).</para>
504
505 <para>RDP provides different authentication methods:<orderedlist>
506 <listitem>
507 <para>Historically, RDP4 authentication was used, with which the
508 RDP client does not perform any checks in order to verify the
509 identity of the server it connects to. Since user credentials can
510 be obtained using a "man in the middle" (MITM) attack, RDP4
511 authentication is insecure and should generally not be
512 used.</para>
513 </listitem>
514
515 <listitem>
516 <para>RDP5.1 authentication employs a server certificate for which
517 the client possesses the public key. This way it is guaranteed
518 that the server possess the corresponding private key. However, as
519 this hard-coded private key became public some years ago, RDP5.1
520 authentication is also insecure.</para>
521 </listitem>
522
523 <listitem>
524 <para>RDP5.2 authentication uses the Enhanced RDP Security, which
525 means that an external security protocol is used to secure the
526 connection. RDP4 and RDP5.1 use Standard RDP Security.
527 The VRDP server supports Enhanced RDP Security with TLS protocol and,
528 as a part of TLS handshake, sends the server certificate to the
529 client.</para>
530
531 <para>The <computeroutput>Security/Method</computeroutput> VRDE
532 property sets the desired security method, which is used for a
533 connection. Valid values are:<itemizedlist>
534 <listitem>
535 <para>
536 <computeroutput>Negotiate</computeroutput> - both Enhanced (TLS)
537 and Standard RDP Security connections are allowed. The security
538 method is negotiated with the client. This is the default setting.
539 </para>
540 </listitem>
541
542 <listitem>
543 <para>
544 <computeroutput>RDP</computeroutput> - only Standard RDP Security
545 is accepted.</para>
546 </listitem>
547
548 <listitem>
549 <para>
550 <computeroutput>TLS</computeroutput> - only Enhanced RDP Security
551 is accepted. The client must support TLS.</para>
552 </listitem>
553 </itemizedlist>
554 For example the following command allows a client to use either Standard
555 or Enhanced RDP Security connection:
556 <screen>vboxmanage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdeproperty "Security/Method=negotiate"</screen>
557 </para>
558
559 <para>If the <computeroutput>Security/Method</computeroutput> property is
560 set to either <computeroutput>Negotiate</computeroutput> or
561 <computeroutput>TLS</computeroutput>, the TLS protocol will be automatically
562 used by the server, if the client supports TLS. However, in order to use TLS
563 the server must possess the Server Certificate, the Server Private Key and the
564 Certificate Authority (CA) Certificate. The following example shows how to
565 generate a server certificate.<orderedlist>
566 <listitem>
567 Create a CA self signed certificate:
568 <screen>openssl req -new -x509 -days 365 -extensions v3_ca \
569 -keyout ca_key_private.pem -out ca_cert.pem</screen>
570 </listitem>
571
572 <listitem>
573 Generate a server private key and a request for signing:
574 <screen>openssl genrsa -out server_key_private.pem
575openssl req -new -key server_key_private.pem -out server_req.pem</screen>
576 </listitem>
577
578 <listitem>
579 Generate the server certificate:
580 <screen>openssl x509 -req -days 365 -in server_req.pem \
581 -CA ca_cert.pem -CAkey ca_key_private.pem -set_serial 01 -out server_cert.pem</screen>
582 </listitem>
583 </orderedlist>
584 The server must be configured to access the required files:
585 <screen>vboxmanage modifyvm "VM name" \
586 --vrdeproperty "Security/CACertificate=path/ca_cert.pem"</screen>
587 <screen>vboxmanage modifyvm "VM name" \
588 --vrdeproperty "Security/ServerCertificate=path/server_cert.pem"</screen>
589 <screen>vboxmanage modifyvm "VM name" \
590 --vrdeproperty "Security/ServerPrivateKey=path/server_key_private.pem"</screen>
591 </para>
592 </listitem>
593 </orderedlist></para>
594
595 <para>As the client that connects to the server determines what type
596 of encryption will be used, with rdesktop, the Linux RDP viewer, use the
597 <computeroutput>-4</computeroutput> or
598 <computeroutput>-5</computeroutput> options.</para>
599 </sect2>
600
601 <sect2 id="vrde-multiconnection">
602 <title>Multiple connections to the VRDP server</title>
603
604 <para>The VRDP server of VirtualBox supports multiple simultaneous
605 connections to the same running VM from different clients. All connected
606 clients see the same screen output and share a mouse pointer and
607 keyboard focus. This is similar to several people using the same
608 computer at the same time, taking turns at the keyboard.</para>
609
610 <para>The following command enables multiple connection mode: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdemulticon on</screen></para>
611 </sect2>
612
613 <sect2 id="vrde-multimonitor">
614 <title>Multiple remote monitors</title>
615
616 <para>To access two or more remote VM displays you have to enable the
617 VRDP multiconnection mode (see <xref
618 linkend="vrde-multiconnection" />).</para>
619
620 <para>The RDP client can select the virtual monitor number to connect to
621 using the <computeroutput>domain</computeroutput> logon parameter
622 (<computeroutput>-d</computeroutput>). If the parameter ends with
623 <computeroutput>@</computeroutput> followed by a number, VirtualBox
624 interprets this number as the screen index. The primary guest screen is
625 selected with <computeroutput>@1</computeroutput>, the first secondary
626 screen is <computeroutput>@2</computeroutput>, etc.</para>
627
628 <para>The Microsoft RDP6 client does not let you specify a separate
629 domain name. Instead, use
630 <computeroutput>domain\username</computeroutput> in the
631 <computeroutput>Username:</computeroutput> field -- for example,
632 <computeroutput>@2\name</computeroutput>.
633 <computeroutput>name</computeroutput> must be supplied, and must be the
634 name used to log in if the VRDP server is set up to require credentials.
635 If it is not, you may use any text as the username.</para>
636 </sect2>
637
638 <sect2 id="vrde-videochannel">
639 <title>VRDP video redirection</title>
640
641 <para>Starting with VirtualBox 3.2, the VRDP server can redirect video
642 streams from the guest to the RDP client. Video frames are compressed
643 using the JPEG algorithm allowing a higher compression ratio than
644 standard RDP bitmap compression methods. It is possible to increase the
645 compression ratio by lowering the video quality.</para>
646
647 <para>The VRDP server automatically detects video streams in a guest as
648 frequently updated rectangular areas. As a result, this method works
649 with any guest operating system without having to install additional
650 software in the guest; in particular, the Guest Additions are not
651 required.</para>
652
653 <para>On the client side, however, currently only the Windows 7 Remote
654 Desktop Connection client supports this feature. If a client does not
655 support video redirection, the VRDP server falls back to regular bitmap
656 updates.</para>
657
658 <para>The following command enables video redirection: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdevideochannel on</screen></para>
659
660 <para>The quality of the video is defined as a value from 10 to 100
661 percent, representing a JPEG compression level (where lower numbers mean
662 lower quality but higher compression). The quality can be changed using
663 the following command: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdevideochannelquality 75</screen></para>
664 </sect2>
665
666 <sect2 id="vrde-customization">
667 <title>VRDP customization</title>
668
669 <para>With VirtualBox 4.0 it is possible to disable display output,
670 mouse and keyboard input, audio, remote USB or clipboard individually in
671 the VRDP server.</para>
672
673 <para>The following commands change corresponding server
674 settings:</para>
675
676 <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdeproperty Client/DisableDisplay=1
677VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdeproperty Client/DisableInput=1
678VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdeproperty Client/DisableUSB=1
679VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdeproperty Client/DisableAudio=1
680VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdeproperty Client/DisableClipboard=1
681VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdeproperty Client/DisableUpstreamAudio=1</screen>
682
683 <para>To reenable a feature use a similar command without the trailing
684 1. For example: <screen>VBoxManage modifyvm "VM name" --vrdeproperty Client/DisableDisplay=</screen></para>
685
686 <para>These properties were introduced with VirtualBox 3.2.10. However,
687 in the 3.2.x series, it was necessary to use the following commands to
688 alter these settings instead:</para>
689
690 <screen>VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VRDP/Feature/Client/DisableDisplay" 1
691VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VRDP/Feature/Client/DisableInput" 1
692VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VRDP/Feature/Client/DisableUSB" 1
693VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VRDP/Feature/Client/DisableAudio" 1
694VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VRDP/Feature/Client/DisableClipboard" 1</screen>
695
696 <para>To reenable a feature use a similar command without the trailing
697 1. For example: <screen>VBoxManage setextradata "VM name" "VRDP/Feature/Client/DisableDisplay"</screen></para>
698 </sect2>
699 </sect1>
700
701 <sect1 id="teleporting">
702 <title>Teleporting</title>
703
704 <para>Starting with version 3.1, VirtualBox supports "teleporting" -- that
705 is, moving a virtual machine over a network from one VirtualBox host to
706 another, while the virtual machine is running. This works regardless of
707 the host operating system that is running on the hosts: you can teleport
708 virtual machines between Solaris and Mac hosts, for example.</para>
709
710 <para>Teleporting requires that a machine be currently running on one
711 host, which is then called the <emphasis role="bold">"source"</emphasis>.
712 The host to which the virtual machine will be teleported will then be
713 called the <emphasis role="bold">"target"</emphasis>; the machine on the
714 target is then configured to wait for the source to contact the target.
715 The machine's running state will then be transferred from the source to
716 the target with minimal downtime.</para>
717
718 <para>Teleporting happens over any TCP/IP network; the source and the
719 target only need to agree on a TCP/IP port which is specified in the
720 teleporting settings.</para>
721
722 <para>At this time, there are a few prerequisites for this to work,
723 however:<orderedlist>
724 <listitem>
725 <para>On the target host, you must configure a virtual machine in
726 VirtualBox with exactly the same hardware settings as the machine on
727 the source that you want to teleport. This does not apply to
728 settings which are merely descriptive, such as the VM name, but
729 obviously for teleporting to work, the target machine must have the
730 same amount of memory and other hardware settings. Otherwise
731 teleporting will fail with an error message.</para>
732 </listitem>
733
734 <listitem>
735 <para>The two virtual machines on the source and the target must
736 share the same storage (hard disks as well as floppy and CD/DVD
737 images). This means that they either use the same iSCSI targets or
738 that the storage resides somewhere on the network and both hosts
739 have access to it via NFS or SMB/CIFS.</para>
740
741 <para>This also means that neither the source nor the target machine
742 can have any snapshots.</para>
743 </listitem>
744 </orderedlist></para>
745
746 <para>Then perform the following steps:<orderedlist>
747 <listitem>
748 <para>On the <emphasis>target</emphasis> host, configure the virtual
749 machine to wait for a teleport request to arrive when it is started,
750 instead of actually attempting to start the machine. This is done
751 with the following VBoxManage command:<screen>VBoxManage modifyvm &lt;targetvmname&gt; --teleporter on --teleporterport &lt;port&gt;</screen></para>
752
753 <para>where <computeroutput>&lt;targetvmname&gt;</computeroutput> is
754 the name of the virtual machine on the target host and
755 <computeroutput>&lt;port&gt;</computeroutput> is a TCP/IP port
756 number to be used on both the source and the target hosts. For
757 example, use 6000. For details, see <xref
758 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm-teleport" />.</para>
759 </listitem>
760
761 <listitem>
762 <para>Start the VM on the target host. You will see that instead of
763 actually running, it will show a progress dialog. indicating that it
764 is waiting for a teleport request to arrive.</para>
765 </listitem>
766
767 <listitem>
768 <para>Start the machine on the <emphasis>source</emphasis> host as
769 usual. When it is running and you want it to be teleported, issue
770 the following command on the source host:<screen>VBoxManage controlvm &lt;sourcevmname&gt; teleport --host &lt;targethost&gt; --port &lt;port&gt;</screen></para>
771
772 <para>where <computeroutput>&lt;sourcevmname&gt;</computeroutput> is
773 the name of the virtual machine on the source host (the machine that
774 is currently running),
775 <computeroutput>&lt;targethost&gt;</computeroutput> is the host or
776 IP name of the target host on which the machine is waiting for the
777 teleport request, and <computeroutput>&lt;port&gt;</computeroutput>
778 must be the same number as specified in the command on the target
779 host. For details, see <xref
780 linkend="vboxmanage-controlvm" />.</para>
781 </listitem>
782 </orderedlist></para>
783
784 <para>For testing, you can also teleport machines on the same host; in
785 that case, use "localhost" as the hostname on both the source and the
786 target host.<note>
787 <para>In rare cases, if the CPUs of the source and the target are very
788 different, teleporting can fail with an error message, or the target
789 may hang. This may happen especially if the VM is running application
790 software that is highly optimized to run on a particular CPU without
791 correctly checking that certain CPU features are actually present.
792 VirtualBox filters what CPU capabilities are presented to the guest
793 operating system. Advanced users can attempt to restrict these virtual
794 CPU capabilities with the <computeroutput>VBoxManage --modifyvm
795 --cpuid</computeroutput> command; see <xref
796 linkend="vboxmanage-modifyvm-teleport" />.</para>
797 </note></para>
798 </sect1>
799</chapter>
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