VirtualBox

source: vbox/trunk/src/VBox/Main/idl/VirtualBox.xidl@ 28292

Last change on this file since 28292 was 28290, checked in by vboxsync, 15 years ago

Devices, Main, FE/Qt: reverted r60036 for now

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1<?xml version="1.0" ?>
2
3<!--
4 * :tabSize=2:indentSize=2:noTabs=true:
5 * :folding=explicit:collapseFolds=1:
6 *
7 * Master declaration for VirtualBox's Main API, represented
8 * by COM/XPCOM and web service interfaces.
9 *
10 * From this document, the build system generates several files
11 * via XSLT that are then used during the build process.
12 *
13 * Below is the list of XSL templates that operate on this file and
14 * output files they generate. These XSL templates must be updated
15 * whenever the schema of this file changes:
16 *
17 * 1. src/VBox/Main/idl/midl.xsl =>
18 * out/<platform>/bin/sdk/idl/VirtualBox.idl
19 * (MS COM interface definition file for Main API)
20 *
21 * 2. src/VBox/Main/idl/xpidl.xsl =>
22 * out/<platform>/bin/sdk/idl/VirtualBox_XPCOM.idl
23 * (XPCOM interface definition file for Main API)
24 *
25 * 3. src/VBox/Main/idl/doxygen.xsl =>
26 * out/<platform>/obj/src/VBox/Main/VirtualBox.idl
27 * (pseudo-IDL for Doxygen to generate the official Main API
28 * documentation)
29 *
30 * 4. src/VBox/Main/webservice/*.xsl =>
31 * a bunch of WSDL and C++ files
32 * (VirtualBox web service sources and SOAP mappers;
33 * see src/VBox/Main/webservice/Makefile.kmk for details)
34 *
35 * 5. src/VBox/Frontends/VirtualBox/include/COMWrappers.xsl =>
36 * out/<platform>/obj/src/VBox/Frontends/VirtualBox/VirtualBox/include/COMWrappers.h
37 * (smart Qt-based C++ wrapper classes for COM interfaces
38 * of the Main API)
39 *
40 * 6. src/VBox/Installer/win32/VirtualBox_TypeLib.xsl =>
41 * out/<platform>/obj/src/VBox/Installer/win32/VirtualBox_TypeLib.wxi
42 * (Main API TypeLib block for the WiX installer)
43 *
44 * 7. src/VBox/Runtime/common/err/errmsgvboxcom.xsl =>
45 * out/<platform>/obj/Runtime/errmsgvboxcomdata.h
46 * (<result> extraction for the %Rhrc format specifier)
47 *
48 Copyright (C) 2006-2010 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
49
50 This file is part of VirtualBox Open Source Edition (OSE), as
51 available from http://www.virtualbox.org. This file is free software;
52 you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU
53 General Public License (GPL) as published by the Free Software
54 Foundation, in version 2 as it comes in the "COPYING" file of the
55 VirtualBox OSE distribution. VirtualBox OSE is distributed in the
56 hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY of any kind.
57
58 Please contact Sun Microsystems, Inc., 4150 Network Circle, Santa
59 Clara, CA 95054 USA or visit http://www.sun.com if you need
60 additional information or have any questions.
61-->
62
63<idl>
64
65<desc>
66 Welcome to the <b>VirtualBox Main API documentation</b>. This documentation
67 describes the so-called <i>VirtualBox Main API</i> which comprises all public
68 COM interfaces and components provided by the VirtualBox server and by the
69 VirtualBox client library.
70
71 VirtualBox employs a client-server design, meaning that whenever any part of
72 VirtualBox is running -- be it the Qt GUI, the VBoxManage command-line
73 interface or any virtual machine --, a dedicated server process named
74 VBoxSVC runs in the background. This allows multiple processes working with
75 VirtualBox to cooperate without conflicts. These processes communicate to each
76 other using inter-process communication facilities provided by the COM
77 implementation of the host computer.
78
79 On Windows platforms, the VirtualBox Main API uses Microsoft COM, a native COM
80 implementation. On all other platforms, Mozilla XPCOM, an open-source COM
81 implementation, is used.
82
83 All the parts that a typical VirtualBox user interacts with (the Qt GUI,
84 the VBoxManage command-line interface and the VBoxVRDP server) are technically
85 front-ends to the Main API and only use the interfaces that are documented
86 in this Main API documentation. This ensures that, with any given release
87 version of VirtualBox, all capabilities of the product that could be useful
88 to an external client program are always exposed by way of this API.
89
90 The VirtualBox Main API (also called the <i>VirtualBox COM library</i>)
91 contains two public component classes:
92 <tt>%VirtualBox.VirtualBox</tt> and <tt>%VirtualBox.Session</tt>, which
93 implement IVirtualBox and ISession interfaces respectively. These two classes
94 are of supreme importance and will be needed in order for any front-end
95 program to do anything useful. It is recommended to read the documentation of
96 the mentioned interfaces first.
97
98 The <tt>%VirtualBox.VirtualBox</tt> class is a singleton. This means that
99 there can be only one object of this class on the local machine at any given
100 time. This object is a parent of many other objects in the VirtualBox COM
101 library and lives in the VBoxSVC process. In fact, when you create an instance
102 of the <tt>VirtualBox.VirtualBox</tt>, the COM subsystem checks if the VBoxSVC
103 process is already running, starts it if not, and returns you a reference to
104 the <tt>VirtualBox</tt> object created in this process. When the last reference
105 to this object is released, the VBoxSVC process ends (with a 5 second delay to
106 protect from too frequent restarts).
107
108 The <tt>%VirtualBox.Session</tt> class is a regular component. You can create
109 as many <tt>Session</tt> objects as you need but all of them will live in a
110 process which issues the object instantiation call. <tt>Session</tt> objects
111 represent virtual machine sessions which are used to configure virtual
112 machines and control their execution.
113</desc>
114
115<if target="midl">
116 <cpp line="enum {"/>
117 <cpp line=" kTypeLibraryMajorVersion = 1,"/>
118 <cpp line=" kTypeLibraryMinorVersion = 0"/>
119 <cpp line="};"/>
120</if>
121
122<if target="xpidl">
123 <!-- NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTSxx_CI macros are placed here, for convenience -->
124 <cpp>
125/* currently, nsISupportsImpl.h lacks the below-like macros */
126
127#define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE1_CI NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE1_CI
128#define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE2_CI NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE2_CI
129#define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE3_CI NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE3_CI
130
131#ifndef NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS1_CI
132# define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS1_CI(_class, _interface) \
133 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ADDREF(_class) \
134 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_RELEASE(_class) \
135 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE1_CI(_class, _interface) \
136 NS_IMPL_CI_INTERFACE_GETTER1(_class, _interface)
137#endif
138
139#ifndef NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS2_CI
140# define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS2_CI(_class, _i1, _i2) \
141 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ADDREF(_class) \
142 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_RELEASE(_class) \
143 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE2_CI(_class, _i1, _i2) \
144 NS_IMPL_CI_INTERFACE_GETTER2(_class, _i1, _i2)
145#endif
146
147#ifndef NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS3_CI
148# define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS3_CI(_class, _i1, _i2, _i3) \
149 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ADDREF(_class) \
150 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_RELEASE(_class) \
151 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE3_CI(_class, _i1, _i2, _i3) \
152 NS_IMPL_CI_INTERFACE_GETTER3(_class, _i1, _i2, _i3)
153#endif
154
155#ifndef NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE1_AMBIGUOUS_CI
156# define NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE1_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1) \
157 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_BEGIN(_class) \
158 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(_i1, _ic1) \
159 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(nsISupports, _ic1) \
160 NS_IMPL_QUERY_CLASSINFO(_class) \
161 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_END
162#endif
163
164#ifndef NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE2_AMBIGUOUS_CI
165# define NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE2_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1, \
166 _i2, _ic2) \
167 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_BEGIN(_class) \
168 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(_i1, _ic1) \
169 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(_i2, _ic2) \
170 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(nsISupports, _ic1) \
171 NS_IMPL_QUERY_CLASSINFO(_class) \
172 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_END
173#endif
174
175#ifndef NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE3_AMBIGUOUS_CI
176# define NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE3_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1, \
177 _i2, _ic2, _i3, _ic3) \
178 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_BEGIN(_class) \
179 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(_i1, _ic1) \
180 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(_i2, _ic2) \
181 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(_i3, _ic3) \
182 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_ENTRY_AMBIGUOUS(nsISupports, _ic1) \
183 NS_IMPL_QUERY_CLASSINFO(_class) \
184 NS_INTERFACE_MAP_END
185#endif
186
187#define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE1_AMBIGUOUS_CI NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE1_AMBIGUOUS_CI
188#define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE2_AMBIGUOUS_CI NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE2_AMBIGUOUS_CI
189#define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE3_AMBIGUOUS_CI NS_IMPL_QUERY_INTERFACE3_AMBIGUOUS_CI
190
191#ifndef NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS1_AMBIGUOUS_CI
192# define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS1_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1) \
193 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ADDREF(_class) \
194 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_RELEASE(_class) \
195 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE1_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1) \
196 NS_IMPL_CI_INTERFACE_GETTER1(_class, _i1)
197#endif
198
199#ifndef NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS2_AMBIGUOUS_CI
200# define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS2_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1, \
201 _i2, _ic2) \
202 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ADDREF(_class) \
203 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_RELEASE(_class) \
204 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE2_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1, \
205 _i2, _ic2) \
206 NS_IMPL_CI_INTERFACE_GETTER2(_class, _i1, _i2)
207#endif
208
209#ifndef NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS3_AMBIGUOUS_CI
210# define NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ISUPPORTS3_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1, \
211 _i2, _ic2, _i3, _ic3) \
212 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_ADDREF(_class) \
213 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_RELEASE(_class) \
214 NS_IMPL_THREADSAFE_QUERY_INTERFACE3_AMBIGUOUS_CI(_class, _i1, _ic1, \
215 _i2, _ic2, _i3, _ic3) \
216 NS_IMPL_CI_INTERFACE_GETTER3(_class, _i1, _i2, _i3)
217#endif
218
219 </cpp>
220</if>
221
222<library
223 name="VirtualBox"
224 uuid="46137EEC-703B-4fe5-AFD4-7C9BBBBA0259"
225 version="1.3"
226 desc="VirtualBox Type Library"
227 appUuid="819B4D85-9CEE-493C-B6FC-64FFE759B3C9"
228 supportsErrorInfo="yes"
229>
230
231
232 <!--
233 // COM result codes for VirtualBox
234 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
235 -->
236
237 <descGroup id="VirtualBox_COM_result_codes" title="VirtualBox COM result codes">
238 <desc>
239 This section describes all VirtualBox-specific COM result codes that may
240 be returned by methods of VirtualBox COM interfaces in addition to
241 standard COM result codes.
242
243 Note that along with the result code, every VirtualBox method returns
244 extended error information through the IVirtualBoxErrorInfo interface on
245 failure. This interface is a preferred way to present the error to the end
246 user because it contains a human readable description of the error. Raw
247 result codes, both standard and described in this section, are intended to
248 be used by programs to analyze the reason of a failure and select an
249 appropriate course of action without involving the end user (for example,
250 retry the operation later or make a different call).
251
252 The standard COM result codes that may originate from our methods include:
253
254 <table>
255 <tr><td>E_INVALIDARG</td>
256 <td>
257 Returned when the value of the method's argument is not within the range
258 of valid values. This should not be confused with situations when the
259 value is within the range but simply doesn't suit the current object
260 state and there is a possibility that it will be accepted later (in such
261 cases VirtualBox-specific codes are returned, for example,
262 <link to="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND"/>).
263 </td>
264 </tr>
265 <tr><td>E_POINTER</td>
266 <td>
267 Returned if a memory pointer for the output argument is invalid (for
268 example, @c null). Note that when pointers representing input
269 arguments (such as strings) are invalid, E_INVALIDARG is returned.
270 </td>
271 </tr>
272 <tr><td>E_ACCESSDENIED</td>
273 <td>
274 Returned when the called object is not ready. Since the lifetime of a
275 public COM object cannot be fully controlled by the implementation,
276 VirtualBox maintains the readiness state for all objects it creates and
277 returns this code in response to any method call on the object that was
278 deactivated by VirtualBox and is not functioning any more.
279 </td>
280 </tr>
281 <tr><td>E_OUTOFMEMORY</td>
282 <td>
283 Returned when a memory allocation operation fails.
284 </td>
285 </tr>
286 </table>
287 </desc>
288 </descGroup>
289
290 <!--
291 Note that src/VBox/Runtime/common/err/errmsgvboxcom.xsl will ignore
292 everything in <result>/<desc> after (and including) the first dot, so express
293 the matter of the error code in the first sentence and keep it short.
294 -->
295
296 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND" value="0x80BB0001">
297 <desc>
298 Object corresponding to the supplied arguments does not exist.
299 </desc>
300 </result>
301
302 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE" value="0x80BB0002">
303 <desc>
304 Current virtual machine state prevents the operation.
305 </desc>
306 </result>
307
308 <result name="VBOX_E_VM_ERROR" value="0x80BB0003">
309 <desc>
310 Virtual machine error occurred attempting the operation.
311 </desc>
312 </result>
313
314 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR" value="0x80BB0004">
315 <desc>
316 File not accessible or erroneous file contents.
317 </desc>
318 </result>
319
320 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR" value="0x80BB0005">
321 <desc>
322 Runtime subsystem error.
323 </desc>
324 </result>
325
326 <result name="VBOX_E_PDM_ERROR" value="0x80BB0006">
327 <desc>
328 Pluggable Device Manager error.
329 </desc>
330 </result>
331
332 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE" value="0x80BB0007">
333 <desc>
334 Current object state prohibits operation.
335 </desc>
336 </result>
337
338 <result name="VBOX_E_HOST_ERROR" value="0x80BB0008">
339 <desc>
340 Host operating system related error.
341 </desc>
342 </result>
343
344 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED" value="0x80BB0009">
345 <desc>
346 Requested operation is not supported.
347 </desc>
348 </result>
349
350 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR" value="0x80BB000A">
351 <desc>
352 Invalid XML found.
353 </desc>
354 </result>
355
356 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_SESSION_STATE" value="0x80BB000B">
357 <desc>
358 Current session state prohibits operation.
359 </desc>
360 </result>
361
362 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_IN_USE" value="0x80BB000C">
363 <desc>
364 Object being in use prohibits operation.
365 </desc>
366 </result>
367
368 <!--
369 Note that src/VBox/Runtime/common/err/errmsgvboxcom.xsl will ignore
370 everything in <result>/<desc> after (and including) the first dot, so express
371 the matter of the error code in the first sentence and keep it short.
372 -->
373
374 <descGroup/>
375
376 <!--
377 // all common enums
378 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
379 -->
380
381 <enum name="SettingsVersion"
382 uuid="52bd6f5f-1adb-4493-975d-581a9c4b803f"
383 >
384 <desc>Settings version of VirtualBox settings files. This is written to
385 the "version" attribute of the root "VirtualBox" element in the settings
386 file XML and indicates which VirtualBox version wrote the file.
387 </desc>
388
389 <const name="Null" value="0">
390 <desc>Null value, indicates invalid version.</desc>
391 </const>
392 <const name="v1_0" value="1">
393 <desc>Legacy settings version, not currently supported.</desc>
394 </const>
395 <const name="v1_1" value="2">
396 <desc>Legacy settings version, not currently supported.</desc>
397 </const>
398 <const name="v1_2" value="3">
399 <desc>Legacy settings version, not currently supported.</desc>
400 </const>
401 <const name="v1_3pre" value="4">
402 <desc>Legacy settings version, not currently supported.</desc>
403 </const>
404 <const name="v1_3" value="5">
405 <desc>Settings version "1.3", written by VirtualBox 2.0.12.</desc>
406 <!--
407 Machine XML: Capitalization of Uart, Lpt elements and many attributes changed.
408 -->
409 </const>
410 <const name="v1_4" value="6">
411 <desc>Intermediate settings version, understood by VirtualBox 2.1.x.</desc>
412 <!--
413 VirtualBox.xml: big DiskRegistry -> MediaRegistry revamp, various HardDisk types merged
414 (was VirtualDiskImage, VMDKImage, VHDImage, ISCSIHardDisk, CustomHardDisk, DiffHardDisk)
415 -->
416 </const>
417 <const name="v1_5" value="7">
418 <desc>Intermediate settings version, understood by VirtualBox 2.1.x.</desc>
419 <!-- 2008-09-04: 2.0.0 released
420 2008-11-20: settings version 1.5 introduced
421 2008-12-17: 2.1.0 released
422 Machine changes:
423 guest OS identifiers changed;
424 Machine/Hardware/Display/MonitorCount renamed to monitorCount;
425 Machine/Hardware/Display/Accelerate3D renamed to accelerate3D;
426 Machine/Hardware/CPU/CPUCount/@count changed to CPU/@count
427 -->
428 </const>
429 <const name="v1_6" value="8">
430 <desc>Settings version "1.6", written by VirtualBox 2.1.4 (at least).</desc>
431 <!-- 2008-12-17: 2.1.0 released
432 2008-12-19: settings version 1.6 introduced (is in 2.1 branch)
433 2009-04-08: 2.2.0 released
434 Machine changes: remove all Machine/Hardware/Network/Adapter/HostInterface[@TAPSetup or @TAPTerminate]/ attributes (done)
435 -->
436 </const>
437 <const name="v1_7" value="9">
438 <desc>Settings version "1.7", written by VirtualBox 2.2.x and 3.0.x.</desc>
439 <!-- 2008-12-17: 2.1.0 released
440 2009-03-11: settings version 1.7 introduced (is in 2.2 branch)
441 2009-04-08: 2.2.0 released
442 VirtualBox.xml additions: NetserviceRegistry with DHCPServers (done)
443 Machine changes: HardDiskAttachments is now StorageControllers (done)
444 -->
445 </const>
446 <const name="v1_8" value="10">
447 <desc>Intermediate settings version "1.8", understood by VirtualBox 3.1.x.</desc>
448 <!-- Machine additions: Display/@accelerate2DVideo (done)
449 -->
450 </const>
451 <const name="v1_9" value="11">
452 <desc>Settings version "1.9", written by VirtualBox 3.1.x.</desc>
453 <!-- The big storage controller / DVD / Floppy rework (done)
454 -->
455 </const>
456 <const name="v1_10" value="12">
457 <desc>Settings version "1.10", written by VirtualBox 3.2.x.</desc>
458 <!-- Machine changes: RTC localOrUTC (done)
459 CPU hot-plug support
460 -->
461 </const>
462 <const name="Future" value="13">
463 <desc>Settings version greater than "1.10", written by a future VirtualBox version.</desc>
464 </const>
465 </enum>
466
467 <enum
468 name="AccessMode"
469 uuid="1da0007c-ddf7-4be8-bcac-d84a1558785f"
470 >
471 <desc>
472 Access mode for opening files.
473 </desc>
474
475 <const name="ReadOnly" value="1"/>
476 <const name="ReadWrite" value="2"/>
477 </enum>
478
479 <enum
480 name="MachineState"
481 uuid="36518cf6-cdf0-4d0d-ad2a-5ee9c60c7494"
482 >
483 <desc>
484 Virtual machine execution state.
485
486 This enumeration represents possible values of the <link
487 to="IMachine::state"/> attribute.
488
489 Below is the basic virtual machine state diagram. It shows how the state
490 changes during virtual machine execution. The text in square braces shows
491 a method of the IConsole interface that performs the given state
492 transition.
493
494 <pre>
495 +---------[powerDown()] &lt;- Stuck &lt;--[failure]-+
496 V |
497 +-&gt; PoweredOff --+--&gt;[powerUp()]--&gt; Starting --+ | +-----[resume()]-----+
498 | | | | V |
499 | Aborted -----+ +--&gt; Running --[pause()]--&gt; Paused
500 | | ^ | ^ |
501 | Saved -----------[powerUp()]--&gt; Restoring -+ | | | |
502 | ^ | | | |
503 | | +-----------------------------------------+-|-------------------+ +
504 | | | | |
505 | | +-- Saving &lt;--------[takeSnapshot()]&lt;-------+---------------------+
506 | | | |
507 | +-------- Saving &lt;--------[saveState()]&lt;----------+---------------------+
508 | | |
509 +-------------- Stopping -------[powerDown()]&lt;----------+---------------------+
510 </pre>
511
512 Note that states to the right from PoweredOff, Aborted and Saved in the
513 above diagram are called <i>online VM states</i>. These states
514 represent the virtual machine which is being executed in a dedicated
515 process (usually with a GUI window attached to it where you can see the
516 activity of the virtual machine and interact with it). There are two
517 special pseudo-states, FirstOnline and LastOnline, that can be used in
518 relational expressions to detect if the given machine state is online or
519 not:
520
521 <pre>
522 if (machine.GetState() &gt;= MachineState_FirstOnline &amp;&amp;
523 machine.GetState() &lt;= MachineState_LastOnline)
524 {
525 ...the machine is being executed...
526 }
527 </pre>
528
529 When the virtual machine is in one of the online VM states (that is, being
530 executed), only a few machine settings can be modified. Methods working
531 with such settings contain an explicit note about that. An attempt to
532 change any oter setting or perform a modifying operation during this time
533 will result in the <link to="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE"/> error.
534
535 All online states except Running, Paused and Stuck are transitional: they
536 represent temporary conditions of the virtual machine that will last as
537 long as the operation that initiated such a condition.
538
539 The Stuck state is a special case. It means that execution of the machine
540 has reached the "Guru Meditation" condition. This condition indicates an
541 internal VMM (virtual machine manager) failure which may happen as a
542 result of either an unhandled low-level virtual hardware exception or one
543 of the recompiler exceptions (such as the <i>too-many-traps</i>
544 condition).
545
546 Note also that any online VM state may transit to the Aborted state. This
547 happens if the process that is executing the virtual machine terminates
548 unexpectedly (for example, crashes). Other than that, the Aborted state is
549 equivalent to PoweredOff.
550
551 There are also a few additional state diagrams that do not deal with
552 virtual machine execution and therefore are shown separately. The states
553 shown on these diagrams are called <i>offline VM states</i> (this includes
554 PoweredOff, Aborted and Saved too).
555
556 The first diagram shows what happens when a lengthy setup operation is
557 being executed (such as <link to="IMachine::attachDevice"/>).
558
559 <pre>
560 +----------------------------------(same state as before the call)------+
561 | |
562 +-&gt; PoweredOff --+ |
563 | | |
564 |-&gt; Aborted -----+--&gt;[lengthy VM configuration call] --&gt; SettingUp -----+
565 | |
566 +-&gt; Saved -------+
567 </pre>
568
569 The next two diagrams demonstrate the process of taking a snapshot of a
570 powered off virtual machine, restoring the state to that as of a snapshot
571 or deleting a snapshot, respectively.
572
573 <pre>
574 +----------------------------------(same state as before the call)------+
575 | |
576 +-&gt; PoweredOff --+ |
577 | +--&gt;[takeSnapshot()] -------------------&gt; Saving ------+
578 +-&gt; Aborted -----+
579
580 +-&gt; PoweredOff --+
581 | |
582 | Aborted -----+--&gt;[restoreSnapshot() ]-------&gt; RestoringSnapshot -+
583 | | [deleteSnapshot() ]-------&gt; DeletingSnapshot --+
584 +-&gt; Saved -------+ |
585 | |
586 +---(Saved if restored from an online snapshot, PoweredOff otherwise)---+
587 </pre>
588
589 Note that the Saving state is present in both the offline state group and
590 online state group. Currently, the only way to determine what group is
591 assumed in a particular case is to remember the previous machine state: if
592 it was Running or Paused, then Saving is an online state, otherwise it is
593 an offline state. This inconsistency may be removed in one of the future
594 versions of VirtualBox by adding a new state.
595
596 <note internal="yes">
597 For whoever decides to touch this enum: In order to keep the
598 comparisons involving FirstOnline and LastOnline pseudo-states valid,
599 the numeric values of these states must be correspondingly updated if
600 needed: for any online VM state, the condition
601 <tt>FirstOnline &lt;= state &lt;= LastOnline</tt> must be
602 @c true. The same relates to transient states for which
603 the condition <tt>FirstOnline &lt;= state &lt;= LastOnline</tt> must be
604 @c true.
605 </note>
606 </desc>
607
608 <const name="Null" value="0">
609 <desc>Null value (never used by the API).</desc>
610 </const>
611 <const name="PoweredOff" value="1">
612 <desc>
613 The machine is not running and has no saved execution state; it has
614 either never been started or been shut down successfully.
615 </desc>
616 </const>
617 <const name="Saved" value="2">
618 <desc>
619 The machine is not currently running, but the execution state of the machine
620 has been saved to an external file when it was running, from where
621 it can be resumed.
622 </desc>
623 </const>
624 <const name="Teleported" value="3">
625 <desc>
626 The machine was teleported to a different host (or process) and then
627 powered off. Take care when powering it on again may corrupt resources
628 it shares with the teleportation target (e.g. disk and network).
629 </desc>
630 </const>
631 <const name="Aborted" value="4">
632 <desc>
633 The process running the machine has terminated abnormally. This may
634 indicate a crash of the VM process in host execution context, or
635 the VM process has been terminated externally.
636 </desc>
637 </const>
638 <const name="Running" value="5">
639 <desc>
640 The machine is currently being executed.
641 <note internal="yes">
642 For whoever decides to touch this enum: In order to keep the
643 comparisons in the old source code valid, this state must immediately
644 precede the Paused state.
645 TODO: Lift this spectacularly wonderful restriction.
646 </note>
647 </desc>
648 </const>
649 <const name="Paused" value="6">
650 <desc>
651 Execution of the machine has been paused.
652 <note internal="yes">
653 For whoever decides to touch this enum: In order to keep the
654 comparisons in the old source code valid, this state must immediately
655 follow the Running state.
656 TODO: Lift this spectacularly wonderful restriction.
657 </note>
658 </desc>
659 </const>
660 <const name="Stuck" value="7">
661 <desc>
662 Execution of the machine has reached the "Guru Meditation"
663 condition. This indicates a severe error in the hypervisor itself.
664 <note internal="yes">
665 bird: Why this uncool name? Could we rename it to "GuruMeditation" or
666 "Guru", perhaps? Or are there some other VMM states that are
667 intended to be lumped in here as well?
668 </note>
669 </desc>
670 </const>
671 <const name="Teleporting" value="8">
672 <desc>
673 The machine is about to be teleported to a different host or process.
674 It is possible to pause a machine in this state, but it will go to the
675 <link to="MachineState::PausedTeleporting"/> state and it will not be
676 possible to resume it again unless the teleportation fails.
677 </desc>
678 </const>
679 <const name="LiveSnapshotting" value="9">
680 <desc>
681 A live snapshot is being taken. The machine is running normally, but
682 some of the runtime configuration options are inaccessible. Also, if
683 paused while in this state it will transition to
684 <link to="MachineState::Saving"/> and it will not be resume the
685 execution until the snapshot operation has completed.
686 </desc>
687 </const>
688 <const name="Starting" value="10">
689 <desc>
690 Machine is being started after powering it on from a
691 zero execution state.
692 </desc>
693 </const>
694 <const name="Stopping" value="11">
695 <desc>
696 Machine is being normally stopped powering it off, or after the guest OS
697 has initiated a shutdown sequence.
698 </desc>
699 </const>
700 <const name="Saving" value="12">
701 <desc>
702 Machine is saving its execution state to a file, or an online
703 snapshot of the machine is being taken.
704 </desc>
705 </const>
706 <const name="Restoring" value="13">
707 <desc>
708 Execution state of the machine is being restored from a file
709 after powering it on from the saved execution state.
710 </desc>
711 </const>
712 <const name="TeleportingPausedVM" value="14">
713 <desc>
714 The machine is being teleported to another host or process, but it is
715 not running. This is the paused variant of the
716 <link to="MachineState::Teleporting"/> state.
717 </desc>
718 </const>
719 <const name="TeleportingIn" value="15">
720 <desc>
721 Teleporting the machine state in from another host or process.
722 </desc>
723 </const>
724 <const name="RestoringSnapshot" value="16">
725 <desc>
726 A machine snapshot is being restored; this typically does not take long.
727 </desc>
728 </const>
729 <const name="DeletingSnapshot" value="17">
730 <desc>
731 A machine snapshot is being deleted; this can take a long time since this
732 may require merging differencing media.
733 </desc>
734 </const>
735 <const name="SettingUp" value="18">
736 <desc>
737 Lengthy setup operation is in progress.
738 </desc>
739 </const>
740
741 <const name="FirstOnline" value="5" wsmap="suppress"> <!-- Running -->
742 <desc>
743 Pseudo-state: first online state (for use in relational expressions).
744 </desc>
745 </const>
746 <const name="LastOnline" value="13" wsmap="suppress"> <!-- TeleportingIn -->
747 <desc>
748 Pseudo-state: last online state (for use in relational expressions).
749 </desc>
750 </const>
751
752 <const name="FirstTransient" value="8" wsmap="suppress"> <!-- Teleporting -->
753 <desc>
754 Pseudo-state: first transient state (for use in relational expressions).
755 </desc>
756 </const>
757 <const name="LastTransient" value="18" wsmap="suppress"> <!-- SettingUp -->
758 <desc>
759 Pseudo-state: last transient state (for use in relational expressions).
760 </desc>
761 </const>
762
763 </enum>
764
765 <enum
766 name="SessionState"
767 uuid="cf2700c0-ea4b-47ae-9725-7810114b94d8"
768 >
769 <desc>
770 Session state. This enumeration represents possible values of
771 <link to="IMachine::sessionState"/> and <link to="ISession::state"/>
772 attributes. See individual enumerator descriptions for the meaning for
773 every value.
774 </desc>
775
776 <const name="Null" value="0">
777 <desc>Null value (never used by the API).</desc>
778 </const>
779 <const name="Closed" value="1">
780 <desc>
781 The machine has no open sessions (<link to="IMachine::sessionState"/>);
782 the session is closed (<link to="ISession::state"/>)
783 </desc>
784 </const>
785 <const name="Open" value="2">
786 <desc>
787 The machine has an open direct session (<link to="IMachine::sessionState"/>);
788 the session is open (<link to="ISession::state"/>)
789 </desc>
790 </const>
791 <const name="Spawning" value="3">
792 <desc>
793 A new (direct) session is being opened for the machine as a result of
794 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/> call
795 (<link to="IMachine::sessionState"/> or <link to="ISession::state"/>).
796 This state also occurs as a short transient state when a new direct
797 session is opened by calling <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/>.
798 </desc>
799 </const>
800 <const name="Closing" value="4">
801 <desc>
802 The direct session is being closed (<link to="IMachine::sessionState"/>);
803 the session is being closed (<link to="ISession::state"/>)
804 </desc>
805 </const>
806 </enum>
807
808 <enum
809 name="CPUPropertyType"
810 uuid="24d356a6-2f45-4abd-b977-1cbe9c4701f5"
811 >
812 <desc>
813 Virtual CPU property type. This enumeration represents possible values of the
814 IMachine get- and setCPUProperty methods.
815 </desc>
816 <const name="Null" value="0">
817 <desc>Null value (never used by the API).</desc>
818 </const>
819 <const name="PAE" value="1">
820 <desc>
821 This setting determines whether VirtualBox will expose the Physical Address
822 Extension (PAE) feature of the host CPU to the guest. Note that in case PAE
823 is not available, it will not be reported.
824 </desc>
825 </const>
826 <const name="Synthetic" value="2">
827 <desc>
828 This setting determines whether VirtualBox will expose a synthetic CPU to the guest to allow
829 teleporting between host systems that differ significantly.
830 </desc>
831 </const>
832 </enum>
833
834
835 <enum
836 name="HWVirtExPropertyType"
837 uuid="ce81dfdd-d2b8-4a90-bbea-40ee8b7ffcee"
838 >
839 <desc>
840 Hardware virtualization property type. This enumeration represents possible values
841 for the <link to="IMachine::getHWVirtExProperty"/> and
842 <link to="IMachine::setHWVirtExProperty"/> methods.
843 </desc>
844 <const name="Null" value="0">
845 <desc>Null value (never used by the API).</desc>
846 </const>
847 <const name="Enabled" value="1">
848 <desc>
849 Whether hardware virtualization (VT-x/AMD-V) is enabled at all. If
850 such extensions are not available, they will not be used.
851 </desc>
852 </const>
853 <const name="Exclusive" value="2">
854 <desc>
855 Whether hardware virtualization is used exclusively by VirtualBox. When enabled,
856 VirtualBox assumes it can acquire full and exclusive access to the VT-x or AMD-V
857 feature of the host. To share these with other hypervisors, you must disable this property.
858 </desc>
859 </const>
860 <const name="VPID" value="3">
861 <desc>
862 Whether VT-x VPID is enabled. If this extension is not available, it will not be used.
863 </desc>
864 </const>
865 <const name="NestedPaging" value="4">
866 <desc>
867 Whether Nested Paging is enabled. If this extension is not available, it will not be used.
868 </desc>
869 </const>
870 <const name="LargePages" value="5">
871 <desc>
872 Whether large page allocation is enabled; requires nested paging and a 64 bits host.
873 </desc>
874 </const>
875 </enum>
876
877 <enum
878 name="SessionType"
879 uuid="A13C02CB-0C2C-421E-8317-AC0E8AAA153A"
880 >
881 <desc>
882 Session type. This enumeration represents possible values of the
883 <link to="ISession::type"/> attribute.
884 </desc>
885
886 <const name="Null" value="0">
887 <desc>Null value (never used by the API).</desc>
888 </const>
889 <const name="Direct" value="1">
890 <desc>
891 Direct session
892 (opened by <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/>)
893 </desc>
894 </const>
895 <const name="Remote" value="2">
896 <desc>
897 Remote session
898 (opened by <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/>)
899 </desc>
900 </const>
901 <const name="Existing" value="3">
902 <desc>
903 Existing session
904 (opened by <link to="IVirtualBox::openExistingSession"/>)
905 </desc>
906 </const>
907 </enum>
908
909 <enum
910 name="DeviceType"
911 uuid="6d9420f7-0b56-4636-99f9-7346f1b01e57"
912 >
913 <desc>
914 Device type.
915 </desc>
916 <const name="Null" value="0">
917 <desc>
918 Null value, may also mean "no device" (not allowed for
919 <link to="IConsole::getDeviceActivity"/>).
920 </desc>
921 </const>
922 <const name="Floppy" value="1">
923 <desc>Floppy device.</desc>
924 </const>
925 <const name="DVD" value="2">
926 <desc>CD/DVD-ROM device.</desc>
927 </const>
928 <const name="HardDisk" value="3">
929 <desc>Hard disk device.</desc>
930 </const>
931 <const name="Network" value="4">
932 <desc>Network device.</desc>
933 </const>
934 <const name="USB" value="5">
935 <desc>USB device.</desc>
936 </const>
937 <const name="SharedFolder" value="6">
938 <desc>Shared folder device.</desc>
939 </const>
940 </enum>
941
942 <enum
943 name="DeviceActivity"
944 uuid="6FC8AEAA-130A-4eb5-8954-3F921422D707"
945 >
946 <desc>
947 Device activity for <link to="IConsole::getDeviceActivity"/>.
948 </desc>
949
950 <const name="Null" value="0"/>
951 <const name="Idle" value="1"/>
952 <const name="Reading" value="2"/>
953 <const name="Writing" value="3"/>
954 </enum>
955
956 <enum
957 name="ClipboardMode"
958 uuid="33364716-4008-4701-8f14-be0fa3d62950"
959 >
960 <desc>
961 Host-Guest clipboard interchange mode.
962 </desc>
963
964 <const name="Disabled" value="0"/>
965 <const name="HostToGuest" value="1"/>
966 <const name="GuestToHost" value="2"/>
967 <const name="Bidirectional" value="3"/>
968 </enum>
969
970 <enum
971 name="Scope"
972 uuid="7c91096e-499e-4eca-9f9b-9001438d7855"
973 >
974 <desc>
975 Scope of the operation.
976
977 A generic enumeration used in various methods to define the action or
978 argument scope.
979 </desc>
980
981 <const name="Global" value="0"/>
982 <const name="Machine" value="1"/>
983 <const name="Session" value="2"/>
984 </enum>
985
986 <enum
987 name="BIOSBootMenuMode"
988 uuid="ae4fb9f7-29d2-45b4-b2c7-d579603135d5"
989 >
990 <desc>
991 BIOS boot menu mode.
992 </desc>
993
994 <const name="Disabled" value="0"/>
995 <const name="MenuOnly" value="1"/>
996 <const name="MessageAndMenu" value="2"/>
997 </enum>
998
999 <enum
1000 name="ProcessorFeature"
1001 uuid="64c38e6b-8bcf-45ad-ac03-9b406287c5bf"
1002 >
1003 <desc>
1004 CPU features.
1005 </desc>
1006
1007 <const name="HWVirtEx" value="0"/>
1008 <const name="PAE" value="1"/>
1009 <const name="LongMode" value="2"/>
1010 <const name="NestedPaging" value="3"/>
1011 </enum>
1012
1013 <enum
1014 name="FirmwareType"
1015 uuid="b903f264-c230-483e-ac74-2b37ce60d371"
1016 >
1017 <desc>
1018 Firmware type.
1019 </desc>
1020 <const name="BIOS" value="1">
1021 <desc>BIOS Firmware.</desc>
1022 </const>
1023 <const name="EFI" value="2">
1024 <desc>EFI Firmware, bitness detetced basing on OS type.</desc>
1025 </const>
1026 <const name="EFI32" value="3">
1027 <desc>Efi firmware, 32-bit.</desc>
1028 </const>
1029 <const name="EFI64" value="4">
1030 <desc>Efi firmware, 64-bit.</desc>
1031 </const>
1032 <const name="EFIDUAL" value="5">
1033 <desc>Efi firmware, combined 32 and 64-bit.</desc>
1034 </const>
1035 </enum>
1036
1037 <enum
1038 name="PointingHidType"
1039 uuid="0d3c17a2-821a-4b2e-ae41-890c6c60aa97"
1040 >
1041 <desc>
1042 Type of pointing device used in a virtual machine.
1043 </desc>
1044 <const name="None" value="1">
1045 <desc>No mouse.</desc>
1046 </const>
1047 <const name="PS2Mouse" value="2">
1048 <desc>PS/2 auxillary device, a.k.a. mouse.</desc>
1049 </const>
1050 <const name="USBMouse" value="3">
1051 <desc>USB mouse (relative pointer).</desc>
1052 </const>
1053 <const name="USBTablet" value="4">
1054 <desc>USB tablet (absolute pointer).</desc>
1055 </const>
1056 <const name="ComboMouse" value="5">
1057 <desc>Combined device, working as PS/2 or USB mouse, depending on guest behavior.
1058 Using of such device can have negative performance implications. </desc>
1059 </const>
1060 </enum>
1061
1062 <enum
1063 name="KeyboardHidType"
1064 uuid="5a5b0996-3a3e-44bb-9019-56979812cbcc"
1065 >
1066 <desc>
1067 Type of keyboard device used in a virtual machine.
1068 </desc>
1069 <const name="None" value="1">
1070 <desc>No keyboard.</desc>
1071 </const>
1072 <const name="PS2Keyboard" value="2">
1073 <desc>PS/2 keyboard.</desc>
1074 </const>
1075 <const name="USBKeyboard" value="3">
1076 <desc>USB keyboard.</desc>
1077 </const>
1078 <const name="ComboKeyboard" value="4">
1079 <desc>Combined device, working as PS/2 or USB keyboard, depending on guest behavior.
1080 Using of such device can have negative performance implications. </desc>
1081 </const>
1082 </enum>
1083
1084 <enum
1085 name="IoMgrType"
1086 uuid="35567419-4d2a-4256-a74e-efcae33493a2"
1087 >
1088 <desc>
1089 Type of the I/O manager used for the image files in a virtual machine.
1090 </desc>
1091 <const name="Simple" value="1">
1092 <desc>Simple manager. Normally only used if the default one runs into an
1093 error. </desc>
1094 </const>
1095 <const name="Async" value="2">
1096 <desc>Asynchronous manager using the async I/O API on the host if present.
1097 This is the default manager.</desc>
1098 </const>
1099 </enum>
1100
1101 <enum
1102 name="IoBackendType"
1103 uuid="2a7e16d1-4e6b-4d5d-b0c9-b9bbe6c5b2ad"
1104 >
1105 <desc>
1106 Type of I/O backend used for the image files in a virtual machine.
1107 </desc>
1108 <const name="Buffered" value="1">
1109 <desc>Image files will use the host cache if possible.
1110 This type does not work with the Async I/O manager on Linux hosts.
1111 Default on all hosts except Linux.</desc>
1112 </const>
1113 <const name="Unbuffered" value="2">
1114 <desc>Image files will not use the host cache.
1115 This should be used on OS X and Linux hosts if a high I/O load is expected
1116 or many virtual machines are running to prevent I/O cache
1117 related hangs. Default on Linux hosts.</desc>
1118 </const>
1119 </enum>
1120
1121 <!--
1122 // IVirtualBoxErrorInfo
1123 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1124 -->
1125
1126 <interface
1127 name="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" extends="$errorinfo"
1128 uuid="4b86d186-407e-4f9e-8be8-e50061be8725"
1129 supportsErrorInfo="no"
1130 wsmap="managed"
1131 >
1132 <desc>
1133 The IVirtualBoxErrorInfo interface represents extended error information.
1134
1135 Extended error information can be set by VirtualBox components after
1136 unsuccessful or partially successful method invocation. This information
1137 can be retrieved by the calling party as an IVirtualBoxErrorInfo object
1138 and then shown to the client in addition to the plain 32-bit result code.
1139
1140 In MS COM, this interface extends the IErrorInfo interface,
1141 in XPCOM, it extends the nsIException interface. In both cases,
1142 it provides a set of common attributes to retrieve error
1143 information.
1144
1145 Sometimes invocation of some component's method may involve methods of
1146 other components that may also fail (independently of this method's
1147 failure), or a series of non-fatal errors may precede a fatal error that
1148 causes method failure. In cases like that, it may be desirable to preserve
1149 information about all errors happened during method invocation and deliver
1150 it to the caller. The <link to="#next"/> attribute is intended
1151 specifically for this purpose and allows to represent a chain of errors
1152 through a single IVirtualBoxErrorInfo object set after method invocation.
1153
1154 Note that errors are stored to a chain in the reverse order, i.e. the
1155 initial error object you query right after method invocation is the last
1156 error set by the callee, the object it points to in the @a next attribute
1157 is the previous error and so on, up to the first error (which is the last
1158 in the chain).
1159 </desc>
1160
1161 <attribute name="resultCode" type="long" readonly="yes">
1162 <desc>
1163 Result code of the error.
1164 Usually, it will be the same as the result code returned
1165 by the method that provided this error information, but not
1166 always. For example, on Win32, CoCreateInstance() will most
1167 likely return E_NOINTERFACE upon unsuccessful component
1168 instantiation attempt, but not the value the component factory
1169 returned. Value is typed 'long', not 'result',
1170 to make interface usable from scripting languages.
1171 <note>
1172 In MS COM, there is no equivalent.
1173 In XPCOM, it is the same as nsIException::result.
1174 </note>
1175 </desc>
1176 </attribute>
1177
1178 <attribute name="interfaceID" type="uuid" mod="string" readonly="yes">
1179 <desc>
1180 UUID of the interface that defined the error.
1181 <note>
1182 In MS COM, it is the same as IErrorInfo::GetGUID, except for the
1183 data type.
1184 In XPCOM, there is no equivalent.
1185 </note>
1186 </desc>
1187 </attribute>
1188
1189 <attribute name="component" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1190 <desc>
1191 Name of the component that generated the error.
1192 <note>
1193 In MS COM, it is the same as IErrorInfo::GetSource.
1194 In XPCOM, there is no equivalent.
1195 </note>
1196 </desc>
1197 </attribute>
1198
1199 <attribute name="text" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1200 <desc>
1201 Text description of the error.
1202 <note>
1203 In MS COM, it is the same as IErrorInfo::GetDescription.
1204 In XPCOM, it is the same as nsIException::message.
1205 </note>
1206 </desc>
1207 </attribute>
1208
1209 <attribute name="next" type="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" readonly="yes">
1210 <desc>
1211 Next error object if there is any, or @c null otherwise.
1212 <note>
1213 In MS COM, there is no equivalent.
1214 In XPCOM, it is the same as nsIException::inner.
1215 </note>
1216 </desc>
1217 </attribute>
1218
1219 </interface>
1220
1221 <interface
1222 name="ILocalOwner" extends="$unknown"
1223 uuid="308FF42A-DC45-49D4-A950-B1EEE5E00BB5" wsmap="suppress"
1224 >
1225 <desc>
1226 The ILocalOwner interface allows to register local objects
1227 (created without COM calls, but with new()).
1228 Once registered, calls to methods of such objects can be made
1229 from remote COM processes.
1230 The main usecase is the event callback implementation where
1231 API clients provide callback objects.
1232 </desc>
1233 <method name="setLocalObject">
1234 <desc>
1235 Set local object.
1236 </desc>
1237 <param name="object" type="$unknown" dir="in">
1238 <desc>Local object to forward requests to.
1239 If null, clears currently set local object.</desc>
1240 </param>
1241 </method>
1242 </interface>
1243
1244 <!--
1245 // IVirtualBox
1246 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1247 -->
1248
1249 <interface
1250 name="IVirtualBoxCallback" extends="$unknown"
1251 uuid="7f6a65b6-ad5d-4a67-8872-0b11cb7ea95c"
1252 wsmap="suppress"
1253 >
1254
1255 <method name="onMachineStateChange">
1256 <desc>
1257 The execution state of the given machine has changed.
1258 <see>IMachine::state</see>
1259 </desc>
1260 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1261 <desc>ID of the machine this event relates to.</desc>
1262 </param>
1263 <param name="state" type="MachineState" dir="in">
1264 <desc>New execution state.</desc>
1265 </param>
1266 </method>
1267
1268 <method name="onMachineDataChange">
1269 <desc>
1270 Any of the settings of the given machine has changed.
1271 </desc>
1272 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1273 <desc>ID of the machine this event relates to.</desc>
1274 </param>
1275 </method>
1276
1277 <method name="onExtraDataCanChange">
1278 <desc>
1279 Notification when someone tries to change extra data for
1280 either the given machine or (if @c null) global extra data.
1281 This gives the chance to veto against changes.
1282 </desc>
1283 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1284 <desc>
1285 ID of the machine this event relates to
1286 (@c null ID for global extra data change requests).
1287 </desc>
1288 </param>
1289 <param name="key" type="wstring" dir="in">
1290 <desc>
1291 Extra data key for the attempted write.
1292 </desc>
1293 </param>
1294 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
1295 <desc>
1296 Extra data value for the given key.
1297 </desc>
1298 </param>
1299 <param name="error" type="wstring" dir="out">
1300 <desc>
1301 Optional error message describing the reason of the
1302 veto (ignored if this notification returns @c true).
1303 </desc>
1304 </param>
1305 <param name="allowChange" type="boolean" dir="return">
1306 <desc>
1307 Flag to indicate whether the callee agrees (@c true)
1308 or vetoes against the change (@c false).
1309 </desc>
1310 </param>
1311 </method>
1312
1313 <method name="onExtraDataChange">
1314 <desc>
1315 Notification when machine specific or global extra data
1316 has changed.
1317 </desc>
1318 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1319 <desc>
1320 ID of the machine this event relates to.
1321 Null for global extra data changes.
1322 </desc>
1323 </param>
1324 <param name="key" type="wstring" dir="in">
1325 <desc>
1326 Extra data key that has changed.
1327 </desc>
1328 </param>
1329 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
1330 <desc>
1331 Extra data value for the given key.
1332 </desc>
1333 </param>
1334 </method>
1335
1336 <method name="onMediumRegistered">
1337 <desc>
1338 The given medium was registered or unregistered
1339 within this VirtualBox installation.
1340
1341 The @a mediumType parameter describes what type of
1342 medium the specified @a mediumId refers to. Possible
1343 values are:
1344
1345 <ul>
1346 <li><link to="DeviceType_HardDisk"/>: the medium is a hard disk
1347 that, if registered, can be obtained using the
1348 <link to="IVirtualBox::getHardDisk"/> call.</li>
1349 <li><link to="DeviceType_DVD"/>: the medium is a CD/DVD image
1350 that, if registered, can be obtained using the
1351 <link to="IVirtualBox::getDVDImage"/> call.</li>
1352 <li><link to="DeviceType_Floppy"/>: the medium is a Floppy image
1353 that, if registered, can be obtained using the
1354 <link to="IVirtualBox::getFloppyImage"/> call.</li>
1355 </ul>
1356
1357 Note that if this is a deregistration notification,
1358 there is no way to access the object representing the
1359 unregistered medium. It is supposed that the
1360 application will do required cleanup based on the
1361 @a mediumId value.
1362 </desc>
1363 <param name="mediumId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1364 <desc>ID of the medium this event relates to.</desc>
1365 </param>
1366 <param name="mediumType" type="DeviceType" dir="in">
1367 <desc>Type of the medium this event relates to.</desc>
1368 </param>
1369 <param name="registered" type="boolean" dir="in">
1370 <desc>
1371 If @c true, the medium was registered, otherwise it was
1372 unregistered.
1373 </desc>
1374 </param>
1375 </method>
1376
1377 <method name="onMachineRegistered">
1378 <desc>
1379 The given machine was registered or unregistered
1380 within this VirtualBox installation.
1381 </desc>
1382 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1383 <desc>ID of the machine this event relates to.</desc>
1384 </param>
1385 <param name="registered" type="boolean" dir="in">
1386 <desc>
1387 If @c true, the machine was registered, otherwise it was
1388 unregistered.
1389 </desc>
1390 </param>
1391 </method>
1392
1393 <method name="onSessionStateChange">
1394 <desc>
1395 The state of the session for the given machine was changed.
1396 <see>IMachine::sessionState</see>
1397 </desc>
1398 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1399 <desc>ID of the machine this event relates to.</desc>
1400 </param>
1401 <param name="state" type="SessionState" dir="in">
1402 <desc>New session state.</desc>
1403 </param>
1404 </method>
1405
1406 <method name="onSnapshotTaken">
1407 <desc>
1408 A new snapshot of the machine has been taken.
1409 <see>ISnapshot</see>
1410 </desc>
1411 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1412 <desc>ID of the machine this event relates to.</desc>
1413 </param>
1414 <param name="snapshotId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1415 <desc>ID of the new snapshot.</desc>
1416 </param>
1417 </method>
1418
1419 <method name="onSnapshotDeleted">
1420 <desc>
1421 Snapshot of the given machine has been deleted.
1422
1423 <note>
1424 This notification is delivered <b>after</b> the snapshot
1425 object has been uninitialized on the server (so that any
1426 attempt to call its methods will return an error).
1427 </note>
1428
1429 <see>ISnapshot</see>
1430 </desc>
1431 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1432 <desc>ID of the machine this event relates to.</desc>
1433 </param>
1434 <param name="snapshotId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1435 <desc>
1436 ID of the deleted snapshot. @c null means the current machine
1437 state has been deleted (restored from the current snapshot).
1438 </desc>
1439 </param>
1440 </method>
1441
1442 <method name="onSnapshotChange">
1443 <desc>
1444 Snapshot properties (name and/or description) have been changed.
1445 <see>ISnapshot</see>
1446 </desc>
1447 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1448 <desc>ID of the machine this event relates to.</desc>
1449 </param>
1450 <param name="snapshotId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1451 <desc>ID of the changed snapshot.</desc>
1452 </param>
1453 </method>
1454
1455 <method name="onGuestPropertyChange">
1456 <desc>
1457 Notification when a guest property has changed.
1458 </desc>
1459 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1460 <desc>
1461 ID of the machine this event relates to.
1462 </desc>
1463 </param>
1464 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
1465 <desc>
1466 The name of the property that has changed.
1467 </desc>
1468 </param>
1469 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
1470 <desc>
1471 The new property value.
1472 </desc>
1473 </param>
1474 <param name="flags" type="wstring" dir="in">
1475 <desc>
1476 The new property flags.
1477 </desc>
1478 </param>
1479 </method>
1480
1481 </interface>
1482
1483 <interface
1484 name="IDHCPServer" extends="$unknown"
1485 uuid="6cfe387c-74fb-4ca7-bff6-973bec8af7a3"
1486 wsmap="managed"
1487 >
1488 <desc>
1489 The IDHCPServer interface represents the vbox dhcp server configuration.
1490
1491 To enumerate all the dhcp servers on the host, use the
1492 <link to="IVirtualBox::DHCPServers"/> attribute.
1493 </desc>
1494
1495 <attribute name="enabled" type="boolean">
1496 <desc>
1497 specifies if the dhcp server is enabled
1498 </desc>
1499 </attribute>
1500
1501 <attribute name="IPAddress" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1502 <desc>
1503 specifies server IP
1504 </desc>
1505 </attribute>
1506
1507 <attribute name="networkMask" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1508 <desc>
1509 specifies server network mask
1510 </desc>
1511 </attribute>
1512
1513 <attribute name="networkName" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1514 <desc>
1515 specifies internal network name the server is used for
1516 </desc>
1517 </attribute>
1518
1519 <attribute name="lowerIP" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1520 <desc>
1521 specifies from IP adrres in server address range
1522 </desc>
1523 </attribute>
1524
1525 <attribute name="upperIP" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1526 <desc>
1527 specifies to IP adrres in server address range
1528 </desc>
1529 </attribute>
1530
1531 <method name="setConfiguration">
1532 <desc>
1533 configures the server
1534 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
1535 invalid configuration supplied
1536 </result>
1537 </desc>
1538 <param name="IPAddress" type="wstring" dir="in">
1539 <desc>
1540 server IP address
1541 </desc>
1542 </param>
1543 <param name="networkMask" type="wstring" dir="in">
1544 <desc>
1545 server network mask
1546 </desc>
1547 </param>
1548 <param name="FromIPAddress" type="wstring" dir="in">
1549 <desc>
1550 server From IP address for address range
1551 </desc>
1552 </param>
1553 <param name="ToIPAddress" type="wstring" dir="in">
1554 <desc>
1555 server To IP address for address range
1556 </desc>
1557 </param>
1558 </method>
1559
1560 <method name="start">
1561 <desc>
1562 Starts DHCP server process.
1563 <result name="E_FAIL">
1564 Failed to start the process.
1565 </result>
1566 </desc>
1567 <param name="networkName" type="wstring" dir="in">
1568 <desc>
1569 Name of internal network DHCP server should attach to.
1570 </desc>
1571 </param>
1572 <param name="trunkName" type="wstring" dir="in">
1573 <desc>
1574 Name of internal network trunk.
1575 </desc>
1576 </param>
1577 <param name="trunkType" type="wstring" dir="in">
1578 <desc>
1579 Type of internal network trunk.
1580 </desc>
1581 </param>
1582 </method>
1583
1584 <method name="stop">
1585 <desc>
1586 Stops DHCP server process.
1587 <result name="E_FAIL">
1588 Failed to stop the process.
1589 </result>
1590 </desc>
1591 </method>
1592 </interface>
1593
1594 <interface
1595 name="IVirtualBox" extends="$unknown"
1596 uuid="3f36e024-7fed-4f20-a02c-9158a82b44e6"
1597 wsmap="managed"
1598 >
1599 <desc>
1600 The IVirtualBox interface represents the main interface exposed by the
1601 product that provides virtual machine management.
1602
1603 An instance of IVirtualBox is required for the product to do anything
1604 useful. Even though the interface does not expose this, internally,
1605 IVirtualBox is implemented as a singleton and actually lives in the
1606 process of the VirtualBox server (VBoxSVC.exe). This makes sure that
1607 IVirtualBox can track the state of all virtual machines on a particular
1608 host, regardless of which frontend started them.
1609
1610 To enumerate all the virtual machines on the host, use the
1611 <link to="IVirtualBox::machines"/> attribute.
1612 </desc>
1613
1614 <attribute name="version" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1615 <desc>
1616 A string representing the version number of the product. The
1617 format is 3 integer numbers divided by dots (e.g. 1.0.1). The
1618 last number represents the build number and will frequently change.
1619 </desc>
1620 </attribute>
1621
1622 <attribute name="revision" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
1623 <desc>
1624 The internal build revision number of the product.
1625 </desc>
1626 </attribute>
1627
1628 <attribute name="packageType" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1629 <desc>
1630 A string representing the package type of this product. The
1631 format is OS_ARCH_DIST where OS is either WINDOWS, LINUX,
1632 SOLARIS, DARWIN. ARCH is either 32BITS or 64BITS. DIST
1633 is either GENERIC, UBUNTU_606, UBUNTU_710, or something like
1634 this.
1635 </desc>
1636 </attribute>
1637
1638 <attribute name="homeFolder" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1639 <desc>
1640 Full path to the directory where the global settings file,
1641 <tt>VirtualBox.xml</tt>, is stored.
1642
1643 In this version of VirtualBox, the value of this property is
1644 always <tt>&lt;user_dir&gt;/.VirtualBox</tt> (where
1645 <tt>&lt;user_dir&gt;</tt> is the path to the user directory,
1646 as determined by the host OS), and cannot be changed.
1647
1648 This path is also used as the base to resolve relative paths in
1649 places where relative paths are allowed (unless otherwise
1650 expressly indicated).
1651 </desc>
1652 </attribute>
1653
1654 <attribute name="settingsFilePath" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
1655 <desc>
1656 Full name of the global settings file.
1657 The value of this property corresponds to the value of
1658 <link to="#homeFolder"/> plus <tt>/VirtualBox.xml</tt>.
1659 </desc>
1660 </attribute>
1661
1662 <attribute name="host" type="IHost" readonly="yes">
1663 <desc>Associated host object.</desc>
1664 </attribute>
1665
1666 <attribute name="systemProperties" type="ISystemProperties" readonly="yes">
1667 <desc>Associated system information object.</desc>
1668 </attribute>
1669
1670 <attribute name="machines" type="IMachine" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
1671 <desc>
1672 Array of machine objects registered within this VirtualBox instance.
1673 </desc>
1674 </attribute>
1675
1676 <attribute name="hardDisks" type="IMedium" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
1677 <desc>
1678 Array of medium objects known to this VirtualBox installation.
1679
1680 This array contains only base media. All differencing
1681 media of the given base medium can be enumerated using
1682 <link to="IMedium::children"/>.
1683 </desc>
1684 </attribute>
1685
1686 <attribute name="DVDImages" type="IMedium" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
1687 <desc>
1688 Array of CD/DVD image objects registered with this VirtualBox instance.
1689 </desc>
1690 </attribute>
1691
1692 <attribute name="floppyImages" type="IMedium" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
1693 <desc>
1694 Array of floppy image objects registered with this VirtualBox instance.
1695 </desc>
1696 </attribute>
1697
1698 <attribute name="progressOperations" type="IProgress" readonly="yes" safearray="yes"/>
1699
1700 <attribute name="guestOSTypes" type="IGuestOSType" readonly="yes" safearray="yes"/>
1701
1702 <attribute name="sharedFolders" type="ISharedFolder" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
1703 <desc>
1704 Collection of global shared folders. Global shared folders are
1705 available to all virtual machines.
1706
1707 New shared folders are added to the collection using
1708 <link to="#createSharedFolder"/>. Existing shared folders can be
1709 removed using <link to="#removeSharedFolder"/>.
1710
1711 <note>
1712 In the current version of the product, global shared folders are not
1713 implemented and therefore this collection is always empty.
1714 </note>
1715 </desc>
1716 </attribute>
1717
1718 <attribute name="performanceCollector" type="IPerformanceCollector" readonly="yes">
1719 <desc>
1720 Associated performance collector object.
1721 </desc>
1722 </attribute>
1723
1724 <attribute name="DHCPServers" type="IDHCPServer" safearray="yes" readonly="yes">
1725 <desc>
1726 dhcp server settings.
1727 </desc>
1728 </attribute>
1729
1730 <method name="createMachine">
1731 <desc>
1732 Creates a new virtual machine.
1733
1734 The new machine is created unregistered, with the initial configuration
1735 set according to the specified guest OS type. A typical sequence of
1736 actions to create a new virtual machine is as follows:
1737
1738 <ol>
1739 <li>
1740 Call this method to have a new machine created. The returned machine
1741 object will be "mutable" allowing to change any machine property.
1742 </li>
1743
1744 <li>
1745 Configure the machine using the appropriate attributes and methods.
1746 </li>
1747
1748 <li>
1749 Call <link to="IMachine::saveSettings" /> to write the settings
1750 to the machine's XML settings file. The configuration of the newly
1751 created machine will not be saved to disk until this method is
1752 called.
1753 </li>
1754
1755 <li>
1756 Call <link to="#registerMachine" /> to add the machine to the list
1757 of machines known to VirtualBox.
1758 </li>
1759 </ol>
1760
1761 You should specify valid name for the newly created machine when calling
1762 this method. See the <link to="IMachine::name"/> attribute description
1763 for more details about the machine name.
1764
1765 The specified guest OS type identifier must match an ID of one of known
1766 guest OS types listed in the <link to="IVirtualBox::guestOSTypes"/>
1767 array.
1768
1769 Every machine has a <i>settings file</i> that is used to store
1770 the machine configuration. This file is stored in a directory called the
1771 <i>machine settings subfolder</i>. Both the settings subfolder and file
1772 will have a name that corresponds to the name of the virtual machine.
1773 You can specify where to create the machine setting subfolder using the
1774 @a baseFolder argument. The base folder can be absolute (full path) or
1775 relative to the <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">VirtualBox home
1776 directory</link>.
1777
1778 If @a baseFolder is a @c null or empty string (which is recommended), the
1779 <link to="ISystemProperties::defaultMachineFolder">default machine
1780 settings folder</link> will be used as a base folder for the created
1781 machine. Otherwise the given base folder will be used. In either case,
1782 the full path to the resulting settings file has the following
1783 structure:
1784 <pre>
1785 &lt;base_folder&gt;/&lt;machine_name&gt;/&lt;machine_name&gt;.xml
1786 </pre>
1787
1788 Note that if the resulting settings file already exists, this method
1789 will fail with <link to="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR"/>.
1790
1791 Optionally, you may specify an UUID of to assign to the created machine.
1792 However, this is not recommended and you should normally pass an empty
1793 (@c null) UUID to this method so that a new UUID will be automatically
1794 generated for every created machine. You can use UUID
1795 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 as @c null value.
1796
1797 <note>
1798 There is no way to change the name of the settings file or
1799 subfolder of the created machine directly.
1800 </note>
1801
1802 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
1803 @a osTypeId is invalid.
1804 </result>
1805 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
1806 Resulting settings file name is invalid or the settings file already
1807 exists or could not be created due to an I/O error.
1808 </result>
1809 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
1810 @a name is empty or @c null.
1811 </result>
1812 </desc>
1813
1814 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
1815 <desc>Machine name.</desc>
1816 </param>
1817 <param name="osTypeId" type="wstring" dir="in">
1818 <desc>Guest OS Type ID.</desc>
1819 </param>
1820 <param name="baseFolder" type="wstring" dir="in">
1821 <desc>Base machine folder (optional).</desc>
1822 </param>
1823 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1824 <desc>Machine UUID (optional).</desc>
1825 </param>
1826 <param name="override" type="boolean" dir="in">
1827 <desc>Create the VM even if there are conflicting files.</desc>
1828 </param>
1829 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="return">
1830 <desc>Created machine object.</desc>
1831 </param>
1832 </method>
1833
1834 <method name="createLegacyMachine">
1835 <desc>
1836 Creates a new virtual machine in "legacy" mode, using the specified
1837 settings file to store machine settings.
1838
1839 As opposed to machines created by <link to="#createMachine"/>,
1840 the settings file of the machine created in "legacy" mode is not
1841 automatically renamed when the machine name is changed -- it will always
1842 remain the same as specified in this method call.
1843
1844 The specified settings file name can be absolute (full path) or relative
1845 to the <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">VirtualBox home
1846 directory</link>. If the file name doesn't contain an extension, the
1847 default extension (.xml) will be appended.
1848
1849 Note that the configuration of the newly created machine is not
1850 saved to disk (and therefore no settings file is created)
1851 until <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> is called. If the
1852 specified settings file already exists, this method
1853 will fail with <link to="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR"/>.
1854
1855 See <link to="#createMachine"/> for more information.
1856
1857 @deprecated This method may be removed later. Use <link
1858 to="IVirtualBox::createMachine"/> instead.
1859
1860 <note>
1861 There is no way to change the name of the settings file
1862 of the machine created in "legacy" mode.
1863 </note>
1864
1865 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
1866 @a osTypeId is invalid.
1867 </result>
1868 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
1869 @a settingsFile is invalid or the settings file already exists or
1870 could not be created due to an I/O error.
1871 </result>
1872 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
1873 @a name or @a settingsFile is empty or @c null.
1874 </result>
1875 </desc>
1876
1877 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
1878 <desc>Machine name.</desc>
1879 </param>
1880 <param name="osTypeId" type="wstring" dir="in">
1881 <desc>Machine OS Type ID.</desc>
1882 </param>
1883 <param name="settingsFile" type="wstring" dir="in">
1884 <desc>Name of the machine settings file.</desc>
1885 </param>
1886 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
1887 <desc>Machine UUID (optional).</desc>
1888 </param>
1889 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="return">
1890 <desc>Created machine object.</desc>
1891 </param>
1892 </method>
1893
1894 <method name="openMachine">
1895 <desc>
1896 Opens a virtual machine from the existing settings file.
1897 The opened machine remains unregistered until you call
1898 <link to="#registerMachine"/>.
1899
1900 The specified settings file name can be absolute
1901 (full path) or relative to the <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">
1902 VirtualBox home directory</link>. This file must exist
1903 and must be a valid machine settings file whose contents
1904 will be used to construct the machine object.
1905
1906 @deprecated Will be removed soon.
1907 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
1908 Settings file name invalid, not found or sharing violation.
1909 </result>
1910 </desc>
1911 <param name="settingsFile" type="wstring" dir="in">
1912 <desc>
1913 Name of the machine settings file.
1914 </desc>
1915 </param>
1916 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="return">
1917 <desc>Opened machine object.</desc>
1918 </param>
1919 <note>
1920 <link to="IMachine::settingsModified"/> will return
1921 @c false for the created machine, until any of machine settings
1922 are changed.
1923 </note>
1924 </method>
1925
1926 <method name="registerMachine">
1927 <desc>
1928
1929 Registers the machine previously created using
1930 <link to="#createMachine"/> or opened using
1931 <link to="#openMachine"/> within this VirtualBox installation. After
1932 successful method invocation, the
1933 <link to="IVirtualBoxCallback::onMachineRegistered"/> signal is sent
1934 to all registered callbacks.
1935
1936 <note>
1937 This method implicitly calls <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/>
1938 to save all current machine settings before registering it.
1939 </note>
1940
1941 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
1942 No matching virtual machine found.
1943 </result>
1944 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
1945 Virtual machine was not created within this VirtualBox instance.
1946 </result>
1947
1948 </desc>
1949 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="in"/>
1950 </method>
1951
1952 <method name="getMachine">
1953 <desc>
1954 Attempts to find a virtual machine given its UUID.
1955 To look up a machine by name, use <link to="IVirtualBox::findMachine" />
1956 instead.
1957
1958 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
1959 Could not find registered machine matching @a id.
1960 </result>
1961
1962 </desc>
1963 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in"/>
1964 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="return"/>
1965 </method>
1966
1967 <method name="findMachine">
1968 <desc>
1969 Attempts to find a virtual machine given its name.
1970 To look up a machine by UUID, use <link to="IVirtualBox::getMachine" />
1971 instead.
1972
1973 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
1974 Could not find registered machine matching @a name.
1975 </result>
1976
1977 </desc>
1978 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
1979 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="return"/>
1980 </method>
1981
1982 <method name="unregisterMachine">
1983 <desc>
1984
1985 Unregisters the machine previously registered using
1986 <link to="#registerMachine"/>. After successful method invocation, the
1987 <link to="IVirtualBoxCallback::onMachineRegistered"/> signal is sent
1988 to all registered callbacks.
1989
1990 <note>
1991 The specified machine must not be in the Saved state, have an open
1992 (or a spawning) direct session associated with it, have snapshots or
1993 have any medium attached.
1994 </note>
1995
1996 <note>
1997 This method implicitly calls <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> to
1998 save all current machine settings before unregistering it.
1999 </note>
2000
2001 <note>
2002 If the given machine is inaccessible (see
2003 <link to="IMachine::accessible"/>), it will be unregistered and
2004 fully uninitialized right afterwards. As a result, the returned
2005 machine object will be unusable and an attempt to call
2006 <b>any</b> method will return the "Object not ready" error.
2007 </note>
2008
2009 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2010 Could not find registered machine matching @a id.
2011 </result>
2012 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
2013 Machine is in Saved state.
2014 </result>
2015 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
2016 Machine has snapshot or open session or medium attached.
2017 </result>
2018
2019 </desc>
2020 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2021 <desc>UUID of the machine to unregister.</desc>
2022 </param>
2023 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="return">
2024 <desc>Unregistered machine object.</desc>
2025 </param>
2026 </method>
2027
2028 <method name="createAppliance">
2029 <desc>
2030 Creates a new appliance object, which represents an appliance in the Open Virtual Machine
2031 Format (OVF). This can then be used to import an OVF appliance into VirtualBox or to export
2032 machines as an OVF appliance; see the documentation for <link to="IAppliance" /> for details.
2033 </desc>
2034 <param name="appliance" type="IAppliance" dir="return">
2035 <desc>New appliance.</desc>
2036 </param>
2037 </method>
2038
2039 <method name="createHardDisk">
2040 <desc>
2041 Creates a new base medium object that will use the given storage
2042 format and location for medium data.
2043
2044 Note that the actual storage unit is not created by this method. In
2045 order to do it, and before you are able to attach the created medium
2046 to virtual machines, you must call one of the following methods to
2047 allocate a format-specific storage unit at the specified location:
2048 <ul>
2049 <li><link to="IMedium::createBaseStorage"/></li>
2050 <li><link to="IMedium::createDiffStorage"/></li>
2051 </ul>
2052
2053 Some medium attributes, such as <link to="IMedium::id"/>, may
2054 remain uninitialized until the medium storage unit is successfully
2055 created by one of the above methods.
2056
2057 After the storage unit is successfully created, the medium gets
2058 remembered by this VirtualBox installation and will be accessible
2059 through <link to="#getHardDisk"/> and <link to="#findHardDisk"/>
2060 methods. Remembered base medium are also returned as part of
2061 the <link to="#hardDisks"/> array. See IMedium for more details.
2062
2063 The list of all storage formats supported by this VirtualBox
2064 installation can be obtained using
2065 <link to="ISystemProperties::mediumFormats"/>. If the @a format
2066 attribute is empty or @c null then the default storage format
2067 specified by <link to="ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFormat"/> will
2068 be used for creating a storage unit of the medium.
2069
2070 Note that the format of the location string is storage format specific.
2071 See <link to="IMedium::location"/>, IMedium and
2072 <link to="ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFolder"/> for more details.
2073
2074 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2075 @a format identifier is invalid. See
2076 <link to="ISystemProperties::mediumFormats"/>.
2077 </result>
2078 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
2079 @a location is a not valid file name (for file-based formats only).
2080 </result>
2081 </desc>
2082 <param name="format" type="wstring" dir="in">
2083 <desc>
2084 Identifier of the storage format to use for the new medium.
2085 </desc>
2086 </param>
2087 <param name="location" type="wstring" dir="in">
2088 <desc>
2089 Location of the storage unit for the new medium.
2090 </desc>
2091 </param>
2092 <param name="medium" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2093 <desc>Created medium object.</desc>
2094 </param>
2095 </method>
2096
2097 <method name="openHardDisk">
2098 <desc>
2099 Opens a medium from an existing location, optionally replacing
2100 the image UUID and/or parent UUID.
2101
2102 After the medium is successfully opened by this method, it gets
2103 remembered by (known to) this VirtualBox installation and will be
2104 accessible through <link to="#getHardDisk"/> and
2105 <link to="#findHardDisk"/> methods. Remembered base media
2106 are also returned as part of the <link to="#hardDisks"/> array and can
2107 be attached to virtual machines. See IMedium for more details.
2108
2109 If a differencing medium is to be opened by this method, the
2110 operation will succeed only if its parent medium and all ancestors,
2111 if any, are already known to this VirtualBox installation (for example,
2112 were opened by this method before).
2113
2114 This method tries to guess the storage format of the specified medium
2115 by reading medium data at the specified location.
2116
2117 If @a accessMode is ReadWrite (which it should be), the image is opened
2118 for read/write access and must have according permissions, as VirtualBox
2119 may actually write status information into the disk's metadata sections.
2120
2121 Note that write access is required for all typical image usage in VirtualBox,
2122 since VirtualBox may need to write metadata such as a UUID into the image.
2123 The only exception is opening a source image temporarily for copying and
2124 cloning when the image will quickly be closed again.
2125
2126 Note that the format of the location string is storage format specific.
2127 See <link to="IMedium::location"/>, IMedium and
2128 <link to="ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFolder"/> for more details.
2129
2130 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
2131 Invalid medium storage file location or could not find the medium
2132 at the specified location.
2133 </result>
2134 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
2135 Could not get medium storage format.
2136 </result>
2137 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2138 Invalid medium storage format.
2139 </result>
2140
2141 </desc>
2142 <param name="location" type="wstring" dir="in">
2143 <desc>
2144 Location of the storage unit that contains medium data in one of
2145 the supported storage formats.
2146 </desc>
2147 </param>
2148 <param name="accessMode" type="AccessMode" dir="in">
2149 <desc>
2150 Determines whether to open the image in read/write or read-only mode.
2151 </desc>
2152 </param>
2153 <param name="setImageId" type="boolean" dir="in">
2154 <desc>
2155 Select whether a new image UUID is set or not.
2156 </desc>
2157 </param>
2158 <param name="imageId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2159 <desc>
2160 New UUID for the image. If an empty string is passed, then a new
2161 UUID is automatically created. Specifying a zero UUIDs is not valid.
2162 </desc>
2163 </param>
2164 <param name="setParentId" type="boolean" dir="in">
2165 <desc>
2166 Select whether a new parent UUID is set or not.
2167 </desc>
2168 </param>
2169 <param name="parentId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2170 <desc>
2171 New parent UUID for the image. If an empty string is passed, then a
2172 new UUID is automatically created, provided @a setParentId is
2173 @c true. A zero UUID is valid.
2174 </desc>
2175 </param>
2176 <param name="medium" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2177 <desc>Opened medium object.</desc>
2178 </param>
2179 </method>
2180
2181 <method name="getHardDisk" const="yes">
2182 <desc>
2183 Returns a medium with the given UUID.
2184
2185 The medium with the given UUID must be known to this VirtualBox
2186 installation, i.e. it must be previously created by
2187 <link to="#createHardDisk"/> or opened by <link
2188 to="#openHardDisk"/>, or attached to some known virtual machine.
2189
2190 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2191 No medium object matching @a id found.
2192 </result>
2193
2194 </desc>
2195 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2196 <desc>UUID of the medium to look for.</desc>
2197 </param>
2198 <param name="medium" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2199 <desc>Found medium object.</desc>
2200 </param>
2201 </method>
2202
2203 <method name="findHardDisk">
2204 <desc>
2205 Returns a medium that uses the given location to store medium data.
2206
2207 The given medium must be known to this VirtualBox installation, i.e.
2208 it must be previously created by
2209 <link to="#createHardDisk"/> or opened by <link
2210 to="#openHardDisk"/>, or attached to some known virtual machine.
2211
2212 The search is done by comparing the value of the @a location argument to
2213 the <link to="IMedium::location"/> attribute of each known medium.
2214
2215 For locations represented by file names in the host's file system, the
2216 requested location can be a path relative to the
2217 <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">VirtualBox home folder</link>. If
2218 only a file name without any path is given, the
2219 <link to="ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFolder"> default medium
2220 folder</link> will be prepended to the file name before searching. Note
2221 that on case sensitive file systems, a case sensitive comparison is
2222 performed, otherwise the case of symbols in the file path is ignored.
2223
2224 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2225 No medium object matching @a location found.
2226 </result>
2227
2228 </desc>
2229 <param name="location" type="wstring" dir="in">
2230 <desc>Location string to search for.</desc>
2231 </param>
2232 <param name="medium" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2233 <desc>Found medium object.</desc>
2234 </param>
2235 </method>
2236
2237 <method name="openDVDImage">
2238 <desc>
2239 Opens a CD/DVD image contained in the specified file of the supported
2240 format and assigns it the given UUID.
2241
2242 After the image is successfully opened by this method, it gets
2243 remembered by (known to) this VirtualBox installation and will be
2244 accessible through <link to="#getDVDImage"/> and
2245 <link to="#findDVDImage"/> methods. Remembered images are also
2246 returned as part of the <link to="#DVDImages"/> array and can be mounted
2247 to virtual machines. See IMedium for more details.
2248
2249 See <link to="IMedium::location"/> to get more details about the format
2250 of the location string.
2251
2252 <note>
2253 Currently only ISO 9960 CD/DVD images are supported by VirtualBox.
2254 </note>
2255
2256 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
2257 Invalid CD/DVD image file location or could not find the CD/DVD
2258 image at the specified location.
2259 </result>
2260 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
2261 CD/DVD image already exists in the media registry.
2262 </result>
2263
2264 </desc>
2265 <param name="location" type="wstring" dir="in">
2266 <desc>
2267 Full path to the file that contains a valid CD/DVD image.
2268 </desc>
2269 </param>
2270 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2271 <desc>
2272 UUID to assign to the given image within this VirtualBox installation.
2273 If an empty (@c null) UUID is specified, the system will randomly
2274 generate a new UUID.
2275 </desc>
2276 </param>
2277 <param name="image" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2278 <desc>Opened CD/DVD image object.</desc>
2279 </param>
2280 </method>
2281
2282 <method name="getDVDImage">
2283 <desc>
2284 Returns a CD/DVD image with the given UUID.
2285
2286 The image with the given UUID must be known to this VirtualBox
2287 installation, i.e. it must be previously opened by <link
2288 to="#openDVDImage"/>, or mounted to some known virtual machine.
2289
2290 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2291 No matching DVD image found in the media registry.
2292 </result>
2293
2294 </desc>
2295 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2296 <desc>UUID of the image to look for.</desc>
2297 </param>
2298 <param name="image" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2299 <desc>Found CD/DVD image object.</desc>
2300 </param>
2301 </method>
2302
2303 <method name="findDVDImage">
2304 <desc>
2305 Returns a CD/DVD image with the given image location.
2306
2307 The image with the given UUID must be known to this VirtualBox
2308 installation, i.e. it must be previously opened by <link
2309 to="#openDVDImage"/>, or mounted to some known virtual machine.
2310
2311 The search is done by comparing the value of the @a location argument to
2312 the <link to="IMedium::location"/> attribute of each known CD/DVD image.
2313
2314 The requested location can be a path relative to the
2315 <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">VirtualBox home folder</link>. If
2316 only a file name without any path is given, the
2317 <link to="ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFolder"> default hard disk
2318 folder</link> will be prepended to the file name before searching. Note
2319 that on case sensitive file systems, a case sensitive comparison is
2320 performed, otherwise the case in the file path is ignored.
2321
2322 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
2323 Invalid image file location.
2324 </result>
2325 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2326 No matching DVD image found in the media registry.
2327 </result>
2328
2329 </desc>
2330 <param name="location" type="wstring" dir="in">
2331 <desc>CD/DVD image file path to look for.</desc>
2332 </param>
2333 <param name="image" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2334 <desc>Found CD/DVD image object.</desc>
2335 </param>
2336 </method>
2337
2338 <method name="openFloppyImage">
2339 <desc>
2340 Opens a floppy image contained in the specified file of the supported
2341 format and assigns it the given UUID.
2342
2343 After the image is successfully opened by this method, it gets
2344 remembered by (known to) this VirtualBox installation and will be
2345 accessible through <link to="#getFloppyImage"/> and
2346 <link to="#findFloppyImage"/> methods. Remembered images are also
2347 returned as part of the <link to="#floppyImages"/> array and can be
2348 mounted to virtual machines. See IMedium for more details.
2349
2350 See <link to="IMedium::location"/> to get more details about the format
2351 of the location string.
2352
2353 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
2354 Invalid floppy image file location or could not find the floppy
2355 image at the specified location.
2356 </result>
2357 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
2358 Floppy image already exists in the media registry.
2359 </result>
2360
2361 <note>
2362 Currently, only raw floppy images are supported by VirtualBox.
2363 </note>
2364 </desc>
2365 <param name="location" type="wstring" dir="in">
2366 <desc>
2367 Full path to the file that contains a valid floppy image.
2368 </desc>
2369 </param>
2370 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2371 <desc>
2372 UUID to assign to the given image file within this VirtualBox
2373 installation. If an empty (@c null) UUID is specified, the system will
2374 randomly generate a new UUID.
2375 </desc>
2376 </param>
2377 <param name="image" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2378 <desc>Opened floppy image object.</desc>
2379 </param>
2380 </method>
2381
2382 <method name="getFloppyImage">
2383 <desc>
2384 Returns a floppy image with the given UUID.
2385
2386 The image with the given UUID must be known to this VirtualBox
2387 installation, i.e. it must be previously opened by <link
2388 to="#openFloppyImage"/>, or mounted to some known virtual machine.
2389
2390 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2391 No matching floppy image found in the media registry.
2392 </result>
2393
2394 </desc>
2395 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2396 <desc>UUID of the image to look for.</desc>
2397 </param>
2398 <param name="image" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2399 <desc>Found floppy image object.</desc>
2400 </param>
2401 </method>
2402
2403 <method name="findFloppyImage">
2404 <desc>
2405 Returns a floppy image with the given image location.
2406
2407 The image with the given UUID must be known to this VirtualBox
2408 installation, i.e. it must be previously opened by <link
2409 to="#openFloppyImage"/>, or mounted to some known virtual machine.
2410
2411 The search is done by comparing the value of the @a location argument to
2412 the <link to="IMedium::location"/> attribute of each known floppy image.
2413
2414 The requested location can be a path relative to the
2415 <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">VirtualBox home folder</link>. If
2416 only a file name without any path is given, the
2417 <link to="ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFolder"> default hard disk
2418 folder</link> will be prepended to the file name before searching. Note
2419 that on case sensitive file systems, a case sensitive comparison is
2420 performed, otherwise the case of symbols in the file path is ignored.
2421
2422 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
2423 Invalid image file location.
2424 </result>
2425 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2426 No matching floppy image found in the media registry.
2427 </result>
2428
2429 </desc>
2430 <param name="location" type="wstring" dir="in">
2431 <desc>Floppy image file path to look for.</desc>
2432 </param>
2433 <param name="image" type="IMedium" dir="return">
2434 <desc>Found floppy image object.</desc>
2435 </param>
2436 </method>
2437
2438 <method name="getGuestOSType">
2439 <desc>
2440 Returns an object describing the specified guest OS type.
2441
2442 The requested guest OS type is specified using a string which is a
2443 mnemonic identifier of the guest operating system, such as
2444 <tt>"win31"</tt> or <tt>"ubuntu"</tt>. The guest OS type ID of a
2445 particular virtual machine can be read or set using the
2446 <link to="IMachine::OSTypeId"/> attribute.
2447
2448 The <link to="IVirtualBox::guestOSTypes"/> collection contains all
2449 available guest OS type objects. Each object has an
2450 <link to="IGuestOSType::id"/> attribute which contains an identifier of
2451 the guest OS this object describes.
2452
2453 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2454 @a id is not a valid Guest OS type.
2455 </result>
2456
2457 </desc>
2458 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2459 <desc>Guest OS type ID string.</desc>
2460 </param>
2461 <param name="type" type="IGuestOSType" dir="return">
2462 <desc>Guest OS type object.</desc>
2463 </param>
2464 </method>
2465
2466 <method name="createSharedFolder">
2467 <desc>
2468 Creates a new global shared folder by associating the given logical
2469 name with the given host path, adds it to the collection of shared
2470 folders and starts sharing it. Refer to the description of
2471 <link to="ISharedFolder"/> to read more about logical names.
2472 <note>
2473 In the current implementation, this operation is not
2474 implemented.
2475 </note>
2476 </desc>
2477 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
2478 <desc>Unique logical name of the shared folder.</desc>
2479 </param>
2480 <param name="hostPath" type="wstring" dir="in">
2481 <desc>Full path to the shared folder in the host file system.</desc>
2482 </param>
2483 <param name="writable" type="boolean" dir="in">
2484 <desc>Whether the share is writable or readonly</desc>
2485 </param>
2486 </method>
2487
2488 <method name="removeSharedFolder">
2489 <desc>
2490 Removes the global shared folder with the given name previously
2491 created by <link to="#createSharedFolder"/> from the collection of
2492 shared folders and stops sharing it.
2493 <note>
2494 In the current implementation, this operation is not
2495 implemented.
2496 </note>
2497 </desc>
2498 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
2499 <desc>Logical name of the shared folder to remove.</desc>
2500 </param>
2501 </method>
2502
2503 <method name="getExtraDataKeys">
2504 <desc>
2505 Returns an array representing the global extra data keys which currently
2506 have values defined.
2507 </desc>
2508 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="return" safearray="yes">
2509 <desc>Array of extra data keys.</desc>
2510 </param>
2511 </method>
2512
2513 <method name="getExtraData">
2514 <desc>
2515 Returns associated global extra data.
2516
2517 If the requested data @a key does not exist, this function will
2518 succeed and return an empty string in the @a value argument.
2519
2520 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
2521 Settings file not accessible.
2522 </result>
2523 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR">
2524 Could not parse the settings file.
2525 </result>
2526
2527 </desc>
2528 <param name="key" type="wstring" dir="in">
2529 <desc>Name of the data key to get.</desc>
2530 </param>
2531 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="return">
2532 <desc>Value of the requested data key.</desc>
2533 </param>
2534 </method>
2535
2536 <method name="setExtraData">
2537 <desc>
2538 Sets associated global extra data.
2539
2540 If you pass @c null or empty string as a key @a value, the given @a key
2541 will be deleted.
2542
2543 <note>
2544 Before performing the actual data change, this method will ask all
2545 registered callbacks using the
2546 <link to="IVirtualBoxCallback::onExtraDataCanChange"/>
2547 notification for a permission. If one of the callbacks refuses the
2548 new value, the change will not be performed.
2549 </note>
2550 <note>
2551 On success, the
2552 <link to="IVirtualBoxCallback::onExtraDataChange"/> notification
2553 is called to inform all registered callbacks about a successful data
2554 change.
2555 </note>
2556
2557 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
2558 Settings file not accessible.
2559 </result>
2560 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR">
2561 Could not parse the settings file.
2562 </result>
2563 <result name="E_ACCESSDENIED">
2564 Modification request refused.
2565 </result>
2566
2567 </desc>
2568 <param name="key" type="wstring" dir="in">
2569 <desc>Name of the data key to set.</desc>
2570 </param>
2571 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
2572 <desc>Value to assign to the key.</desc>
2573 </param>
2574 </method>
2575
2576 <method name="openSession">
2577 <desc>
2578 Opens a new direct session with the given virtual machine.
2579
2580 A direct session acts as a local lock on the given VM.
2581 There can be only one direct session open at a time for every
2582 virtual machine, protecting the VM from being manipulated by
2583 conflicting actions from different processes. Only after a
2584 direct session has been opened, one can change all VM settings
2585 and execute the VM in the process space of the session object.
2586
2587 Sessions therefore can be compared to mutex semaphores that
2588 lock a given VM for modification and execution.
2589 See <link to="ISession">ISession</link> for details.
2590
2591 <note>Unless you are writing a new VM frontend, you will not
2592 want to execute a VM in the current process. To spawn a new
2593 process that executes a VM, use
2594 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession" />
2595 instead.</note>
2596
2597 Upon successful return, the session object can be used to
2598 get access to the machine and to the VM console.
2599
2600 In VirtualBox terminology, the machine becomes "mutable" after
2601 a session has been opened. Note that the "mutable" machine
2602 object, on which you may invoke IMachine methods to change its
2603 settings, will be a different object from the immutable IMachine
2604 objects returned by various IVirtualBox methods. To obtain a
2605 mutable IMachine object (upon which you can invoke settings methods),
2606 use the <link to="ISession::machine" /> attribute.
2607
2608 One must always call <link to="ISession::close" /> to release the
2609 lock on the machine, or the machine's state will eventually be
2610 set to "Aborted".
2611
2612 In other words, to change settings on a machine, the following
2613 sequence is typically performed:
2614
2615 <ol>
2616 <li>Call this method (openSession) to have a machine locked for
2617 the current session.</li>
2618
2619 <li>Obtain a mutable IMachine object from <link to="ISession::machine" />.</li>
2620
2621 <li>Change the settings of the machine.</li>
2622
2623 <li>Call <link to="IMachine::saveSettings" />.</li>
2624
2625 <li>Close the session by calling <link to="ISession::close"/>.</li>
2626 </ol>
2627
2628 <result name="E_UNEXPECTED">
2629 Virtual machine not registered.
2630 </result>
2631 <result name="E_ACCESSDENIED">
2632 Process not started by OpenRemoteSession.
2633 </result>
2634 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2635 No matching virtual machine found.
2636 </result>
2637 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
2638 Session already open or being opened.
2639 </result>
2640 <result name="VBOX_E_VM_ERROR">
2641 Failed to assign machine to session.
2642 </result>
2643
2644 </desc>
2645 <param name="session" type="ISession" dir="in">
2646 <desc>
2647 Session object that will represent the opened session after
2648 successful method invocation. This object must not represent
2649 the already open session.
2650 <note>
2651 This session will be automatically closed if the
2652 VirtualBox server is terminated for some reason.
2653 </note>
2654 </desc>
2655 </param>
2656 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2657 <desc>ID of the virtual machine to open a session with.</desc>
2658 </param>
2659 </method>
2660
2661 <method name="openRemoteSession">
2662 <desc>
2663 Spawns a new process that executes a virtual machine (called a
2664 "remote session").
2665
2666 Opening a remote session causes the VirtualBox server to start a new
2667 process that opens a direct session with the given VM. As a result, the
2668 VM is locked by that direct session in the new process, preventing
2669 conflicting changes from other processes. Since sessions act as locks
2670 that prevent conflicting changes, one cannot open a remote session
2671 for a VM that already has another open session (direct or remote), or
2672 is currently in the process of opening one (see <link
2673 to="IMachine::sessionState"/>).
2674
2675 While the remote session still provides some level of control over the
2676 VM execution to the caller (using the <link to="IConsole" /> interface),
2677 not all VM settings are available for modification within the remote
2678 session context.
2679
2680 This operation can take some time (a new VM is started in a new process,
2681 for which memory and other resources need to be set up). Because of this,
2682 an <link to="IProgress" /> is returned to allow the caller to wait for this
2683 asynchronous operation to be completed. Until then, the remote session
2684 object remains in the closed state, and accessing the machine or its
2685 console through it is invalid. It is recommended to use
2686 <link to="IProgress::waitForCompletion" /> or similar calls to wait for
2687 completion. Completion is signalled when the VM is powered on. Error
2688 messages etc. can be queried via the progress object, if available.
2689
2690 As with all <link to="ISession" /> objects, it is recommended to call
2691 <link to="ISession::close" /> on the local session object once openRemoteSession()
2692 has been called. However, the session's state (see <link to="ISession::state" />)
2693 will not return to "Closed" until the remote session has also closed (i.e.
2694 until the VM is no longer running). In that case, however, the state of
2695 the session will automatically change back to "Closed".
2696
2697 Currently supported session types (values of the @a type
2698 argument) are:
2699 <ul>
2700 <li><tt>"gui"</tt>: VirtualBox Qt GUI session</li>
2701 <li><tt>"vrdp"</tt>: VirtualBox VRDP Server session</li>
2702 <li><tt>"sdl"</tt>: VirtualBox SDL GUI session</li>
2703 </ul>
2704
2705 The @a environment argument is a string containing definitions of
2706 environment variables in the following format:
2707 @code
2708 NAME[=VALUE]\n
2709 NAME[=VALUE]\n
2710 ...
2711 @endcode
2712 where <tt>\\n</tt> is the new line character. These environment
2713 variables will be appended to the environment of the VirtualBox server
2714 process. If an environment variable exists both in the server process
2715 and in this list, the value from this list takes precedence over the
2716 server's variable. If the value of the environment variable is
2717 omitted, this variable will be removed from the resulting environment.
2718 If the environment string is @c null or empty, the server environment
2719 is inherited by the started process as is.
2720
2721 <see>openExistingSession</see>
2722
2723 <result name="E_UNEXPECTED">
2724 Virtual machine not registered.
2725 </result>
2726 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2727 Invalid session type @a type.
2728 </result>
2729 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2730 No machine matching @a machineId found.
2731 </result>
2732 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
2733 Session already open or being opened.
2734 </result>
2735 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
2736 Launching process for machine failed.
2737 </result>
2738 <result name="VBOX_E_VM_ERROR">
2739 Failed to assign machine to session.
2740 </result>
2741
2742 </desc>
2743 <param name="session" type="ISession" dir="in">
2744 <desc>
2745 Session object that will represent the opened remote session
2746 after successful method invocation (this object must not
2747 represent an already open session).
2748 </desc>
2749 </param>
2750 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2751 <desc>ID of the virtual machine to open a session with.</desc>
2752 </param>
2753 <param name="type" type="wstring" dir="in">
2754 <desc>
2755 Type of the remote session (case sensitive).
2756 </desc>
2757 </param>
2758 <param name="environment" type="wstring" dir="in">
2759 <desc>
2760 Environment to pass to the opened session.
2761 </desc>
2762 </param>
2763 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
2764 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
2765 </param>
2766 </method>
2767
2768 <method name="openExistingSession">
2769 <desc>
2770 Opens a new remote session with the virtual machine for
2771 which a direct session is already open.
2772
2773 The remote session provides some level of control over the VM
2774 execution (using the IConsole interface) to the caller; however,
2775 within the remote session context, not all VM settings are available
2776 for modification.
2777
2778 As opposed to <link to="#openRemoteSession"/>, the number of
2779 remote sessions opened this way is not limited by the API
2780
2781 <note>
2782 It is an error to open a remote session with the machine that
2783 doesn't have an open direct session.
2784 </note>
2785
2786 <result name="E_UNEXPECTED">
2787 Virtual machine not registered.
2788 </result>
2789 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
2790 No machine matching @a machineId found.
2791 </result>
2792 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
2793 Session already open or being opened.
2794 </result>
2795 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_SESSION_STATE">
2796 Direct session state not Open.
2797 </result>
2798 <result name="VBOX_E_VM_ERROR">
2799 Failed to get console object from direct session or assign
2800 machine to session.
2801 </result>
2802
2803 <see>openRemoteSession</see>
2804 </desc>
2805 <param name="session" type="ISession" dir="in">
2806 <desc>
2807 Session object that will represent the open remote session
2808 after successful method invocation. This object must not
2809 represent an already open session.
2810 <note>
2811 This session will be automatically closed when the peer
2812 (direct) session dies or gets closed.
2813 </note>
2814 </desc>
2815 </param>
2816 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
2817 <desc>ID of the virtual machine to open a session with.</desc>
2818 </param>
2819 </method>
2820
2821 <method name="registerCallback">
2822 <desc>
2823 Registers a new global VirtualBox callback. The methods of the given
2824 callback object will be called by VirtualBox when an appropriate
2825 event occurs.
2826
2827 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2828 A @c null callback cannot be registered.
2829 </result>
2830
2831 </desc>
2832 <param name="callback" type="IVirtualBoxCallback" dir="in">
2833 <desc>Callback object to register.</desc>
2834 </param>
2835 </method>
2836
2837 <method name="unregisterCallback">
2838 <desc>
2839 Unregisters the previously registered global VirtualBox callback.
2840
2841 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2842 Specified @a callback not registered.
2843 </result>
2844
2845 </desc>
2846 <param name="callback" type="IVirtualBoxCallback" dir="in">
2847 <desc>Callback object to unregister.</desc>
2848 </param>
2849 </method>
2850
2851 <method name="waitForPropertyChange">
2852 <desc>
2853 Blocks the caller until any of the properties represented by the
2854 @a what argument changes the value or until the given timeout interval
2855 expires.
2856
2857 The @a what argument is a comma separated list of property masks that
2858 describe properties the caller is interested in. The property mask is
2859 a string in the following format:
2860
2861 <pre>
2862 [[group.]subgroup.]name
2863 </pre>
2864
2865 where @c name is the property name and @c group, @c subgroup are zero
2866 or more property group specifiers. Each element (group or name) in
2867 the property mask may be either a Latin string or an asterisk symbol
2868 (@c "*") which is used to match any string for the given element. A
2869 property mask that doesn't contain asterisk symbols represents a
2870 single fully qualified property name.
2871
2872 Groups in the fully qualified property name go from more generic (the
2873 left-most part) to more specific (the right-most part). The first
2874 element is usually a name of the object the property belongs to. The
2875 second element may be either a property name, or a child object name,
2876 or an index if the preceding element names an object which is one of
2877 many objects of the same type. This way, property names form a
2878 hierarchy of properties. Here are some examples of property names:
2879
2880 <table>
2881 <tr>
2882 <td><tt>VirtualBox.version</tt></td>
2883 <td><link to="IVirtualBox::version"/> property</td>
2884 </tr>
2885 <tr>
2886 <td><tt>Machine.&lt;UUID&gt;.name</tt></td>
2887 <td><link to="IMachine::name"/> property of the machine with the
2888 given UUID</td>
2889 </tr>
2890 </table>
2891
2892 Most property names directly correspond to the properties of objects
2893 (components) provided by the VirtualBox library and may be used to
2894 track changes to these properties. However, there may be
2895 pseudo-property names that don't correspond to any existing object's
2896 property directly, as well as there may be object properties that
2897 don't have a corresponding property name that is understood by this
2898 method, and therefore changes to such properties cannot be
2899 tracked. See individual object's property descriptions to get a
2900 fully qualified property name that can be used with this method (if
2901 any).
2902
2903 There is a special property mask @c "*" (i.e. a string consisting of a
2904 single asterisk symbol) that can be used to match all properties.
2905 Below are more examples of property masks:
2906
2907 <table>
2908 <tr>
2909 <td><tt>VirtualBox.*</tt></td>
2910 <td>Track all properties of the VirtualBox object</td>
2911 </tr>
2912 <tr>
2913 <td><tt>Machine.*.name</tt></td>
2914 <td>Track changes to the <link to="IMachine::name"/> property of
2915 all registered virtual machines</td>
2916 </tr>
2917 </table>
2918
2919 <note>
2920 This function is not implemented in the current version of the
2921 product.
2922 </note>
2923 </desc>
2924 <param name="what" type="wstring" dir="in">
2925 <desc>Comma separated list of property masks.</desc>
2926 </param>
2927 <param name="timeout" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
2928 <desc>
2929 Wait timeout in milliseconds.
2930 Specify -1 for an indefinite wait.
2931 </desc>
2932 </param>
2933 <param name="changed" type="wstring" dir="out">
2934 <desc>
2935 Comma separated list of properties that have been changed and caused
2936 this method to return to the caller.
2937 </desc>
2938 </param>
2939 <param name="values" type="wstring" dir="out">
2940 <desc>Reserved, not currently used.</desc>
2941 </param>
2942 </method>
2943
2944 <!--method name="createDHCPServerForInterface">
2945 <desc>
2946 Creates a dhcp server settings to be used for the given interface
2947 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2948 Host network interface @a name already exists.
2949 </result>
2950 </desc>
2951 <param name="interface" type="IHostNetworkInterface" dir="in">
2952 <desc>Network Interface</desc>
2953 </param>
2954 <param name="server" type="IDHCPServer" dir="out">
2955 <desc>Dhcp server settings</desc>
2956 </param>
2957 </method-->
2958
2959 <method name="createDHCPServer">
2960 <desc>
2961 Creates a dhcp server settings to be used for the given internal network name
2962 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2963 Host network interface @a name already exists.
2964 </result>
2965 </desc>
2966 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
2967 <desc>server name</desc>
2968 </param>
2969 <param name="server" type="IDHCPServer" dir="return">
2970 <desc>Dhcp server settings</desc>
2971 </param>
2972 </method>
2973
2974 <method name="findDHCPServerByNetworkName">
2975 <desc>
2976 Searches a dhcp server settings to be used for the given internal network name
2977 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2978 Host network interface @a name already exists.
2979 </result>
2980
2981 </desc>
2982 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
2983 <desc>server name</desc>
2984 </param>
2985 <param name="server" type="IDHCPServer" dir="return">
2986 <desc>Dhcp server settings</desc>
2987 </param>
2988 </method>
2989
2990 <!--method name="findDHCPServerForInterface">
2991 <desc>
2992 Searches a dhcp server settings to be used for the given interface
2993 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
2994 Host network interface @a name already exists.
2995 </result>
2996 </desc>
2997 <param name="interface" type="IHostNetworkInterface" dir="in">
2998 <desc>Network Interface</desc>
2999 </param>
3000 <param name="server" type="IDHCPServer" dir="out">
3001 <desc>Dhcp server settings</desc>
3002 </param>
3003 </method-->
3004
3005 <method name="removeDHCPServer">
3006 <desc>
3007 Removes the dhcp server settings
3008 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
3009 Host network interface @a name already exists.
3010 </result>
3011 </desc>
3012 <param name="server" type="IDHCPServer" dir="in">
3013 <desc>Dhcp server settings to be removed</desc>
3014 </param>
3015 </method>
3016
3017
3018 <method name="checkFirmwarePresent">
3019 <desc>
3020 Check if this VirtualBox installation has a firmware
3021 of the given type available, either system-wide or per-user.
3022 Optionally, this may return a hint where this firmware can be
3023 downloaded from.
3024 </desc>
3025 <param name="firmwareType" type="FirmwareType" dir="in">
3026 <desc>
3027 Type of firmware to check.
3028 </desc>
3029 </param>
3030 <param name="version" type="wstring" dir="in">
3031 <desc>Expected version number, usually empty string (presently ignored).</desc>
3032 </param>
3033
3034 <param name="url" type="wstring" dir="out">
3035 <desc>
3036 Suggested URL to download this firmware from.
3037 </desc>
3038 </param>
3039
3040 <param name="file" type="wstring" dir="out">
3041 <desc>
3042 Filename of firmware, only valid if result == TRUE.
3043 </desc>
3044 </param>
3045
3046 <param name="result" type="boolean" dir="return">
3047 <desc>If firmware of this type and version is available.</desc>
3048 </param>
3049 </method>
3050
3051 </interface>
3052
3053 <!--
3054 // IVFSExplorer
3055 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
3056 -->
3057
3058 <enum
3059 name="VFSType"
3060 uuid="813999ba-b949-48a8-9230-aadc6285e2f2"
3061 >
3062 <desc>
3063 Virtual file systems supported by VFSExplorer.
3064 </desc>
3065
3066 <const name="File" value="1" />
3067 <const name="Cloud" value="2" />
3068 <const name="S3" value="3" />
3069 <const name="WebDav" value="4" />
3070 </enum>
3071
3072 <enum
3073 name="VFSFileType"
3074 uuid="714333cd-44e2-415f-a245-d378fa9b1242"
3075 >
3076 <desc>
3077 File types known by VFSExplorer.
3078 </desc>
3079
3080 <const name="Unknown" value="1" />
3081 <const name="Fifo" value="2" />
3082 <const name="DevChar" value="3" />
3083 <const name="Directory" value="4" />
3084 <const name="DevBlock" value="5" />
3085 <const name="File" value="6" />
3086 <const name="SymLink" value="7" />
3087 <const name="Socket" value="8" />
3088 <const name="WhiteOut" value="9" />
3089 </enum>
3090
3091 <interface
3092 name="IVFSExplorer" extends="$unknown"
3093 uuid="2bb864a1-02a3-4474-a1d4-fb5f23b742e1"
3094 wsmap="managed"
3095 >
3096 <desc>
3097 The VFSExplorer interface unifies access to different file system
3098 types. This includes local file systems as well remote file systems like
3099 S3. For a list of supported types see <link to="VFSType" />.
3100 An instance of this is returned by <link to="IAppliance::createVFSExplorer" />.
3101 </desc>
3102
3103 <attribute name="path" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
3104 <desc>Returns the current path in the virtual file system.</desc>
3105 </attribute>
3106
3107 <attribute name="type" type="VFSType" readonly="yes">
3108 <desc>Returns the file system type which is currently in use.</desc>
3109 </attribute>
3110
3111 <method name="update">
3112 <desc>Updates the internal list of files/directories from the
3113 current directory level. Use <link to="#entryList" /> to get the full list
3114 after a call to this method.</desc>
3115
3116 <param name="aProgress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3117 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
3118 </param>
3119 </method>
3120
3121 <method name="cd">
3122 <desc>Change the current directory level.</desc>
3123
3124 <param name="aDir" type="wstring" dir="in">
3125 <desc>The name of the directory to go in.</desc>
3126 </param>
3127
3128 <param name="aProgress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3129 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
3130 </param>
3131 </method>
3132
3133 <method name="cdUp">
3134 <desc>Go one directory upwards from the current directory level.</desc>
3135
3136 <param name="aProgress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3137 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
3138 </param>
3139 </method>
3140
3141 <method name="entryList">
3142 <desc>Returns a list of files/directories after a call to <link
3143 to="#update" />. The user is responsible for keeping this internal
3144 list up do date.</desc>
3145
3146 <param name="aNames" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="out">
3147 <desc>The list of names for the entries.</desc>
3148 </param>
3149
3150 <param name="aTypes" type="unsigned long" safearray="yes" dir="out">
3151 <desc>The list of types for the entries.</desc>
3152 </param>
3153 </method>
3154
3155 <method name="exists">
3156 <desc>Checks if the given file list exists in the current directory
3157 level.</desc>
3158
3159 <param name="aNames" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="in">
3160 <desc>The names to check.</desc>
3161 </param>
3162
3163 <param name="aExists" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="return">
3164 <desc>The names which exist.</desc>
3165 </param>
3166 </method>
3167
3168 <method name="remove">
3169 <desc>Deletes the given files in the current directory level.</desc>
3170
3171 <param name="aNames" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="in">
3172 <desc>The names to remove.</desc>
3173 </param>
3174
3175 <param name="aProgress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3176 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
3177 </param>
3178 </method>
3179
3180 </interface>
3181
3182 <!--
3183 // IAppliance
3184 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
3185 -->
3186
3187 <interface
3188 name="IAppliance" extends="$unknown"
3189 uuid="e3ba9ab9-ac2c-4266-8bd2-91c4bf721ceb"
3190 wsmap="managed"
3191 >
3192 <desc>
3193 Represents a platform-independent appliance in OVF format. An instance of this is returned
3194 by <link to="IVirtualBox::createAppliance" />, which can then be used to import and export
3195 virtual machines within an appliance with VirtualBox.
3196
3197 The OVF standard suggests two different physical file formats:
3198
3199 <ol>
3200 <li>If the appliance is distributed as a set of files, there must be at least one XML descriptor
3201 file that conforms to the OVF standard and carries an <tt>.ovf</tt> file extension. If
3202 this descriptor file references other files such as disk images, as OVF appliances typically
3203 do, those additional files must be in the same directory as the descriptor file.</li>
3204
3205 <li>If the appliance is distributed as a single file, it must be in TAR format and have the
3206 <tt>.ova</tt> file extension. This TAR file must then contain at least the OVF descriptor
3207 files and optionally other files.
3208
3209 At this time, VirtualBox does not not yet support the packed (TAR) variant; support will
3210 be added with a later version.</li>
3211 </ol>
3212
3213 <b>Importing</b> an OVF appliance into VirtualBox as instances of
3214 <link to="IMachine" /> involves the following sequence of API calls:
3215
3216 <ol>
3217 <li>Call <link to="IVirtualBox::createAppliance" />. This will create an empty IAppliance object.
3218 </li>
3219
3220 <li>On the new object, call <link to="#read" /> with the full path of the OVF file you
3221 would like to import. So long as this file is syntactically valid, this will succeed
3222 and fill the appliance object with the parsed data from the OVF file.
3223 </li>
3224
3225 <li>Next, call <link to="#interpret" />, which analyzes the OVF data and sets up the
3226 contents of the IAppliance attributes accordingly. These can be inspected by a
3227 VirtualBox front-end such as the GUI, and the suggestions can be displayed to the
3228 user. In particular, the <link to="#virtualSystemDescriptions" /> array contains
3229 instances of <link to="IVirtualSystemDescription" /> which represent the virtual
3230 systems in the OVF, which in turn describe the virtual hardware prescribed by the
3231 OVF (network and hardware adapters, virtual disk images, memory size and so on).
3232 The GUI can then give the user the option to confirm and/or change these suggestions.
3233 </li>
3234
3235 <li>If desired, call <link to="IVirtualSystemDescription::setFinalValues" /> for each
3236 virtual system to override the suggestions made by the interpret() routine.
3237 </li>
3238
3239 <li>Finally, call <link to="#importMachines" /> to create virtual machines in
3240 VirtualBox as instances of <link to="IMachine" /> that match the information in the
3241 virtual system descriptions.
3242 </li>
3243 </ol>
3244
3245 <b>Exporting</b> VirtualBox machines into an OVF appliance involves the following steps:
3246
3247 <ol>
3248 <li>As with importing, first call <link to="IVirtualBox::createAppliance" /> to create
3249 an empty IAppliance object.
3250 </li>
3251
3252 <li>For each machine you would like to export, call <link to="IMachine::export" />
3253 with the IAppliance object you just created. This creates an instance of
3254 <link to="IVirtualSystemDescription" /> inside the appliance.
3255 </li>
3256
3257 <li>If desired, call <link to="IVirtualSystemDescription::setFinalValues" /> for each
3258 virtual system to override the suggestions made by the export() routine.
3259 </li>
3260
3261 <li>Finally, call <link to="#write" /> with a path specification to have the OVF
3262 file written.</li>
3263 </ol>
3264
3265 </desc>
3266
3267 <attribute name="path" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
3268 <desc>Path to the main file of the OVF appliance, which is either the <tt>.ovf</tt> or
3269 the <tt>.ova</tt> file passed to <link to="#read" /> (for import) or
3270 <link to="#write" /> (for export).
3271 This attribute is empty until one of these methods has been called.
3272 </desc>
3273 </attribute>
3274
3275 <attribute name="disks" type="wstring" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
3276 <desc>
3277 Array of virtual disk definitions. One such description exists for each
3278 disk definition in the OVF; each string array item represents one such piece of
3279 disk information, with the information fields separated by tab (\t) characters.
3280
3281 The caller should be prepared for additional fields being appended to
3282 this string in future versions of VirtualBox and therefore check for
3283 the number of tabs in the strings returned.
3284
3285 In the current version, the following eight fields are returned per string
3286 in the array:
3287
3288 <ol>
3289 <li>Disk ID (unique string identifier given to disk)</li>
3290
3291 <li>Capacity (unsigned integer indicating the maximum capacity of the disk)</li>
3292
3293 <li>Populated size (optional unsigned integer indicating the current size of the
3294 disk; can be approximate; -1 if unspecified)</li>
3295
3296 <li>Format (string identifying the disk format, typically
3297 "http://www.vmware.com/specifications/vmdk.html#sparse")</li>
3298
3299 <li>Reference (where to find the disk image, typically a file name; if empty,
3300 then the disk should be created on import)</li>
3301
3302 <li>Image size (optional unsigned integer indicating the size of the image,
3303 which need not necessarily be the same as the values specified above, since
3304 the image may be compressed or sparse; -1 if not specified)</li>
3305
3306 <li>Chunk size (optional unsigned integer if the image is split into chunks;
3307 presently unsupported and always -1)</li>
3308
3309 <li>Compression (optional string equalling "gzip" if the image is gzip-compressed)</li>
3310 </ol>
3311 </desc>
3312 </attribute>
3313
3314 <attribute name="virtualSystemDescriptions" type="IVirtualSystemDescription" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
3315 <desc> Array of virtual system descriptions. One such description is created
3316 for each virtual system found in the OVF.
3317 This array is empty until either <link to="#interpret" /> (for import) or <link to="IMachine::export" />
3318 (for export) has been called.
3319 </desc>
3320 </attribute>
3321
3322 <method name="read">
3323 <desc>
3324 Reads an OVF file into the appliance object.
3325
3326 This method succeeds if the OVF is syntactically valid and, by itself, without errors. The
3327 mere fact that this method returns successfully does not mean that VirtualBox supports all
3328 features requested by the appliance; this can only be examined after a call to <link to="#interpret" />.
3329 </desc>
3330 <param name="file" type="wstring" dir="in">
3331 <desc>
3332 Name of appliance file to open (either with an <tt>.ovf</tt> or <tt>.ova</tt> extension, depending
3333 on whether the appliance is distributed as a set of files or as a single file, respectively).
3334 </desc>
3335 </param>
3336 <param name="aProgress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3337 <desc></desc>
3338 </param>
3339 </method>
3340
3341 <method name="interpret">
3342 <desc>
3343 Interprets the OVF data that was read when the appliance was constructed. After
3344 calling this method, one can inspect the
3345 <link to="#virtualSystemDescriptions" /> array attribute, which will then contain
3346 one <link to="IVirtualSystemDescription" /> for each virtual machine found in
3347 the appliance.
3348
3349 Calling this method is the second step of importing an appliance into VirtualBox;
3350 see <link to="IAppliance" /> for an overview.
3351
3352 After calling this method, one should call <link to="#getWarnings" /> to find out
3353 if problems were encountered during the processing which might later lead to
3354 errors.
3355 </desc>
3356 </method>
3357
3358 <method name="importMachines">
3359 <desc>
3360 Imports the appliance into VirtualBox by creating instances of <link to="IMachine" />
3361 and other interfaces that match the information contained in the appliance as
3362 closely as possible, as represented by the import instructions in the
3363 <link to="#virtualSystemDescriptions" /> array.
3364
3365 Calling this method is the final step of importing an appliance into VirtualBox;
3366 see <link to="IAppliance" /> for an overview.
3367
3368 Since importing the appliance will most probably involve copying and converting
3369 disk images, which can take a long time, this method operates asynchronously and
3370 returns an IProgress object to allow the caller to monitor the progress.
3371 </desc>
3372
3373 <param name="aProgress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3374 <desc></desc>
3375 </param>
3376 </method>
3377
3378 <method name="createVFSExplorer">
3379 <desc>Returns a <link to="IVFSExplorer" /> object for the given URI.</desc>
3380
3381 <param name="aUri" type="wstring" dir="in">
3382 <desc>The URI describing the file system to use.</desc>
3383 </param>
3384
3385 <param name="aExplorer" type="IVFSExplorer" dir="return">
3386 <desc></desc>
3387 </param>
3388 </method>
3389
3390 <method name="write">
3391 <desc>
3392 Writes the contents of the appliance exports into a new OVF file.
3393
3394 Calling this method is the final step of exporting an appliance from VirtualBox;
3395 see <link to="IAppliance" /> for an overview.
3396
3397 Since exporting the appliance will most probably involve copying and converting
3398 disk images, which can take a long time, this method operates asynchronously and
3399 returns an IProgress object to allow the caller to monitor the progress.
3400 </desc>
3401 <param name="format" type="wstring" dir="in">
3402 <desc>
3403 Output format, as a string. Currently supported formats are "ovf-0.9" and "ovf-1.0";
3404 future versions of VirtualBox may support additional formats.
3405 </desc>
3406 </param>
3407 <param name="path" type="wstring" dir="in">
3408 <desc>
3409 Name of appliance file to open (either with an <tt>.ovf</tt> or <tt>.ova</tt> extension, depending
3410 on whether the appliance is distributed as a set of files or as a single file, respectively).
3411 </desc>
3412 </param>
3413 <param name="aProgress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3414 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
3415 </param>
3416 </method>
3417
3418 <method name="getWarnings">
3419 <desc>Returns textual warnings which occured during execution of <link to="#interpret" />.</desc>
3420
3421 <param name="aWarnings" type="wstring" dir="return" safearray="yes">
3422 <desc></desc>
3423 </param>
3424 </method>
3425
3426 </interface>
3427
3428 <enum
3429 name="VirtualSystemDescriptionType"
3430 uuid="aacc58de-5b45-4f82-ae2e-dd9a824fc3b5"
3431 >
3432 <desc>Used with <link to="IVirtualSystemDescription" /> to describe the type of
3433 a configuration value.</desc>
3434
3435 <const name="Ignore" value="1" />
3436 <const name="OS" value="2" />
3437 <const name="Name" value="3" />
3438 <const name="Product" value="4" />
3439 <const name="Vendor" value="5" />
3440 <const name="Version" value="6" />
3441 <const name="ProductUrl" value="7" />
3442 <const name="VendorUrl" value="8" />
3443 <const name="Description" value="9" />
3444 <const name="License" value="10" />
3445 <const name="Miscellaneous" value="11" />
3446 <const name="CPU" value="12" />
3447 <const name="Memory" value="13" />
3448 <const name="HardDiskControllerIDE" value="14" />
3449 <const name="HardDiskControllerSATA" value="15" />
3450 <const name="HardDiskControllerSCSI" value="16" />
3451 <const name="HardDiskImage" value="17" />
3452 <const name="Floppy" value="18" />
3453 <const name="CDROM" value="19" />
3454 <const name="NetworkAdapter" value="20" />
3455 <const name="USBController" value="21" />
3456 <const name="SoundCard" value="22" />
3457
3458 </enum>
3459
3460 <enum
3461 name="VirtualSystemDescriptionValueType"
3462 uuid="56d9403f-3425-4118-9919-36f2a9b8c77c"
3463 >
3464 <desc>Used with <link to="IVirtualSystemDescription::getValuesByType" /> to describe the value
3465 type to fetch.</desc>
3466
3467 <const name="Reference" value="1" />
3468 <const name="Original" value="2" />
3469 <const name="Auto" value="3" />
3470 <const name="ExtraConfig" value="4" />
3471
3472 </enum>
3473
3474 <interface
3475 name="IVirtualSystemDescription" extends="$unknown"
3476 uuid="d7525e6c-531a-4c51-8e04-41235083a3d8"
3477 wsmap="managed"
3478 >
3479
3480 <desc>This interface is used in the <link to="IAppliance::virtualSystemDescriptions" /> array.
3481 After <link to="IAppliance::interpret" /> has been called, that array contains
3482 information about how the virtual systems described in the OVF should best be imported into VirtualBox
3483 virtual machines. See <link to="IAppliance" /> for the steps required to import an OVF
3484 into VirtualBox.
3485 </desc>
3486
3487 <attribute name="count" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
3488 <desc>Return the number of virtual system description entries.</desc>
3489 </attribute>
3490
3491 <method name="getDescription">
3492 <desc>Returns information about the virtual system as arrays of instruction items. In each array, the
3493 items with the same indices correspond and jointly represent an import instruction for VirtualBox.
3494
3495 The list below identifies the value sets that are possible depending on the
3496 <link to="VirtualSystemDescriptionType" /> enum value in the array item in aTypes[]. In each case,
3497 the array item with the same index in aOvfValues[] will contain the original value as contained
3498 in the OVF file (just for informational purposes), and the corresponding item in aVBoxValues[]
3499 will contain a suggested value to be used for VirtualBox. Depending on the description type,
3500 the aExtraConfigValues[] array item may also be used.
3501
3502 <ul>
3503 <li>
3504 "OS": the guest operating system type. There must be exactly one such array item on import. The
3505 corresponding item in aVBoxValues[] contains the suggested guest operating system for VirtualBox.
3506 This will be one of the values listed in <link to="IVirtualBox::guestOSTypes" />. The corresponding
3507 item in aOvfValues[] will contain a numerical value that described the operating system in the OVF.
3508 </li>
3509 <li>
3510 "Name": the name to give to the new virtual machine. There can be at most one such array item;
3511 if none is present on import, then an automatic name will be created from the operating system
3512 type. The correponding item im aOvfValues[] will contain the suggested virtual machine name
3513 from the OVF file, and aVBoxValues[] will contain a suggestion for a unique VirtualBox
3514 <link to="IMachine" /> name that does not exist yet.
3515 </li>
3516 <li>
3517 "Description": an arbitrary description.
3518 </li>
3519 <li>
3520 "License": the EULA section from the OVF, if present. It is the responsibility of the calling
3521 code to display such a license for agreement; the Main API does not enforce any such policy.
3522 </li>
3523 <li>
3524 Miscellaneous: reserved for future use.
3525 </li>
3526 <li>
3527 "CPU": the number of CPUs. There can be at most one such item, which will presently be ignored.
3528 </li>
3529 <li>
3530 "Memory": the amount of guest RAM, in bytes. There can be at most one such array item; if none
3531 is present on import, then VirtualBox will set a meaningful default based on the operating system
3532 type.
3533 </li>
3534 <li>
3535 "HarddiskControllerIDE": an IDE hard disk controller. There can be at most one such item. This
3536 has no value in aOvfValues[] or aVBoxValues[].
3537 The matching item in the aRefs[] array will contain an integer that items of the "Harddisk"
3538 type can use to specify which hard disk controller a virtual disk should be connected to.
3539 </li>
3540 <li>
3541 "HarddiskControllerSATA": an SATA hard disk controller. There can be at most one such item. This
3542 has no value in aOvfValues[] or aVBoxValues[].
3543 The matching item in the aRefs[] array will be used as with IDE controllers (see above).
3544 </li>
3545 <li>
3546 "HarddiskControllerSCSI": a SCSI hard disk controller. There can be at most one such item.
3547 The items in aOvfValues[] and aVBoxValues[] will either be "LsiLogic" or "BusLogic".
3548 The matching item in the aRefs[] array will be used as with IDE controllers (see above).
3549 </li>
3550 <li>
3551 "HardDiskImage": a virtual hard disk, most probably as a reference to an image file. There can be an
3552 arbitrary number of these items, one for each virtual disk image that accompanies the OVF.
3553
3554 The array item in aOvfValues[] will contain the file specification from the OVF file (without
3555 a path since the image file should be in the same location as the OVF file itself), whereas the
3556 item in aVBoxValues[] will contain a qualified path specification to where VirtualBox uses the
3557 hard disk image. This means that on import the image will be copied and converted from the
3558 "ovf" location to the "vbox" location; on export, this will be handled the other way round.
3559 On import, the target image will also be registered with VirtualBox.
3560
3561 The matching item in the aExtraConfigValues[] array must contain a string of the following
3562 format: "controller=&lt;index&gt;;channel=&lt;c&gt;"
3563 In this string, &lt;index&gt; must be an integer specifying the hard disk controller to connect
3564 the image to. That number must be the index of an array item with one of the hard disk controller
3565 types (HarddiskControllerSCSI, HarddiskControllerSATA, HarddiskControllerIDE).
3566 In addition, &lt;c&gt; must specify the channel to use on that controller. For IDE controllers,
3567 this can range from 0-3 (which VirtualBox will interpret as primary master, primary slave, secondary master and
3568 secondary slave. For SATA and SCSI controllers, the channel can range from 0-29.
3569 </li>
3570 <li>
3571 "CDROM": a virtual CD-ROM drive. The matching item in aExtraConfigValue[] contains the same
3572 attachment information as with "HardDiskImage" items.
3573 </li>
3574 <li>
3575 "CDROM": a virtual floppy drive. The matching item in aExtraConfigValue[] contains the same
3576 attachment information as with "HardDiskImage" items.
3577 </li>
3578 <li>
3579 "NetworkAdapter": a network adapter. The array item in aVBoxValues[] will specify the hardware
3580 for the network adapter, whereas the array item in aExtraConfigValues[] will have a string
3581 of the "type=&lt;X&gt;" format, where &lt;X&gt; must be either "NAT" or "Bridged".
3582 </li>
3583 <li>
3584 "USBController": a USB controller. There can be at most one such item. If and only if such an
3585 item ispresent, USB support will be enabled for the new virtual machine.
3586 </li>
3587 <li>
3588 "SoundCard": a sound card. There can be at most one such item. If and only if such an item is
3589 present, sound support will be enabled for the new virtual machine. Note that the virtual
3590 machine in VirtualBox will always be presented with the standard VirtualBox soundcard, which
3591 may be different from the virtual soundcard expected by the appliance.
3592 </li>
3593 </ul>
3594
3595 </desc>
3596
3597 <param name="aTypes" type="VirtualSystemDescriptionType" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3598 <desc></desc>
3599 </param>
3600
3601 <param name="aRefs" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3602 <desc></desc>
3603 </param>
3604
3605 <param name="aOvfValues" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3606 <desc></desc>
3607 </param>
3608
3609 <param name="aVBoxValues" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3610 <desc></desc>
3611 </param>
3612
3613 <param name="aExtraConfigValues" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3614 <desc></desc>
3615 </param>
3616
3617 </method>
3618
3619 <method name="getDescriptionByType">
3620 <desc>This is the same as <link to="#getDescription" /> except that you can specify which types
3621 should be returned.</desc>
3622
3623 <param name="aType" type="VirtualSystemDescriptionType" dir="in">
3624 <desc></desc>
3625 </param>
3626
3627 <param name="aTypes" type="VirtualSystemDescriptionType" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3628 <desc></desc>
3629 </param>
3630
3631 <param name="aRefs" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3632 <desc></desc>
3633 </param>
3634
3635 <param name="aOvfValues" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3636 <desc></desc>
3637 </param>
3638
3639 <param name="aVBoxValues" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3640 <desc></desc>
3641 </param>
3642
3643 <param name="aExtraConfigValues" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
3644 <desc></desc>
3645 </param>
3646
3647 </method>
3648
3649 <method name="getValuesByType">
3650 <desc>This is the same as <link to="#getDescriptionByType" /> except that you can specify which
3651 value types should be returned. See <link to="VirtualSystemDescriptionValueType" /> for possible
3652 values.</desc>
3653
3654 <param name="aType" type="VirtualSystemDescriptionType" dir="in">
3655 <desc></desc>
3656 </param>
3657
3658 <param name="aWhich" type="VirtualSystemDescriptionValueType" dir="in">
3659 <desc></desc>
3660 </param>
3661
3662 <param name="aValues" type="wstring" dir="return" safearray="yes">
3663 <desc></desc>
3664 </param>
3665
3666 </method>
3667
3668 <method name="setFinalValues">
3669 <desc>
3670 This method allows the appliance's user to change the configuration for the virtual
3671 system descriptions. For each array item returned from <link to="#getDescription" />,
3672 you must pass in one boolean value and one configuration value.
3673
3674 Each item in the boolean array determines whether the particular configuration item
3675 should be enabled.
3676 You can only disable items of the types HardDiskControllerIDE, HardDiskControllerSATA,
3677 HardDiskControllerSCSI, HardDiskImage, CDROM, Floppy, NetworkAdapter, USBController
3678 and SoundCard.
3679
3680 For the "vbox" and "extra configuration" values, if you pass in the same arrays
3681 as returned in the aVBoxValues and aExtraConfigValues arrays from getDescription(),
3682 the configuration remains unchanged. Please see the documentation for getDescription()
3683 for valid configuration values for the individual array item types. If the
3684 corresponding item in the aEnabled array is @c false, the configuration value is ignored.
3685 </desc>
3686
3687 <param name="aEnabled" type="boolean" dir="in" safearray="yes">
3688 <desc></desc>
3689 </param>
3690
3691 <param name="aVBoxValues" type="wstring" dir="in" safearray="yes">
3692 <desc></desc>
3693 </param>
3694
3695 <param name="aExtraConfigValues" type="wstring" dir="in" safearray="yes">
3696 <desc></desc>
3697 </param>
3698 </method>
3699
3700 <method name="addDescription">
3701 <desc>
3702 This method adds an additional description entry to the stack of already
3703 available descriptions for this virtual system. This is handy for writing
3704 values which aren't directly supported by VirtualBox. One example would
3705 be the License type of <link to="VirtualSystemDescriptionType" />.
3706 </desc>
3707
3708 <param name="aType" type="VirtualSystemDescriptionType" dir="in">
3709 <desc></desc>
3710 </param>
3711
3712 <param name="aVBoxValue" type="wstring" dir="in">
3713 <desc></desc>
3714 </param>
3715
3716 <param name="aExtraConfigValue" type="wstring" dir="in">
3717 <desc></desc>
3718 </param>
3719 </method>
3720 </interface>
3721
3722
3723 <!--
3724 // IMachine
3725 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
3726 -->
3727
3728 <interface
3729 name="IInternalMachineControl" extends="$unknown"
3730 uuid="35d8d838-d066-447d-927a-fd93afdbec90"
3731 internal="yes"
3732 wsmap="suppress"
3733 >
3734 <method name="setRemoveSavedState">
3735 <desc>
3736 Updates the flag whether saved state is removed on a machine state
3737 change from Saved to PoweredOff.
3738 </desc>
3739 <param name="aRemove" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
3740 </method>
3741
3742 <method name="updateState">
3743 <desc>
3744 Updates the VM state.
3745 <note>
3746 This operation will also update the settings file with
3747 the correct information about the saved state file
3748 and delete this file from disk when appropriate.
3749 </note>
3750 </desc>
3751 <param name="state" type="MachineState" dir="in"/>
3752 </method>
3753
3754 <method name="getIPCId">
3755 <param name="id" type="wstring" dir="return"/>
3756 </method>
3757
3758 <method name="setPowerUpInfo">
3759 <desc>
3760 Transfers success (@c null) or error information for this session.
3761 This method updates the progress object to signal completion of the
3762 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/> method if appropriate,
3763 which means that the progress object returned by
3764 <link to="IConsole::powerUp"/>.
3765 </desc>
3766 <param name="error" type="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" dir="in"/>
3767 </method>
3768
3769 <method name="runUSBDeviceFilters">
3770 <desc>
3771 Asks the server to run USB devices filters of the associated
3772 machine against the given USB device and tell if there is
3773 a match.
3774 <note>
3775 Intended to be used only for remote USB devices. Local
3776 ones don't require to call this method (this is done
3777 implicitly by the Host and USBProxyService).
3778 </note>
3779 </desc>
3780 <param name="device" type="IUSBDevice" dir="in"/>
3781 <param name="matched" type="boolean" dir="out"/>
3782 <param name="maskedInterfaces" type="unsigned long" dir="out"/>
3783 </method>
3784
3785 <method name="captureUSBDevice">
3786 <desc>
3787 Requests a capture of the given host USB device.
3788 When the request is completed, the VM process will
3789 get a <link to="IInternalSessionControl::onUSBDeviceAttach"/>
3790 notification.
3791 </desc>
3792 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in"/>
3793 </method>
3794
3795 <method name="detachUSBDevice">
3796 <desc>
3797 Notification that a VM is going to detach (@a done = @c false) or has
3798 already detached (@a done = @c true) the given USB device.
3799 When the @a done = @c true request is completed, the VM process will
3800 get a <link to="IInternalSessionControl::onUSBDeviceDetach"/>
3801 notification.
3802 <note>
3803 In the @a done = @c true case, the server must run its own filters
3804 and filters of all VMs but this one on the detached device
3805 as if it were just attached to the host computer.
3806 </note>
3807 </desc>
3808 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in"/>
3809 <param name="done" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
3810 </method>
3811
3812 <method name="autoCaptureUSBDevices">
3813 <desc>
3814 Requests a capture all matching USB devices attached to the host.
3815 When the request is completed, the VM process will
3816 get a <link to="IInternalSessionControl::onUSBDeviceAttach"/>
3817 notification per every captured device.
3818 </desc>
3819 </method>
3820
3821 <method name="detachAllUSBDevices">
3822 <desc>
3823 Notification that a VM that is being powered down. The done
3824 parameter indicates whether which stage of the power down
3825 we're at. When @a done = @c false the VM is announcing its
3826 intentions, while when @a done = @c true the VM is reporting
3827 what it has done.
3828 <note>
3829 In the @a done = @c true case, the server must run its own filters
3830 and filters of all VMs but this one on all detach devices as
3831 if they were just attached to the host computer.
3832 </note>
3833 </desc>
3834 <param name="done" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
3835 </method>
3836
3837 <method name="onSessionEnd">
3838 <desc>
3839 Triggered by the given session object when the session is about
3840 to close normally.
3841 </desc>
3842 <param name="session" type="ISession" dir="in">
3843 <desc>Session that is being closed</desc>
3844 </param>
3845 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3846 <desc>
3847 Used to wait until the corresponding machine is actually
3848 dissociated from the given session on the server.
3849 Returned only when this session is a direct one.
3850 </desc>
3851 </param>
3852 </method>
3853
3854 <method name="beginSavingState">
3855 <desc>
3856 Called by the VM process to inform the server it wants to
3857 save the current state and stop the VM execution.
3858 </desc>
3859 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="in">
3860 <desc>
3861 Progress object created by the VM process to wait until
3862 the state is saved.
3863 </desc>
3864 </param>
3865 <param name="stateFilePath" type="wstring" dir="out">
3866 <desc>
3867 File path the VM process must save the execution state to.
3868 </desc>
3869 </param>
3870 </method>
3871
3872 <method name="endSavingState">
3873 <desc>
3874 Called by the VM process to inform the server that saving
3875 the state previously requested by #beginSavingState is either
3876 successfully finished or there was a failure.
3877
3878 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
3879 Settings file not accessible.
3880 </result>
3881 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR">
3882 Could not parse the settings file.
3883 </result>
3884
3885 </desc>
3886
3887 <param name="success" type="boolean" dir="in">
3888 <desc>@c true to indicate success and @c false otherwise.
3889 </desc>
3890 </param>
3891 </method>
3892
3893 <method name="adoptSavedState">
3894 <desc>
3895 Gets called by IConsole::adoptSavedState.
3896 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
3897 Invalid saved state file path.
3898 </result>
3899 </desc>
3900 <param name="savedStateFile" type="wstring" dir="in">
3901 <desc>Path to the saved state file to adopt.</desc>
3902 </param>
3903 </method>
3904
3905 <method name="beginTakingSnapshot">
3906 <desc>
3907 Called from the VM process to request from the server to perform the
3908 server-side actions of creating a snapshot (creating differencing images
3909 and the snapshot object).
3910
3911 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
3912 Settings file not accessible.
3913 </result>
3914 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR">
3915 Could not parse the settings file.
3916 </result>
3917 </desc>
3918 <param name="initiator" type="IConsole" dir="in">
3919 <desc>The console object that initiated this call.</desc>
3920 </param>
3921 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
3922 <desc>Snapshot name.</desc>
3923 </param>
3924 <param name="description" type="wstring" dir="in">
3925 <desc>Snapshot description.</desc>
3926 </param>
3927 <param name="consoleProgress" type="IProgress" dir="in">
3928 <desc>
3929 Progress object created by the VM process tracking the
3930 snapshot's progress. This has the following sub-operations:
3931 <ul>
3932 <li>setting up (weight 1);</li>
3933 <li>one for each medium attachment that needs a differencing image (weight 1 each);</li>
3934 <li>another one to copy the VM state (if offline with saved state, weight is VM memory size in MB);</li>
3935 <li>another one to save the VM state (if online, weight is VM memory size in MB);</li>
3936 <li>finishing up (weight 1)</li>
3937 </ul>
3938 </desc>
3939 </param>
3940 <param name="fTakingSnapshotOnline" type="boolean" dir="in">
3941 <desc>
3942 Whether this is an online snapshot (i.e. the machine is running).
3943 </desc>
3944 </param>
3945 <param name="stateFilePath" type="wstring" dir="out">
3946 <desc>
3947 File path the VM process must save the execution state to.
3948 </desc>
3949 </param>
3950 </method>
3951
3952 <method name="endTakingSnapshot">
3953 <desc>
3954 Called by the VM process to inform the server that the snapshot
3955 previously requested by #beginTakingSnapshot is either
3956 successfully taken or there was a failure.
3957 </desc>
3958
3959 <param name="success" type="boolean" dir="in">
3960 <desc>@c true to indicate success and @c false otherwise</desc>
3961 </param>
3962 </method>
3963
3964 <method name="deleteSnapshot">
3965 <desc>
3966 Gets called by IConsole::deleteSnapshot.
3967 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
3968 Snapshot has more than one child snapshot.
3969 </result>
3970 </desc>
3971 <param name="initiator" type="IConsole" dir="in">
3972 <desc>The console object that initiated this call.</desc>
3973 </param>
3974 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
3975 <desc>UUID of the snapshot to delete.</desc>
3976 </param>
3977 <param name="machineState" type="MachineState" dir="out">
3978 <desc>New machine state after this operation is started.</desc>
3979 </param>
3980 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3981 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
3982 </param>
3983 </method>
3984
3985 <method name="restoreSnapshot">
3986 <desc>
3987 Gets called by IConsole::RestoreSnapshot.
3988 </desc>
3989 <param name="initiator" type="IConsole" dir="in">
3990 <desc>The console object that initiated this call.</desc>
3991 </param>
3992 <param name="snapshot" type="ISnapshot" dir="in">
3993 <desc>The snapshot to restore the VM state from.</desc>
3994 </param>
3995 <param name="machineState" type="MachineState" dir="out">
3996 <desc>New machine state after this operation is started.</desc>
3997 </param>
3998 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
3999 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
4000 </param>
4001 </method>
4002
4003 <method name="pullGuestProperties">
4004 <desc>
4005 Get the list of the guest properties matching a set of patterns along
4006 with their values, time stamps and flags and give responsibility for
4007 managing properties to the console.
4008 </desc>
4009 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
4010 <desc>
4011 The names of the properties returned.
4012 </desc>
4013 </param>
4014 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
4015 <desc>
4016 The values of the properties returned. The array entries match the
4017 corresponding entries in the @a name array.
4018 </desc>
4019 </param>
4020 <param name="timestamp" type="unsigned long long" dir="out" safearray="yes">
4021 <desc>
4022 The time stamps of the properties returned. The array entries match
4023 the corresponding entries in the @a name array.
4024 </desc>
4025 </param>
4026 <param name="flags" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
4027 <desc>
4028 The flags of the properties returned. The array entries match the
4029 corresponding entries in the @a name array.
4030 </desc>
4031 </param>
4032 </method>
4033
4034 <method name="pushGuestProperty">
4035 <desc>
4036 Update a single guest property in IMachine.
4037 </desc>
4038 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
4039 <desc>
4040 The name of the property to be updated.
4041 </desc>
4042 </param>
4043 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
4044 <desc>
4045 The value of the property.
4046 </desc>
4047 </param>
4048 <param name="timestamp" type="unsigned long long" dir="in">
4049 <desc>
4050 The timestamp of the property.
4051 </desc>
4052 </param>
4053 <param name="flags" type="wstring" dir="in">
4054 <desc>
4055 The flags of the property.
4056 </desc>
4057 </param>
4058 </method>
4059
4060 <method name="lockMedia">
4061 <desc>
4062 Locks all media attached to the machine for writing and parents of
4063 attached differencing media (if any) for reading. This operation is
4064 atomic so that if it fails no media is actually locked.
4065
4066 This method is intended to be called when the machine is in Starting or
4067 Restoring state. The locked media will be automatically unlocked when
4068 the machine is powered off or crashed.
4069 </desc>
4070 </method>
4071 <method name="unlockMedia">
4072 <desc>
4073 Unlocks all media previously locked using
4074 <link to="IInternalMachineControl::lockMedia"/>.
4075
4076 This method is intended to be used with teleportation so that it is
4077 possible to teleport between processes on the same machine.
4078 </desc>
4079 </method>
4080 </interface>
4081
4082 <interface
4083 name="IBIOSSettings" extends="$unknown"
4084 uuid="38b54279-dc35-4f5e-a431-835b867c6b5e"
4085 wsmap="managed"
4086 >
4087 <desc>
4088 The IBIOSSettings interface represents BIOS settings of the virtual
4089 machine. This is used only in the <link to="IMachine::BIOSSettings" /> attribute.
4090 </desc>
4091 <attribute name="logoFadeIn" type="boolean">
4092 <desc>Fade in flag for BIOS logo animation.</desc>
4093 </attribute>
4094
4095 <attribute name="logoFadeOut" type="boolean">
4096 <desc>Fade out flag for BIOS logo animation.</desc>
4097 </attribute>
4098
4099 <attribute name="logoDisplayTime" type="unsigned long">
4100 <desc>BIOS logo display time in milliseconds (0 = default).</desc>
4101 </attribute>
4102
4103 <attribute name="logoImagePath" type="wstring">
4104 <desc>
4105 Local file system path for external BIOS splash image. Empty string
4106 means the default image is shown on boot.
4107 </desc>
4108 </attribute>
4109
4110 <attribute name="bootMenuMode" type="BIOSBootMenuMode">
4111 <desc>Mode of the BIOS boot device menu.</desc>
4112 </attribute>
4113
4114 <attribute name="ACPIEnabled" type="boolean">
4115 <desc>ACPI support flag.</desc>
4116 </attribute>
4117
4118 <attribute name="IOAPICEnabled" type="boolean">
4119 <desc>
4120 IO APIC support flag. If set, VirtualBox will provide an IO APIC
4121 and support IRQs above 15.
4122 </desc>
4123 </attribute>
4124
4125 <attribute name="timeOffset" type="long long">
4126 <desc>
4127 Offset in milliseconds from the host system time. This allows for
4128 guests running with a different system date/time than the host.
4129 It is equivalent to setting the system date/time in the BIOS except
4130 it is not an absolute value but a relative one. Guest Additions
4131 time synchronization honors this offset.
4132 </desc>
4133 </attribute>
4134
4135 <attribute name="PXEDebugEnabled" type="boolean">
4136 <desc>
4137 PXE debug logging flag. If set, VirtualBox will write extensive
4138 PXE trace information to the release log.
4139 </desc>
4140 </attribute>
4141
4142 </interface>
4143
4144 <interface
4145 name="IMachine" extends="$unknown"
4146 uuid="21f56f5d-d0fc-49e5-9ea7-91639278f424"
4147 wsmap="managed"
4148 >
4149 <desc>
4150 The IMachine interface represents a virtual machine, or guest, created
4151 in VirtualBox.
4152
4153 This interface is used in two contexts. First of all, a collection of
4154 objects implementing this interface is stored in the
4155 <link to="IVirtualBox::machines"/> attribute which lists all the virtual
4156 machines that are currently registered with this VirtualBox
4157 installation. Also, once a session has been opened for the given virtual
4158 machine (e.g. the virtual machine is running), the machine object
4159 associated with the open session can be queried from the session object;
4160 see <link to="ISession"/> for details.
4161
4162 The main role of this interface is to expose the settings of the virtual
4163 machine and provide methods to change various aspects of the virtual
4164 machine's configuration. For machine objects stored in the
4165 <link to="IVirtualBox::machines"/> collection, all attributes are
4166 read-only unless explicitly stated otherwise in individual attribute
4167 and method descriptions. In order to change a machine setting, a session
4168 for this machine must be opened using one of
4169 <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/>,
4170 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/> or
4171 <link to="IVirtualBox::openExistingSession"/> methods. After the
4172 session has been successfully opened, a mutable machine object needs to
4173 be queried from the session object and then the desired settings changes
4174 can be applied to the returned object using IMachine attributes and
4175 methods. See the <link to="ISession"/> interface description for more
4176 information about sessions.
4177
4178 Note that IMachine does not provide methods to control virtual machine
4179 execution (such as start the machine, or power it down) -- these methods
4180 are grouped in a separate interface called <link to="IConsole" />.
4181
4182 <see>ISession, IConsole</see>
4183 </desc>
4184
4185 <attribute name="parent" type="IVirtualBox" readonly="yes">
4186 <desc>Associated parent object.</desc>
4187 </attribute>
4188
4189 <attribute name="accessible" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
4190 <desc>
4191 Whether this virtual machine is currently accessible or not.
4192
4193 A machine is always deemed accessible unless it is registered <i>and</i>
4194 its settings file cannot be read or parsed (either because the file itself
4195 is unavailable or has invalid XML contents).
4196
4197 Every time this property is read, the accessibility state of
4198 this machine is re-evaluated. If the returned value is @c false,
4199 the <link to="#accessError"/> property may be used to get the
4200 detailed error information describing the reason of
4201 inaccessibility, including XML error messages.
4202
4203 When the machine is inaccessible, only the following properties
4204 can be used on it:
4205 <ul>
4206 <li><link to="#parent"/></li>
4207 <li><link to="#id"/></li>
4208 <li><link to="#settingsFilePath"/></li>
4209 <li><link to="#accessible"/></li>
4210 <li><link to="#accessError"/></li>
4211 </ul>
4212
4213 An attempt to access any other property or method will return
4214 an error.
4215
4216 The only possible action you can perform on an inaccessible
4217 machine is to unregister it using the
4218 <link to="IVirtualBox::unregisterMachine"/> call (or, to check
4219 for the accessibility state once more by querying this
4220 property).
4221
4222 <note>
4223 In the current implementation, once this property returns
4224 @c true, the machine will never become inaccessible
4225 later, even if its settings file cannot be successfully
4226 read/written any more (at least, until the VirtualBox
4227 server is restarted). This limitation may be removed in
4228 future releases.
4229 </note>
4230 </desc>
4231 </attribute>
4232
4233 <attribute name="accessError" type="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" readonly="yes">
4234 <desc>
4235 Error information describing the reason of machine
4236 inaccessibility.
4237
4238 Reading this property is only valid after the last call to
4239 <link to="#accessible"/> returned @c false (i.e. the
4240 machine is currently unaccessible). Otherwise, a @c null
4241 IVirtualBoxErrorInfo object will be returned.
4242 </desc>
4243 </attribute>
4244
4245 <attribute name="name" type="wstring">
4246 <desc>
4247 Name of the virtual machine.
4248
4249 Besides being used for human-readable identification purposes
4250 everywhere in VirtualBox, the virtual machine name is also used
4251 as a name of the machine's settings file and as a name of the
4252 subdirectory this settings file resides in. Thus, every time you
4253 change the value of this property, the settings file will be
4254 renamed once you call <link to="#saveSettings"/> to confirm the
4255 change. The containing subdirectory will be also renamed, but
4256 only if it has exactly the same name as the settings file
4257 itself prior to changing this property (for backward compatibility
4258 with previous API releases). The above implies the following
4259 limitations:
4260 <ul>
4261 <li>The machine name cannot be empty.</li>
4262 <li>The machine name can contain only characters that are valid
4263 file name characters according to the rules of the file
4264 system used to store VirtualBox configuration.</li>
4265 <li>You cannot have two or more machines with the same name
4266 if they use the same subdirectory for storing the machine
4267 settings files.</li>
4268 <li>You cannot change the name of the machine if it is running,
4269 or if any file in the directory containing the settings file
4270 is being used by another running machine or by any other
4271 process in the host operating system at a time when
4272 <link to="#saveSettings"/> is called.
4273 </li>
4274 </ul>
4275 If any of the above limitations are hit, <link to="#saveSettings"/>
4276 will return an appropriate error message explaining the exact
4277 reason and the changes you made to this machine will not be
4278 saved.
4279 <note>
4280 For "legacy" machines created using the
4281 <link to="IVirtualBox::createLegacyMachine"/> call,
4282 the above naming limitations do not apply because the
4283 machine name does not affect the settings file name.
4284 The settings file name remains the same as it was specified
4285 during machine creation and never changes.
4286 </note>
4287 </desc>
4288 </attribute>
4289
4290 <attribute name="description" type="wstring">
4291 <desc>
4292 Description of the virtual machine.
4293
4294 The description attribute can contain any text and is
4295 typically used to describe the hardware and software
4296 configuration of the virtual machine in detail (i.e. network
4297 settings, versions of the installed software and so on).
4298 </desc>
4299 </attribute>
4300
4301 <attribute name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" readonly="yes">
4302 <desc>UUID of the virtual machine.</desc>
4303 </attribute>
4304
4305 <attribute name="OSTypeId" type="wstring">
4306 <desc>
4307 User-defined identifier of the Guest OS type.
4308 You may use <link to="IVirtualBox::getGuestOSType"/> to obtain
4309 an IGuestOSType object representing details about the given
4310 Guest OS type.
4311 <note>
4312 This value may differ from the value returned by
4313 <link to="IGuest::OSTypeId"/> if Guest Additions are
4314 installed to the guest OS.
4315 </note>
4316 </desc>
4317 </attribute>
4318
4319 <attribute name="HardwareVersion" type="wstring">
4320 <desc>Hardware version identifier. Internal use only for now.</desc>
4321 </attribute>
4322
4323 <attribute name="hardwareUUID" type="uuid" mod="string">
4324 <desc>
4325 The UUID presented to the guest via memory tables, hardware and guest
4326 properties. For most VMs this is the same as the @a id, but for VMs
4327 which have been cloned or teleported it may be the same as the source
4328 VM. This latter is because the guest shouldn't notice that it was
4329 cloned or teleported.
4330 </desc>
4331 </attribute>
4332
4333 <attribute name="CPUCount" type="unsigned long">
4334 <desc>Number of virtual CPUs in the VM.</desc>
4335 </attribute>
4336
4337 <attribute name="CPUHotPlugEnabled" type="boolean">
4338 <desc>
4339 This setting determines whether VirtualBox allows CPU
4340 hotplugging for this machine.</desc>
4341 </attribute>
4342
4343 <attribute name="memorySize" type="unsigned long">
4344 <desc>System memory size in megabytes.</desc>
4345 </attribute>
4346
4347 <attribute name="memoryBalloonSize" type="unsigned long">
4348 <desc>Memory balloon size in megabytes.</desc>
4349 </attribute>
4350
4351 <attribute name="VRAMSize" type="unsigned long">
4352 <desc>Video memory size in megabytes.</desc>
4353 </attribute>
4354
4355 <attribute name="accelerate3DEnabled" type="boolean" default="false">
4356 <desc>
4357 This setting determines whether VirtualBox allows this machine to make
4358 use of the 3D graphics support available on the host.</desc>
4359 </attribute>
4360
4361 <attribute name="accelerate2DVideoEnabled" type="boolean" default="false">
4362 <desc>
4363 This setting determines whether VirtualBox allows this machine to make
4364 use of the 2D video acceleration support available on the host.</desc>
4365 </attribute>
4366
4367 <attribute name="monitorCount" type="unsigned long">
4368 <desc>
4369 Number of virtual monitors.
4370 <note>
4371 Only effective on Windows XP and later guests with
4372 Guest Additions installed.
4373 </note>
4374 </desc>
4375 </attribute>
4376
4377 <attribute name="BIOSSettings" type="IBIOSSettings" readonly="yes">
4378 <desc>Object containing all BIOS settings.</desc>
4379 </attribute>
4380
4381 <attribute name="firmwareType" type="FirmwareType">
4382 <desc>Type of firmware (such as legacy BIOS or EFI), used for initial
4383 bootstrap in this VM.</desc>
4384 </attribute>
4385
4386 <attribute name="pointingHidType" type="PointingHidType">
4387 <desc>Type of pointing HID (such as mouse or tablet) used in this VM.
4388 The default is typically "PS2Mouse" but can vary depending on the
4389 requirements of the guest operating system.</desc>
4390 </attribute>
4391
4392 <attribute name="keyboardHidType" type="KeyboardHidType">
4393 <desc>Type of keyboard HID used in this VM.
4394 The default is typically "PS2Keyboard" but can vary depending on the
4395 requirements of the guest operating system.</desc>
4396 </attribute>
4397
4398 <attribute name="hpetEnabled" type="boolean">
4399 <desc>This attribute controls if High Precision Event Timer (HPET) is
4400 enabled in this VM. Use this property if you want to provide guests
4401 with additional time source, or if guest requires HPET to function correctly.
4402 Default is false.</desc>
4403 </attribute>
4404
4405 <attribute name="snapshotFolder" type="wstring">
4406 <desc>
4407 Full path to the directory used to store snapshot data
4408 (differencing media and saved state files) of this machine.
4409
4410 The initial value of this property is
4411 <tt>&lt;</tt><link to="#settingsFilePath">
4412 path_to_settings_file</link><tt>&gt;/&lt;</tt>
4413 <link to="#id">machine_uuid</link>
4414 <tt>&gt;</tt>.
4415
4416 Currently, it is an error to try to change this property on
4417 a machine that has snapshots (because this would require to
4418 move possibly large files to a different location).
4419 A separate method will be available for this purpose later.
4420
4421 <note>
4422 Setting this property to @c null or to an empty string will restore
4423 the initial value.
4424 </note>
4425 <note>
4426 When setting this property, the specified path can be
4427 absolute (full path) or relative to the directory where the
4428 <link to="#settingsFilePath">machine settings file</link>
4429 is located. When reading this property, a full path is
4430 always returned.
4431 </note>
4432 <note>
4433 The specified path may not exist, it will be created
4434 when necessary.
4435 </note>
4436 </desc>
4437 </attribute>
4438
4439 <attribute name="VRDPServer" type="IVRDPServer" readonly="yes">
4440 <desc>VRDP server object.</desc>
4441 </attribute>
4442
4443 <attribute name="mediumAttachments" type="IMediumAttachment" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
4444 <desc>Array of media attached to this machine.</desc>
4445 </attribute>
4446
4447 <attribute name="USBController" type="IUSBController" readonly="yes">
4448 <desc>
4449 Associated USB controller object.
4450
4451 <note>
4452 If USB functionality is not available in the given edition of
4453 VirtualBox, this method will set the result code to @c E_NOTIMPL.
4454 </note>
4455 </desc>
4456 </attribute>
4457
4458 <attribute name="audioAdapter" type="IAudioAdapter" readonly="yes">
4459 <desc>Associated audio adapter, always present.</desc>
4460 </attribute>
4461
4462 <attribute name="storageControllers" type="IStorageController" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
4463 <desc>Array of storage controllers attached to this machine.</desc>
4464 </attribute>
4465
4466 <attribute name="settingsFilePath" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
4467 <desc>
4468 Full name of the file containing machine settings data.
4469 </desc>
4470 </attribute>
4471
4472 <attribute name="settingsModified" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
4473 <desc>
4474 Whether the settings of this machine have been modified
4475 (but neither yet saved nor discarded).
4476 <note>
4477 Reading this property is only valid on instances returned
4478 by <link to="ISession::machine"/> and on new machines
4479 created by <link to="IVirtualBox::createMachine"/> or opened
4480 by <link to="IVirtualBox::openMachine"/> but not
4481 yet registered, or on unregistered machines after calling
4482 <link to="IVirtualBox::unregisterMachine"/>. For all other
4483 cases, the settings can never be modified.
4484 </note>
4485 <note>
4486 For newly created unregistered machines, the value of this
4487 property is always @c true until <link to="#saveSettings"/>
4488 is called (no matter if any machine settings have been
4489 changed after the creation or not). For opened machines
4490 the value is set to @c false (and then follows to normal rules).
4491 </note>
4492 </desc>
4493 </attribute>
4494
4495 <attribute name="sessionState" type="SessionState" readonly="yes">
4496 <desc>Current session state for this machine.</desc>
4497 </attribute>
4498
4499 <attribute name="sessionType" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
4500 <desc>
4501 Type of the session. If <link to="#sessionState"/> is
4502 SessionSpawning or SessionOpen, this attribute contains the
4503 same value as passed to the
4504 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/> method in the
4505 @a type parameter. If the session was opened directly using
4506 <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/>, or if
4507 <link to="#sessionState"/> is SessionClosed, the value of this
4508 attribute is an empty string.
4509 </desc>
4510 </attribute>
4511
4512 <attribute name="sessionPid" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
4513 <desc>
4514 Identifier of the session process. This attribute contains the
4515 platform-dependent identifier of the process that has opened a
4516 direct session for this machine using the
4517 <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/> call. The returned value
4518 is only valid if <link to="#sessionState"/> is SessionOpen or
4519 SessionClosing (i.e. a session is currently open or being
4520 closed) by the time this property is read.
4521 </desc>
4522 </attribute>
4523
4524 <attribute name="state" type="MachineState" readonly="yes">
4525 <desc>Current execution state of this machine.</desc>
4526 </attribute>
4527
4528 <attribute name="lastStateChange" type="long long" readonly="yes">
4529 <desc>
4530 Time stamp of the last execution state change,
4531 in milliseconds since 1970-01-01 UTC.
4532 </desc>
4533 </attribute>
4534
4535 <attribute name="stateFilePath" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
4536 <desc>
4537 Full path to the file that stores the execution state of
4538 the machine when it is in the <link to="MachineState_Saved"/> state.
4539 <note>
4540 When the machine is not in the Saved state, this attribute is
4541 an empty string.
4542 </note>
4543 </desc>
4544 </attribute>
4545
4546 <attribute name="logFolder" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
4547 <desc>
4548 Full path to the folder that stores a set of rotated log files
4549 recorded during machine execution. The most recent log file is
4550 named <tt>VBox.log</tt>, the previous log file is
4551 named <tt>VBox.log.1</tt> and so on (up to <tt>VBox.log.3</tt>
4552 in the current version).
4553 </desc>
4554 </attribute>
4555
4556 <attribute name="currentSnapshot" type="ISnapshot" readonly="yes">
4557 <desc>
4558 Current snapshot of this machine. This is @c null if the machine
4559 currently has no snapshots. If it is not @c null, then it was
4560 set by one of <link to="Console::takeSnapshot" />,
4561 <link to="Console::deleteSnapshot" />
4562 or <link to="Console::restoreSnapshot" />, depending on which
4563 was called last. See <link to="ISnapshot"/> for details.
4564 </desc>
4565 </attribute>
4566
4567 <attribute name="snapshotCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
4568 <desc>
4569 Number of snapshots taken on this machine. Zero means the
4570 machine doesn't have any snapshots.
4571 </desc>
4572 </attribute>
4573
4574 <attribute name="currentStateModified" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
4575 <desc>
4576 Returns @c true if the current state of the machine is not
4577 identical to the state stored in the current snapshot.
4578
4579 The current state is identical to the current snapshot only
4580 directly after one of the following calls are made:
4581
4582 <ul>
4583 <li><link to="IConsole::restoreSnapshot"/>
4584 </li>
4585 <li><link to="IConsole::takeSnapshot"/> (issued on a
4586 "powered off" or "saved" machine, for which
4587 <link to="#settingsModified"/> returns @c false)
4588 </li>
4589 <li><link to="IMachine::setCurrentSnapshot"/>
4590 </li>
4591 </ul>
4592
4593 The current state remains identical until one of the following
4594 happens:
4595 <ul>
4596 <li>settings of the machine are changed</li>
4597 <li>the saved state is deleted</li>
4598 <li>the current snapshot is deleted</li>
4599 <li>an attempt to execute the machine is made</li>
4600 </ul>
4601
4602 <note>
4603 For machines that don't have snapshots, this property is
4604 always @c false.
4605 </note>
4606 </desc>
4607 </attribute>
4608
4609 <attribute name="sharedFolders" type="ISharedFolder" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
4610 <desc>
4611 Collection of shared folders for this machine (permanent shared
4612 folders). These folders are shared automatically at machine startup
4613 and available only to the guest OS installed within this machine.
4614
4615 New shared folders are added to the collection using
4616 <link to="#createSharedFolder"/>. Existing shared folders can be
4617 removed using <link to="#removeSharedFolder"/>.
4618 </desc>
4619 </attribute>
4620
4621 <attribute name="clipboardMode" type="ClipboardMode">
4622 <desc>
4623 Synchronization mode between the host OS clipboard
4624 and the guest OS clipboard.
4625 </desc>
4626 </attribute>
4627
4628 <attribute name="guestPropertyNotificationPatterns" type="wstring">
4629 <desc>
4630 A comma-separated list of simple glob patterns. Changes to guest
4631 properties whose name matches one of the patterns will generate an
4632 <link to="IVirtualBoxCallback::onGuestPropertyChange"/> signal.
4633 </desc>
4634 </attribute>
4635
4636 <attribute name="teleporterEnabled" type="boolean">
4637 <desc>
4638 When set to @a true, the virtual machine becomes a target teleporter
4639 the next time it is powered on. This can only set to @a true when the
4640 VM is in the @a PoweredOff or @a Aborted state.
4641
4642 <!-- This property is automatically set to @a false when the VM is powered
4643 on. (bird: This doesn't work yet ) -->
4644 </desc>
4645 </attribute>
4646
4647 <attribute name="teleporterPort" type="unsigned long">
4648 <desc>
4649 The TCP port the target teleporter will listen for incoming
4650 teleportations on.
4651
4652 0 means the port is automatically selected upon power on. The actual
4653 value can be read from this property while the machine is waiting for
4654 incoming teleportations.
4655 </desc>
4656 </attribute>
4657
4658 <attribute name="teleporterAddress" type="wstring">
4659 <desc>
4660 The address the target teleporter will listen on. If set to an empty
4661 string, it will listen on all addresses.
4662 </desc>
4663 </attribute>
4664
4665 <attribute name="teleporterPassword" type="wstring">
4666 <desc>
4667 The password the to check for on the target teleporter. This is just a
4668 very basic measure to prevent simple hacks and operators accidentally
4669 beaming a virtual machine to the wrong place.
4670 </desc>
4671 </attribute>
4672
4673 <attribute name="RTCUseUTC" type="boolean">
4674 <desc>
4675 When set to @a true, the RTC device of the virtual machine will run
4676 in UTC time, otherwise in local time. Especially Unix guests prefer
4677 the time in UTC.
4678 </desc>
4679 </attribute>
4680
4681 <attribute name="ioMgr" type="IoMgrType">
4682 <desc>
4683 Selects the I/O manager to use for the virtual machine.
4684 </desc>
4685 </attribute>
4686
4687 <attribute name="ioBackend" type="IoBackendType">
4688 <desc>
4689 Selects the I/O backend to use for the virtual machine.
4690 </desc>
4691 </attribute>
4692
4693 <attribute name="ioCacheEnabled" type="boolean">
4694 <desc>
4695 When set to @a true, the builtin I/O cache of the virtual machine
4696 will be enabled.
4697 </desc>
4698 </attribute>
4699
4700 <attribute name="ioCacheSize" type="unsigned long">
4701 <desc>
4702 Maximum size of the I/O cache in MB.
4703 </desc>
4704 </attribute>
4705
4706 <attribute name="ioBandwidthMax" type="unsigned long">
4707 <desc>
4708 The maximum number of MB the VM is allowed to transfer per second.
4709 0 means unlimited bandwidth.
4710 </desc>
4711 </attribute>
4712
4713 <method name="setBootOrder">
4714 <desc>
4715 Puts the given device to the specified position in
4716 the boot order.
4717
4718 To indicate that no device is associated with the given position,
4719 <link to="DeviceType_Null"/> should be used.
4720
4721 @todo setHardDiskBootOrder(), setNetworkBootOrder()
4722
4723 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
4724 Boot @a position out of range.
4725 </result>
4726 <result name="E_NOTIMPL">
4727 Booting from USB @a device currently not supported.
4728 </result>
4729
4730 </desc>
4731 <param name="position" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
4732 <desc>
4733 Position in the boot order (@c 1 to the total number of
4734 devices the machine can boot from, as returned by
4735 <link to="ISystemProperties::maxBootPosition"/>).
4736 </desc>
4737 </param>
4738 <param name="device" type="DeviceType" dir="in">
4739 <desc>
4740 The type of the device used to boot at the given position.
4741 </desc>
4742 </param>
4743 </method>
4744
4745 <method name="getBootOrder" const="yes">
4746 <desc>
4747 Returns the device type that occupies the specified
4748 position in the boot order.
4749
4750 @todo [remove?]
4751 If the machine can have more than one device of the returned type
4752 (such as hard disks), then a separate method should be used to
4753 retrieve the individual device that occupies the given position.
4754
4755 If here are no devices at the given position, then
4756 <link to="DeviceType_Null"/> is returned.
4757
4758 @todo getHardDiskBootOrder(), getNetworkBootOrder()
4759
4760 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
4761 Boot @a position out of range.
4762 </result>
4763
4764 </desc>
4765 <param name="position" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
4766 <desc>
4767 Position in the boot order (@c 1 to the total number of
4768 devices the machine can boot from, as returned by
4769 <link to="ISystemProperties::maxBootPosition"/>).
4770 </desc>
4771 </param>
4772 <param name="device" type="DeviceType" dir="return">
4773 <desc>
4774 Device at the given position.
4775 </desc>
4776 </param>
4777 </method>
4778
4779 <method name="attachDevice">
4780 <desc>
4781 Attaches a device and optionally mounts a medium to the given storage
4782 controller (<link to="IStorageController" />, identified by @a name),
4783 at the indicated port and device.
4784
4785 This method is intended for managing storage devices in general (it works
4786 for both fixed and removable media). For storage devices supporting removable
4787 media (such as DVDs and floppies), you can also use <link to="IMedium::mountMedium"/>
4788 for changing the media while the machine is running.
4789
4790 For the IDE bus, the @a controllerPort parameter can be either
4791 @c 0 or @c 1, to specify the primary or secondary IDE controller,
4792 respectively. For each of these, @a device can then be either @c 0 or @c 1,
4793 to specify the master or the slave device, respectively. (In the
4794 default configuration of virtual machines, the secondary master is
4795 used for a CD/DVD drive.)
4796
4797 For an SATA controller, @a controllerPort must be a number ranging
4798 from @c 0 to @c 29. For a SCSI controller, @a controllerPort must
4799 be a number ranging from @c 0 to @c 15.
4800
4801 For both SCSI and SATA, the @a device parameter is unused and must
4802 be @c 0.
4803
4804 For fixed media such as hard disks, the given medium identifier cannot
4805 be a zero UUID. It may be a zero UUID for removable media such as DVDs
4806 and floppies.
4807
4808 After calling this returns successfully, a new instance of
4809 <link to="IMediumAttachment"/> will appear in the machine's list of medium
4810 attachments (<link to="IMachine::mediumAttachments"/>).
4811
4812 The specified device slot must not have a device attached to it,
4813 or this method will fail.
4814
4815 See <link to="IMedium"/> and <link to="IMediumAttachment"/> for more
4816 information about attaching media.
4817
4818 <note>
4819 You cannot attach a device to a running machine. Also, you cannot
4820 attach a device to a newly created machine until this machine's
4821 settings are saved to disk using <link to="#saveSettings"/>.
4822 </note>
4823 <note>
4824 If the medium is being attached indirectly, a new differencing medium
4825 will implicitly be created for it and attached instead. If the
4826 changes made to the machine settings (including this indirect
4827 attachment) are later cancelled using <link to="#discardSettings"/>,
4828 this implicitly created differencing medium will implicitly
4829 be deleted.
4830 </note>
4831
4832 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
4833 SATA device, SATA port, IDE port or IDE slot out of range.
4834 </result>
4835 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
4836 Attempt to attach medium to an unregistered virtual machine.
4837 </result>
4838 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
4839 Invalid machine state.
4840 </result>
4841 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_IN_USE">
4842 Hard disk already attached to this or another virtual machine.
4843 </result>
4844
4845 </desc>
4846 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
4847 <desc>Name of the storage controller to attach the device to.</desc>
4848 </param>
4849 <param name="controllerPort" type="long" dir="in">
4850 <desc>Port to attach the device to.</desc>
4851 </param>
4852 <param name="device" type="long" dir="in">
4853 <desc>Device slot in the given port to attach the device to.</desc>
4854 </param>
4855 <param name="type" type="DeviceType" dir="in">
4856 <desc>Device type of the attached device.</desc>
4857 </param>
4858 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
4859 <desc>UUID of the medium to mount. Zero UUID means do not mount any
4860 medium.</desc>
4861 </param>
4862 </method>
4863
4864 <method name="detachDevice">
4865 <desc>
4866 Detaches the device attached to a device slot of the specified bus.
4867
4868 Detaching the device from the virtual machine is deferred. This means
4869 that the medium remains associated with the machine when this method
4870 returns and gets actually de-associated only after a successful
4871 <link to="#saveSettings"/> call. See <link to="IMedium"/>
4872 for more detailed information about attaching media.
4873
4874 <note>
4875 You cannot detach a device from a running machine.
4876 </note>
4877 <note>
4878 Detaching differencing media implicitly created by <link
4879 to="#attachDevice"/> for the indirect attachment using this
4880 method will <b>not</b> implicitly delete them. The
4881 <link to="IMedium::deleteStorage"/> operation should be
4882 explicitly performed by the caller after the medium is successfully
4883 detached and the settings are saved with
4884 <link to="#saveSettings"/>, if it is the desired action.
4885 </note>
4886
4887 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
4888 Attempt to detach medium from a running virtual machine.
4889 </result>
4890 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
4891 No medium attached to given slot/bus.
4892 </result>
4893 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED">
4894 Medium format does not support storage deletion.
4895 </result>
4896
4897 </desc>
4898 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
4899 <desc>Name of the storage controller to detach the medium from.</desc>
4900 </param>
4901 <param name="controllerPort" type="long" dir="in">
4902 <desc>Port number to detach the medium from.</desc>
4903 </param>
4904 <param name="device" type="long" dir="in">
4905 <desc>Device slot number to detach the medium from.</desc>
4906 </param>
4907 </method>
4908
4909 <method name="passthroughDevice">
4910 <desc>
4911 Sets the passthrough mode of an existing DVD device. Changing the
4912 setting while the VM is running is forbidden. The setting is only used
4913 if at VM start the device is configured as a host DVD drive, in all
4914 other cases it is ignored. The device must already exist; see
4915 <link to="IMachine::attachDevice"/> for how to attach a new device.
4916
4917 The @a controllerPort and @a device parameters specify the device slot and
4918 have have the same meaning as with <link to="IMachine::attachDevice" />.
4919
4920 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
4921 SATA device, SATA port, IDE port or IDE slot out of range.
4922 </result>
4923 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
4924 Attempt to modify an unregistered virtual machine.
4925 </result>
4926 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
4927 Invalid machine state.
4928 </result>
4929
4930 </desc>
4931 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
4932 <desc>Name of the storage controller.</desc>
4933 </param>
4934 <param name="controllerPort" type="long" dir="in">
4935 <desc>Storage controller port.</desc>
4936 </param>
4937 <param name="device" type="long" dir="in">
4938 <desc>Device slot in the given port.</desc>
4939 </param>
4940 <param name="passthrough" type="boolean" dir="in">
4941 <desc>New value for the passthrough setting.</desc>
4942 </param>
4943 </method>
4944
4945 <method name="mountMedium">
4946 <desc>
4947 Mounts a medium (<link to="IMedium" />, identified
4948 by the given UUID @a id) to the given storage controller
4949 (<link to="IStorageController" />, identified by @a name),
4950 at the indicated port and device. The device must already exist;
4951 see <link to="IMachine::attachDevice"/> for how to attach a new device.
4952
4953 This method is intended only for managing removable media, where the
4954 device is fixed but media is changeable at runtime (such as DVDs
4955 and floppies). It cannot be used for fixed media such as hard disks.
4956
4957 The @a controllerPort and @a device parameters specify the device slot and
4958 have have the same meaning as with <link to="IMachine::attachDevice" />.
4959
4960 The specified device slot can have a medium mounted, which will be
4961 unmounted first. Specifying a zero UUID (or an empty string) for
4962 @a medium does just an unmount.
4963
4964 See <link to="IMedium"/> for more detailed information about
4965 attaching media.
4966
4967 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
4968 SATA device, SATA port, IDE port or IDE slot out of range.
4969 </result>
4970 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
4971 Attempt to attach medium to an unregistered virtual machine.
4972 </result>
4973 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
4974 Invalid machine state.
4975 </result>
4976 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_IN_USE">
4977 Medium already attached to this or another virtual machine.
4978 </result>
4979
4980 </desc>
4981 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
4982 <desc>Name of the storage controller to attach the medium to.</desc>
4983 </param>
4984 <param name="controllerPort" type="long" dir="in">
4985 <desc>Port to attach the medium to.</desc>
4986 </param>
4987 <param name="device" type="long" dir="in">
4988 <desc>Device slot in the given port to attach the medium to.</desc>
4989 </param>
4990 <param name="medium" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
4991 <desc>UUID of the medium to attach. A zero UUID means unmount the
4992 currently mounted medium.</desc>
4993 </param>
4994 <param name="force" type="boolean" dir="in">
4995 <desc>Allows to force unmount/mount of a medium which is locked by
4996 theDevice slot in the given port to attach the medium to.</desc>
4997 </param>
4998 </method>
4999
5000 <method name="getMedium" const="yes">
5001 <desc>
5002 Returns the virtual medium attached to a device slot of the specified
5003 bus.
5004
5005 Note that if the medium was indirectly attached by
5006 <link to="#mountMedium"/> to the given device slot then this
5007 method will return not the same object as passed to the
5008 <link to="#mountMedium"/> call. See <link to="IMedium"/> for
5009 more detailed information about mounting a medium.
5010
5011 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5012 No medium attached to given slot/bus.
5013 </result>
5014
5015 </desc>
5016 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
5017 <desc>Name of the storage controller the medium is attached to.</desc>
5018 </param>
5019 <param name="controllerPort" type="long" dir="in">
5020 <desc>Port to query.</desc>
5021 </param>
5022 <param name="device" type="long" dir="in">
5023 <desc>Device slot in the given port to query.</desc>
5024 </param>
5025 <param name="medium" type="IMedium" dir="return">
5026 <desc>Attached medium object.</desc>
5027 </param>
5028 </method>
5029
5030 <method name="getMediumAttachmentsOfController" const="yes">
5031 <desc>
5032 Returns an array of medium attachments which are attached to the
5033 the controller with the given name.
5034
5035 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5036 A storage controller with given name doesn't exist.
5037 </result>
5038 </desc>
5039 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
5040 <param name="mediumAttachments" type="IMediumAttachment" safearray="yes" dir="return"/>
5041 </method>
5042
5043 <method name="getMediumAttachment" const="yes">
5044 <desc>
5045 Returns a medium attachment which corresponds to the controller with
5046 the given name, on the given port and device slot.
5047
5048 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5049 No attachment exists for the given controller/port/device combination.
5050 </result>
5051 </desc>
5052 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
5053 <param name="controllerPort" type="long" dir="in"/>
5054 <param name="device" type="long" dir="in"/>
5055 <param name="attachment" type="IMediumAttachment" dir="return"/>
5056 </method>
5057
5058 <method name="getNetworkAdapter" const="yes">
5059 <desc>
5060 Returns the network adapter associated with the given slot.
5061 Slots are numbered sequentially, starting with zero. The total
5062 number of adapters per machine is defined by the
5063 <link to="ISystemProperties::networkAdapterCount"/> property,
5064 so the maximum slot number is one less than that property's value.
5065
5066 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5067 Invalid @a slot number.
5068 </result>
5069
5070 </desc>
5071 <param name="slot" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
5072 <param name="adapter" type="INetworkAdapter" dir="return"/>
5073 </method>
5074
5075 <method name="addStorageController">
5076 <desc>
5077 Adds a new storage controller (SCSI or SATA controller) to the
5078 machine and returns it as an instance of
5079 <link to="IStorageController" />.
5080
5081 @a name identifies the controller for subsequent calls such as
5082 <link to="#getStorageControllerByName" />,
5083 <link to="#getStorageControllerByInstance" />,
5084 <link to="#removeStorageController" />,
5085 <link to="#attachDevice" /> or <link to="#mountMedium" />.
5086
5087 After the controller has been added, you can set its exact
5088 type by setting the <link to="IStorageController::controllerType" />.
5089
5090 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_IN_USE">
5091 A storage controller with given name exists already.
5092 </result>
5093 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5094 Invalid @a controllerType.
5095 </result>
5096 </desc>
5097 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
5098 <param name="connectionType" type="StorageBus" dir="in"/>
5099 <param name="controller" type="IStorageController" dir="return"/>
5100 </method>
5101
5102 <method name="getStorageControllerByName" const="yes">
5103 <desc>
5104 Returns a storage controller with the given name.
5105
5106 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5107 A storage controller with given name doesn't exist.
5108 </result>
5109 </desc>
5110 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
5111 <param name="storageController" type="IStorageController" dir="return"/>
5112 </method>
5113
5114 <method name="getStorageControllerByInstance" const="yes">
5115 <desc>
5116 Returns a storage controller with the given instance number.
5117
5118 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5119 A storage controller with given instance number doesn't exist.
5120 </result>
5121 </desc>
5122 <param name="instance" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
5123 <param name="storageController" type="IStorageController" dir="return"/>
5124 </method>
5125
5126 <method name="removeStorageController">
5127 <desc>
5128 Removes a storage controller from the machine.
5129
5130 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5131 A storage controller with given name doesn't exist.
5132 </result>
5133 </desc>
5134 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
5135 </method>
5136
5137 <method name="getSerialPort" const="yes">
5138 <desc>
5139 Returns the serial port associated with the given slot.
5140 Slots are numbered sequentially, starting with zero. The total
5141 number of serial ports per machine is defined by the
5142 <link to="ISystemProperties::serialPortCount"/> property,
5143 so the maximum slot number is one less than that property's value.
5144
5145 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5146 Invalid @a slot number.
5147 </result>
5148
5149 </desc>
5150 <param name="slot" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
5151 <param name="port" type="ISerialPort" dir="return"/>
5152 </method>
5153
5154 <method name="getParallelPort" const="yes">
5155 <desc>
5156 Returns the parallel port associated with the given slot.
5157 Slots are numbered sequentially, starting with zero. The total
5158 number of parallel ports per machine is defined by the
5159 <link to="ISystemProperties::parallelPortCount"/> property,
5160 so the maximum slot number is one less than that property's value.
5161
5162 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5163 Invalid @a slot number.
5164 </result>
5165
5166 </desc>
5167 <param name="slot" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
5168 <param name="port" type="IParallelPort" dir="return"/>
5169 </method>
5170
5171 <method name="getExtraDataKeys">
5172 <desc>
5173 Returns an array representing the machine-specific extra data keys
5174 which currently have values defined.
5175 </desc>
5176 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="return" safearray="yes">
5177 <desc>Array of extra data keys.</desc>
5178 </param>
5179 </method>
5180
5181 <method name="getExtraData">
5182 <desc>
5183 Returns associated machine-specific extra data.
5184
5185 If the requested data @a key does not exist, this function will
5186 succeed and return an empty string in the @a value argument.
5187
5188 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
5189 Settings file not accessible.
5190 </result>
5191 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR">
5192 Could not parse the settings file.
5193 </result>
5194
5195 </desc>
5196 <param name="key" type="wstring" dir="in">
5197 <desc>Name of the data key to get.</desc>
5198 </param>
5199 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="return">
5200 <desc>Value of the requested data key.</desc>
5201 </param>
5202 </method>
5203
5204 <method name="setExtraData">
5205 <desc>
5206 Sets associated machine-specific extra data.
5207
5208 If you pass @c null or an empty string as a key @a value, the given
5209 @a key will be deleted.
5210
5211 <note>
5212 Before performing the actual data change, this method will ask all
5213 registered callbacks using the
5214 <link to="IVirtualBoxCallback::onExtraDataCanChange"/>
5215 notification for a permission. If one of the callbacks refuses the
5216 new value, the change will not be performed.
5217 </note>
5218 <note>
5219 On success, the
5220 <link to="IVirtualBoxCallback::onExtraDataChange"/> notification
5221 is called to inform all registered callbacks about a successful data
5222 change.
5223 </note>
5224 <note>
5225 This method can be called outside the machine session and therefore
5226 it's a caller's responsibility to handle possible race conditions
5227 when several clients change the same key at the same time.
5228 </note>
5229
5230 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
5231 Settings file not accessible.
5232 </result>
5233 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR">
5234 Could not parse the settings file.
5235 </result>
5236
5237 </desc>
5238 <param name="key" type="wstring" dir="in">
5239 <desc>Name of the data key to set.</desc>
5240 </param>
5241 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
5242 <desc>Value to assign to the key.</desc>
5243 </param>
5244 </method>
5245
5246 <method name="getCPUProperty" const="yes">
5247 <desc>
5248 Returns the virtual CPU boolean value of the specified property.
5249
5250 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5251 Invalid property.
5252 </result>
5253
5254 </desc>
5255 <param name="property" type="CPUPropertyType" dir="in">
5256 <desc>
5257 Property type to query.
5258 </desc>
5259 </param>
5260 <param name="value" type="boolean" dir="return">
5261 <desc>
5262 Property value.
5263 </desc>
5264 </param>
5265 </method>
5266
5267 <method name="setCPUProperty">
5268 <desc>
5269 Sets the virtual CPU boolean value of the specified property.
5270
5271 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5272 Invalid property.
5273 </result>
5274
5275 </desc>
5276 <param name="property" type="CPUPropertyType" dir="in">
5277 <desc>
5278 Property type to query.
5279 </desc>
5280 </param>
5281 <param name="value" type="boolean" dir="in">
5282 <desc>
5283 Property value.
5284 </desc>
5285 </param>
5286 </method>
5287
5288 <method name="getCPUIDLeaf" const="yes">
5289 <desc>
5290 Returns the virtual CPU cpuid information for the specified leaf.
5291
5292 Currently supported index values for cpuid:
5293 Standard CPUID leafs: 0 - 0xA
5294 Extended CPUID leafs: 0x80000000 - 0x8000000A
5295
5296 See the Intel and AMD programmer's manuals for detailed information
5297 about the cpuid instruction and its leafs.
5298 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5299 Invalid id.
5300 </result>
5301
5302 </desc>
5303 <param name="id" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5304 <desc>
5305 CPUID leaf index.
5306 </desc>
5307 </param>
5308 <param name="valEax" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5309 <desc>
5310 CPUID leaf value for register eax.
5311 </desc>
5312 </param>
5313 <param name="valEbx" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5314 <desc>
5315 CPUID leaf value for register ebx.
5316 </desc>
5317 </param>
5318 <param name="valEcx" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5319 <desc>
5320 CPUID leaf value for register ecx.
5321 </desc>
5322 </param>
5323 <param name="valEdx" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5324 <desc>
5325 CPUID leaf value for register edx.
5326 </desc>
5327 </param>
5328 </method>
5329
5330 <method name="setCPUIDLeaf" const="yes">
5331 <desc>
5332 Sets the virtual CPU cpuid information for the specified leaf. Note that these values
5333 are not passed unmodified. VirtualBox clears features that it doesn't support.
5334
5335 Currently supported index values for cpuid:
5336 Standard CPUID leafs: 0 - 0xA
5337 Extended CPUID leafs: 0x80000000 - 0x8000000A
5338
5339 See the Intel and AMD programmer's manuals for detailed information
5340 about the cpuid instruction and its leafs.
5341
5342 Do not use this method unless you know exactly what you're doing. Misuse can lead to
5343 random crashes inside VMs.
5344 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5345 Invalid id.
5346 </result>
5347
5348 </desc>
5349 <param name="id" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5350 <desc>
5351 CPUID leaf index.
5352 </desc>
5353 </param>
5354 <param name="valEax" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5355 <desc>
5356 CPUID leaf value for register eax.
5357 </desc>
5358 </param>
5359 <param name="valEbx" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5360 <desc>
5361 CPUID leaf value for register ebx.
5362 </desc>
5363 </param>
5364 <param name="valEcx" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5365 <desc>
5366 CPUID leaf value for register ecx.
5367 </desc>
5368 </param>
5369 <param name="valEdx" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5370 <desc>
5371 CPUID leaf value for register edx.
5372 </desc>
5373 </param>
5374 </method>
5375
5376 <method name="removeCPUIDLeaf" const="yes">
5377 <desc>
5378 Removes the virtual CPU cpuid leaf for the specified index
5379
5380 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5381 Invalid id.
5382 </result>
5383
5384 </desc>
5385 <param name="id" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5386 <desc>
5387 CPUID leaf index.
5388 </desc>
5389 </param>
5390 </method>
5391
5392 <method name="removeAllCPUIDLeaves" const="yes">
5393 <desc>
5394 Removes all the virtual CPU cpuid leaves
5395 </desc>
5396 </method>
5397
5398 <method name="getHWVirtExProperty" const="yes">
5399 <desc>
5400 Returns the value of the specified hardware virtualization boolean property.
5401
5402 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5403 Invalid property.
5404 </result>
5405
5406 </desc>
5407 <param name="property" type="HWVirtExPropertyType" dir="in">
5408 <desc>
5409 Property type to query.
5410 </desc>
5411 </param>
5412 <param name="value" type="boolean" dir="return">
5413 <desc>
5414 Property value.
5415 </desc>
5416 </param>
5417 </method>
5418
5419 <method name="setHWVirtExProperty">
5420 <desc>
5421 Sets a new value for the specified hardware virtualization boolean property.
5422
5423 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5424 Invalid property.
5425 </result>
5426
5427 </desc>
5428 <param name="property" type="HWVirtExPropertyType" dir="in">
5429 <desc>
5430 Property type to set.
5431 </desc>
5432 </param>
5433 <param name="value" type="boolean" dir="in">
5434 <desc>
5435 New property value.
5436 </desc>
5437 </param>
5438 </method>
5439
5440 <method name="saveSettings">
5441 <desc>
5442 Saves any changes to machine settings made since the session
5443 has been opened or a new machine has been created, or since the
5444 last call to <link to="#saveSettings"/> or <link to="#discardSettings"/>.
5445 For registered machines, new settings become visible to all
5446 other VirtualBox clients after successful invocation of this
5447 method.
5448 <note>
5449 The method sends <link to="IVirtualBoxCallback::onMachineDataChange"/>
5450 notification event after the configuration has been successfully
5451 saved (only for registered machines).
5452 </note>
5453 <note>
5454 Calling this method is only valid on instances returned
5455 by <link to="ISession::machine"/> and on new machines
5456 created by <link to="IVirtualBox::createMachine"/> but not
5457 yet registered, or on unregistered machines after calling
5458 <link to="IVirtualBox::unregisterMachine"/>.
5459 </note>
5460
5461 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
5462 Settings file not accessible.
5463 </result>
5464 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR">
5465 Could not parse the settings file.
5466 </result>
5467 <result name="E_ACCESSDENIED">
5468 Modification request refused.
5469 </result>
5470
5471 </desc>
5472 </method>
5473
5474 <method name="discardSettings">
5475 <desc>
5476 Discards any changes to the machine settings made since the session
5477 has been opened or since the last call to <link to="#saveSettings"/>
5478 or <link to="#discardSettings"/>.
5479 <note>
5480 Calling this method is only valid on instances returned
5481 by <link to="ISession::machine"/> and on new machines
5482 created by <link to="IVirtualBox::createMachine"/> or
5483 opened by <link to="IVirtualBox::openMachine"/> but not
5484 yet registered, or on unregistered machines after calling
5485 <link to="IVirtualBox::unregisterMachine"/>.
5486 </note>
5487
5488 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5489 Virtual machine is not mutable.
5490 </result>
5491
5492 </desc>
5493 </method>
5494
5495 <method name="deleteSettings">
5496 <desc>
5497 Deletes the settings file of this machine from disk.
5498 The machine must not be registered in order for this operation
5499 to succeed.
5500 <note>
5501 <link to="#settingsModified"/> will return @c true after this
5502 method successfully returns.
5503 </note>
5504 <note>
5505 Calling this method is only valid on instances returned
5506 by <link to="ISession::machine"/> and on new machines
5507 created by <link to="IVirtualBox::createMachine"/> or
5508 opened by <link to="IVirtualBox::openMachine"/> but not
5509 yet registered, or on unregistered machines after calling
5510 <link to="IVirtualBox::unregisterMachine"/>.
5511 </note>
5512 <note>
5513 The deleted machine settings file can be restored (saved again)
5514 by calling <link to="#saveSettings"/>.
5515 </note>
5516
5517 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5518 Cannot delete settings of a registered machine or
5519 machine not mutable.
5520 </result>
5521 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
5522 Could not delete the settings file.
5523 </result>
5524
5525 </desc>
5526 </method>
5527
5528 <method name="export">
5529 <desc>Exports the machine to an OVF appliance. See <link to="IAppliance" /> for the
5530 steps required to export VirtualBox machines to OVF.
5531 </desc>
5532
5533 <param name="aAppliance" type="IAppliance" dir="in">
5534 <desc>Appliance to export this machine to.</desc>
5535 </param>
5536 <param name="aDescription" type="IVirtualSystemDescription" dir="return">
5537 <desc>VirtualSystemDescription object which is created for this machine.</desc>
5538 </param>
5539 </method >
5540
5541 <method name="getSnapshot">
5542 <desc>
5543 Returns a snapshot of this machine with the given UUID.
5544 A @c null UUID can be used to obtain the first snapshot
5545 taken on this machine. This is useful if you want to traverse
5546 the whole tree of snapshots starting from the root.
5547
5548 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5549 Virtual machine has no snapshots or snapshot not found.
5550 </result>
5551
5552 </desc>
5553 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
5554 <desc>UUID of the snapshot to get</desc>
5555 </param>
5556 <param name="snapshot" type="ISnapshot" dir="return">
5557 <desc>Snapshot object with the given UUID.</desc>
5558 </param>
5559 </method>
5560
5561 <method name="findSnapshot">
5562 <desc>
5563 Returns a snapshot of this machine with the given name.
5564
5565 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5566 Virtual machine has no snapshots or snapshot not found.
5567 </result>
5568
5569 </desc>
5570 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
5571 <desc>Name of the snapshot to find</desc>
5572 </param>
5573 <param name="snapshot" type="ISnapshot" dir="return">
5574 <desc>Snapshot object with the given name.</desc>
5575 </param>
5576 </method>
5577
5578 <method name="setCurrentSnapshot">
5579 <desc>
5580 Sets the current snapshot of this machine.
5581 <note>
5582 In the current implementation, this operation is not
5583 implemented.
5584 </note>
5585 </desc>
5586 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
5587 <desc>UUID of the snapshot to set as the current snapshot.</desc>
5588 </param>
5589 </method>
5590
5591 <method name="createSharedFolder">
5592 <desc>
5593 Creates a new permanent shared folder by associating the given logical
5594 name with the given host path, adds it to the collection of shared
5595 folders and starts sharing it. Refer to the description of
5596 <link to="ISharedFolder"/> to read more about logical names.
5597
5598 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_IN_USE">
5599 Shared folder already exists.
5600 </result>
5601 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
5602 Shared folder @a hostPath not accessible.
5603 </result>
5604
5605 </desc>
5606 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
5607 <desc>Unique logical name of the shared folder.</desc>
5608 </param>
5609 <param name="hostPath" type="wstring" dir="in">
5610 <desc>Full path to the shared folder in the host file system.</desc>
5611 </param>
5612 <param name="writable" type="boolean" dir="in">
5613 <desc>Whether the share is writable or readonly</desc>
5614 </param>
5615 </method>
5616
5617 <method name="removeSharedFolder">
5618 <desc>
5619 Removes the permanent shared folder with the given name previously
5620 created by <link to="#createSharedFolder"/> from the collection of
5621 shared folders and stops sharing it.
5622
5623 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5624 Virtual machine is not mutable.
5625 </result>
5626 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
5627 Shared folder @a name does not exist.
5628 </result>
5629
5630 </desc>
5631 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
5632 <desc>Logical name of the shared folder to remove.</desc>
5633 </param>
5634 </method>
5635
5636 <method name="canShowConsoleWindow">
5637 <desc>
5638 Returns @c true if the VM console process can activate the
5639 console window and bring it to foreground on the desktop of
5640 the host PC.
5641 <note>
5642 This method will fail if a session for this machine is not
5643 currently open.
5644 </note>
5645
5646 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5647 Machine session is not open.
5648 </result>
5649
5650 </desc>
5651 <param name="canShow" type="boolean" dir="return">
5652 <desc>
5653 @c true if the console window can be shown and @c false otherwise.
5654 </desc>
5655 </param>
5656 </method>
5657
5658 <method name="showConsoleWindow">
5659 <desc>
5660 Activates the console window and brings it to foreground on
5661 the desktop of the host PC. Many modern window managers on
5662 many platforms implement some sort of focus stealing
5663 prevention logic, so that it may be impossible to activate
5664 a window without the help of the currently active
5665 application. In this case, this method will return a non-zero
5666 identifier that represents the top-level window of the VM
5667 console process. The caller, if it represents a currently
5668 active process, is responsible to use this identifier (in a
5669 platform-dependent manner) to perform actual window
5670 activation.
5671 <note>
5672 This method will fail if a session for this machine is not
5673 currently open.
5674 </note>
5675
5676 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5677 Machine session is not open.
5678 </result>
5679
5680 </desc>
5681 <param name="winId" type="unsigned long long" dir="return">
5682 <desc>
5683 Platform-dependent identifier of the top-level VM console
5684 window, or zero if this method has performed all actions
5685 necessary to implement the <i>show window</i> semantics for
5686 the given platform and/or VirtualBox front-end.
5687 </desc>
5688 </param>
5689 </method>
5690
5691 <method name="getGuestProperty">
5692 <desc>
5693 Reads an entry from the machine's guest property store.
5694
5695 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5696 Machine session is not open.
5697 </result>
5698
5699 </desc>
5700 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
5701 <desc>
5702 The name of the property to read.
5703 </desc>
5704 </param>
5705 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="out">
5706 <desc>
5707 The value of the property. If the property does not exist then this
5708 will be empty.
5709 </desc>
5710 </param>
5711 <param name="timestamp" type="unsigned long long" dir="out">
5712 <desc>
5713 The time at which the property was last modified, as seen by the
5714 server process.
5715 </desc>
5716 </param>
5717 <param name="flags" type="wstring" dir="out">
5718 <desc>
5719 Additional property parameters, passed as a comma-separated list of
5720 "name=value" type entries.
5721 </desc>
5722 </param>
5723 </method>
5724
5725 <method name="getGuestPropertyValue">
5726 <desc>
5727 Reads a value from the machine's guest property store.
5728
5729 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5730 Machine session is not open.
5731 </result>
5732
5733 </desc>
5734 <param name="property" type="wstring" dir="in">
5735 <desc>
5736 The name of the property to read.
5737 </desc>
5738 </param>
5739 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="return">
5740 <desc>
5741 The value of the property. If the property does not exist then this
5742 will be empty.
5743 </desc>
5744 </param>
5745 </method>
5746
5747 <method name="getGuestPropertyTimestamp">
5748 <desc>
5749 Reads a property timestamp from the machine's guest property store.
5750
5751 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5752 Machine session is not open.
5753 </result>
5754
5755 </desc>
5756 <param name="property" type="wstring" dir="in">
5757 <desc>
5758 The name of the property to read.
5759 </desc>
5760 </param>
5761 <param name="value" type="unsigned long long" dir="return">
5762 <desc>
5763 The timestamp. If the property does not exist then this will be
5764 empty.
5765 </desc>
5766 </param>
5767 </method>
5768
5769 <method name="setGuestProperty">
5770 <desc>
5771 Sets, changes or deletes an entry in the machine's guest property
5772 store.
5773
5774 <result name="E_ACCESSDENIED">
5775 Property cannot be changed.
5776 </result>
5777 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
5778 Invalid @a flags.
5779 </result>
5780 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5781 Virtual machine is not mutable or session not open.
5782 </result>
5783 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
5784 Cannot set transient property when machine not running.
5785 </result>
5786
5787 </desc>
5788 <param name="property" type="wstring" dir="in">
5789 <desc>
5790 The name of the property to set, change or delete.
5791 </desc>
5792 </param>
5793 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
5794 <desc>
5795 The new value of the property to set, change or delete. If the
5796 property does not yet exist and value is non-empty, it will be
5797 created. If the value is @c null or empty, the property will be
5798 deleted if it exists.
5799 </desc>
5800 </param>
5801 <param name="flags" type="wstring" dir="in">
5802 <desc>
5803 Additional property parameters, passed as a comma-separated list of
5804 "name=value" type entries.
5805 </desc>
5806 </param>
5807 </method>
5808
5809 <method name="setGuestPropertyValue">
5810 <desc>
5811 Sets, changes or deletes a value in the machine's guest property
5812 store. The flags field will be left unchanged or created empty for a
5813 new property.
5814
5815 <result name="E_ACCESSDENIED">
5816 Property cannot be changed.
5817 </result>
5818 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
5819 Virtual machine is not mutable or session not open.
5820 </result>
5821 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
5822 Cannot set transient property when machine not running.
5823 </result>
5824 </desc>
5825
5826 <param name="property" type="wstring" dir="in">
5827 <desc>
5828 The name of the property to set, change or delete.
5829 </desc>
5830 </param>
5831 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
5832 <desc>
5833 The new value of the property to set, change or delete. If the
5834 property does not yet exist and value is non-empty, it will be
5835 created. If the value is @c null or empty, the property will be
5836 deleted if it exists.
5837 </desc>
5838 </param>
5839 </method>
5840
5841 <method name="enumerateGuestProperties">
5842 <desc>
5843 Return a list of the guest properties matching a set of patterns along
5844 with their values, time stamps and flags.
5845 </desc>
5846 <param name="patterns" type="wstring" dir="in">
5847 <desc>
5848 The patterns to match the properties against, separated by '|'
5849 characters. If this is empty or @c null, all properties will match.
5850 </desc>
5851 </param>
5852 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
5853 <desc>
5854 The names of the properties returned.
5855 </desc>
5856 </param>
5857 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
5858 <desc>
5859 The values of the properties returned. The array entries match the
5860 corresponding entries in the @a name array.
5861 </desc>
5862 </param>
5863 <param name="timestamp" type="unsigned long long" dir="out" safearray="yes">
5864 <desc>
5865 The time stamps of the properties returned. The array entries match
5866 the corresponding entries in the @a name array.
5867 </desc>
5868 </param>
5869 <param name="flags" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
5870 <desc>
5871 The flags of the properties returned. The array entries match the
5872 corresponding entries in the @a name array.
5873 </desc>
5874 </param>
5875 </method>
5876
5877 <method name="querySavedThumbnailSize">
5878 <desc>
5879 Returns size in bytes and dimensions in pixels of a saved thumbnail bitmap from saved state.
5880 </desc>
5881 <param name="size" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5882 <desc>
5883 Size of buffer required to store the bitmap.
5884 </desc>
5885 </param>
5886 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5887 <desc>
5888 Bitmap width.
5889 </desc>
5890 </param>
5891 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5892 <desc>
5893 Bitmap height.
5894 </desc>
5895 </param>
5896 </method>
5897
5898 <method name="readSavedThumbnailToArray">
5899 <desc>
5900 Thumbnail is retrieved to an array of bytes in uncompressed 32-bit BGRA or RGBA format.
5901 </desc>
5902 <param name="BGR" type="boolean" dir="in">
5903 <desc>
5904 How to order bytes in the pixel. A pixel consists of 4 bytes. If this parameter is true, then
5905 bytes order is: B, G, R, 0xFF. If this parameter is false, then bytes order is: R, G, B, 0xFF.
5906 </desc>
5907 </param>
5908 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5909 <desc>
5910 Bitmap width.
5911 </desc>
5912 </param>
5913 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5914 <desc>
5915 Bitmap height.
5916 </desc>
5917 </param>
5918 <param name="data" type="octet" dir="return" safearray="yes">
5919 <desc>
5920 Array with resulting bitmap data.
5921 </desc>
5922 </param>
5923 </method>
5924
5925 <method name="querySavedScreenshotPNGSize">
5926 <desc>
5927 Returns size in bytes and dimensions of a saved PNG image of screenshot from saved state.
5928 </desc>
5929 <param name="size" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5930 <desc>
5931 Size of buffer required to store the PNG binary data.
5932 </desc>
5933 </param>
5934 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5935 <desc>
5936 Image width.
5937 </desc>
5938 </param>
5939 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5940 <desc>
5941 Image height.
5942 </desc>
5943 </param>
5944 </method>
5945
5946 <method name="readSavedScreenshotPNGToArray">
5947 <desc>
5948 Screenshot in PNG format is retrieved to an array of bytes.
5949 </desc>
5950 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5951 <desc>
5952 Image width.
5953 </desc>
5954 </param>
5955 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
5956 <desc>
5957 Image height.
5958 </desc>
5959 </param>
5960 <param name="data" type="octet" dir="return" safearray="yes">
5961 <desc>
5962 Array with resulting PNG data.
5963 </desc>
5964 </param>
5965 </method>
5966
5967 <method name="hotPlugCPU">
5968 <desc>
5969 Plugs a CPU into the machine.
5970 </desc>
5971 <param name="cpu" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5972 <desc>
5973 The CPU id to insert.
5974 </desc>
5975 </param>
5976 </method>
5977
5978 <method name="hotUnplugCPU">
5979 <desc>
5980 Removes a CPU from the machine.
5981 </desc>
5982 <param name="cpu" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5983 <desc>
5984 The CPU id to remove.
5985 </desc>
5986 </param>
5987 </method>
5988
5989 <method name="getCPUStatus">
5990 <desc>
5991 Returns the current status of the given CPU.
5992 </desc>
5993 <param name="cpu" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
5994 <desc>
5995 The CPU id to check for.
5996 </desc>
5997 </param>
5998 <param name="attached" type="boolean" dir="return">
5999 <desc>
6000 Status of the CPU.
6001 </desc>
6002 </param>
6003 </method>
6004
6005 <method name="readLog">
6006 <desc>
6007 Reads the VM log file. The chunk size is limited, so even if you
6008 ask for a big piece there might be less data returned.
6009 </desc>
6010 <param name="idx" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
6011 <desc>
6012 Which log file to read. 0=current log file.
6013 </desc>
6014 </param>
6015 <param name="offset" type="unsigned long long" dir="in">
6016 <desc>
6017 Offset in the log file.
6018 </desc>
6019 </param>
6020 <param name="size" type="unsigned long long" dir="in">
6021 <desc>
6022 Chunk size to read in the log file.
6023 </desc>
6024 </param>
6025 <param name="data" type="octet" dir="return" safearray="yes">
6026 <desc>
6027 Data read from the log file. A data size of 0 means end of file
6028 if the requested chunk size was not 0. This is the unprocessed
6029 file data, i.e. the line ending style depends on the platform of
6030 the system the server is running on.
6031 </desc>
6032 </param>
6033 </method>
6034 </interface>
6035
6036 <!--
6037 // IConsole
6038 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
6039 -->
6040
6041 <interface
6042 name="IConsoleCallback" extends="$unknown"
6043 uuid="60703f8d-81e4-4b45-a147-dcfd07692b19"
6044 wsmap="suppress"
6045 >
6046
6047 <desc>
6048 This interface is used by a client of the Main API that need to
6049 be notified of events. For example, a graphical user interface
6050 can use this to learn about machine state changes so they can
6051 update the list of virtual machines without having to rely
6052 on polling.
6053
6054 Whenever relevant events occur in VirtualBox, the callbacks in
6055 objects of this interface are called. In order for this to be
6056 useful, a client needs to create its own subclass that implements
6057 this interface in which the methods for the relevant callbacks
6058 are overridden. An instance of this subclass interface can then
6059 be passed to <link to="IConsole::registerCallback" />.
6060 </desc>
6061
6062 <method name="onMousePointerShapeChange">
6063 <desc>
6064 Notification when the guest mouse pointer shape has
6065 changed. The new shape data is given.
6066 </desc>
6067 <param name="visible" type="boolean" dir="in">
6068 <desc>
6069 Flag whether the pointer is visible.
6070 </desc>
6071 </param>
6072 <param name="alpha" type="boolean" dir="in">
6073 <desc>
6074 Flag whether the pointer has an alpha channel.
6075 </desc>
6076 </param>
6077 <param name="xHot" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
6078 <desc>
6079 The pointer hot spot x coordinate.
6080 </desc>
6081 </param>
6082 <param name="yHot" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
6083 <desc>
6084 The pointer hot spot y coordinate.
6085 </desc>
6086 </param>
6087 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
6088 <desc>
6089 Width of the pointer shape in pixels.
6090 </desc>
6091 </param>
6092 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
6093 <desc>
6094 Height of the pointer shape in pixels.
6095 </desc>
6096 </param>
6097 <param name="shape" type="octet" mod="ptr" dir="in">
6098 <desc>
6099 Address of the shape buffer.
6100
6101 The @a shape buffer contains a 1-bpp (bits per pixel) AND mask
6102 followed by a 32-bpp XOR (color) mask.
6103
6104 For pointers without alpha channel the XOR mask pixels are 32
6105 bit values: (lsb)BGR0(msb). For pointers with alpha channel
6106 the XOR mask consists of (lsb)BGRA(msb) 32 bit values.
6107
6108 An AND mask is used for pointers with alpha channel, so if the
6109 callback does not support alpha, the pointer could be
6110 displayed as a normal color pointer.
6111
6112 The AND mask is a 1-bpp bitmap with byte aligned scanlines. The
6113 size of the AND mask therefore is <tt>cbAnd = (width + 7) / 8 *
6114 height</tt>. The padding bits at the end of each scanline are
6115 undefined.
6116
6117 The XOR mask follows the AND mask on the next 4-byte aligned
6118 offset: <tt>uint8_t *pXor = pAnd + (cbAnd + 3) &amp; ~3</tt>.
6119 Bytes in the gap between the AND and the XOR mask are undefined.
6120 The XOR mask scanlines have no gap between them and the size of
6121 the XOR mask is: <tt>cXor = width * 4 * height</tt>.
6122
6123 <note>
6124 If @a shape is 0, only the pointer visibility is changed.
6125 </note>
6126 </desc>
6127 </param>
6128 </method>
6129
6130 <method name="onMouseCapabilityChange">
6131 <desc>
6132 Notification when the mouse capabilities reported by the
6133 guest have changed. The new capabilities are passed.
6134 </desc>
6135 <param name="supportsAbsolute" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
6136 <param name="supportsRelative" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
6137 <param name="needsHostCursor" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
6138 </method>
6139
6140 <method name="onKeyboardLedsChange">
6141 <desc>
6142 Notification when the guest OS executes the KBD_CMD_SET_LEDS command
6143 to alter the state of the keyboard LEDs.
6144 </desc>
6145 <param name="numLock" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
6146 <param name="capsLock" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
6147 <param name="scrollLock" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
6148 </method>
6149
6150 <method name="onStateChange">
6151 <desc>
6152 Notification when the execution state of the machine has changed.
6153 The new state will be given.
6154 </desc>
6155 <param name="state" type="MachineState" dir="in"/>
6156 </method>
6157
6158 <method name="onAdditionsStateChange">
6159 <desc>
6160 Notification when a Guest Additions property changes.
6161 Interested callees should query IGuest attributes to
6162 find out what has changed.
6163 </desc>
6164 </method>
6165
6166 <method name="onNetworkAdapterChange">
6167 <desc>
6168 Notification when a property of one of the
6169 virtual <link to="IMachine::getNetworkAdapter">network adapters</link>
6170 changes. Interested callees should use INetworkAdapter methods and
6171 attributes to find out what has changed.
6172 </desc>
6173 <param name="networkAdapter" type="INetworkAdapter" dir="in">
6174 <desc>Network adapter that is subject to change.</desc>
6175 </param>
6176 </method>
6177
6178 <method name="onSerialPortChange">
6179 <desc>
6180 Notification when a property of one of the
6181 virtual <link to="IMachine::getSerialPort">serial ports</link> changes.
6182 Interested callees should use ISerialPort methods and attributes
6183 to find out what has changed.
6184 </desc>
6185 <param name="serialPort" type="ISerialPort" dir="in">
6186 <desc>Serial port that is subject to change.</desc>
6187 </param>
6188 </method>
6189
6190 <method name="onParallelPortChange">
6191 <desc>
6192 Notification when a property of one of the
6193 virtual <link to="IMachine::getParallelPort">parallel ports</link>
6194 changes. Interested callees should use ISerialPort methods and
6195 attributes to find out what has changed.
6196 </desc>
6197 <param name="parallelPort" type="IParallelPort" dir="in">
6198 <desc>Parallel port that is subject to change.</desc>
6199 </param>
6200 </method>
6201
6202 <method name="onStorageControllerChange">
6203 <desc>
6204 Notification when a property of one of the
6205 virtual <link to="IMachine::storageControllers">storage controllers</link>
6206 changes. Interested callees should query the corresponding collections
6207 to find out what has changed.
6208 </desc>
6209 </method>
6210
6211 <method name="onMediumChange">
6212 <desc>
6213 Notification when a
6214 <link to="IMachine::mediumAttachments">medium attachment</link>
6215 changes.
6216 </desc>
6217 <param name="mediumAttachment" type="IMediumAttachment" dir="in">
6218 <desc>Medium attachment that is subject to change.</desc>
6219 </param>
6220 </method>
6221
6222 <method name="onCPUChange">
6223 <desc>
6224 Notification when a CPU changes.
6225 </desc>
6226 <param name="cpu" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
6227 <desc>The CPU which changed</desc>
6228 </param>
6229 <param name="add" type="boolean" dir="in">
6230 <desc>Flag whether the CPU was added or removed</desc>
6231 </param>
6232 </method>
6233
6234 <method name="onVRDPServerChange">
6235 <desc>
6236 Notification when a property of the
6237 <link to="IMachine::VRDPServer">VRDP server</link> changes.
6238 Interested callees should use IVRDPServer methods and attributes to
6239 find out what has changed.
6240 </desc>
6241 </method>
6242
6243 <method name="onRemoteDisplayInfoChange">
6244 <desc>
6245 Notification when the status of the VRDP server changes. Interested callees
6246 should use <link to="IConsole::RemoteDisplayInfo">IRemoteDisplayInfo</link>
6247 attributes to find out what is the current status.
6248 </desc>
6249 </method>
6250
6251 <method name="onUSBControllerChange">
6252 <desc>
6253 Notification when a property of the virtual
6254 <link to="IMachine::USBController">USB controller</link> changes.
6255 Interested callees should use IUSBController methods and attributes to
6256 find out what has changed.
6257 </desc>
6258 </method>
6259
6260 <method name="onUSBDeviceStateChange">
6261 <desc>
6262 Notification when a USB device is attached to or detached from
6263 the virtual USB controller.
6264
6265 This notification is sent as a result of the indirect
6266 request to attach the device because it matches one of the
6267 machine USB filters, or as a result of the direct request
6268 issued by <link to="IConsole::attachUSBDevice"/> or
6269 <link to="IConsole::detachUSBDevice"/>.
6270
6271 This notification is sent in case of both a succeeded and a
6272 failed request completion. When the request succeeds, the
6273 @a error parameter is @c null, and the given device has been
6274 already added to (when @a attached is @c true) or removed from
6275 (when @a attached is @c false) the collection represented by
6276 <link to="IConsole::USBDevices"/>. On failure, the collection
6277 doesn't change and the @a error parameter represents the error
6278 message describing the failure.
6279
6280 </desc>
6281 <param name="device" type="IUSBDevice" dir="in">
6282 <desc>Device that is subject to state change.</desc>
6283 </param>
6284 <param name="attached" type="boolean" dir="in">
6285 <desc>
6286 @c true if the device was attached and @c false otherwise.
6287 </desc>
6288 </param>
6289 <param name="error" type="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" dir="in">
6290 <desc>
6291 @c null on success or an error message object on failure.
6292 </desc>
6293 </param>
6294 </method>
6295
6296 <method name="onSharedFolderChange">
6297 <desc>
6298 Notification when a shared folder is added or removed.
6299 The @a scope argument defines one of three scopes:
6300 <link to="IVirtualBox::sharedFolders">global shared folders</link>
6301 (<link to="Scope_Global">Global</link>),
6302 <link to="IMachine::sharedFolders">permanent shared folders</link> of
6303 the machine (<link to="Scope_Machine">Machine</link>) or <link
6304 to="IConsole::sharedFolders">transient shared folders</link> of the
6305 machine (<link to="Scope_Session">Session</link>). Interested callees
6306 should use query the corresponding collections to find out what has
6307 changed.
6308 </desc>
6309 <param name="scope" type="Scope" dir="in">
6310 <desc>Scope of the notification.</desc>
6311 </param>
6312 </method>
6313
6314 <method name="onRuntimeError">
6315 <desc>
6316 Notification when an error happens during the virtual
6317 machine execution.
6318
6319 There are three kinds of runtime errors:
6320 <ul>
6321 <li><i>fatal</i></li>
6322 <li><i>non-fatal with retry</i></li>
6323 <li><i>non-fatal warnings</i></li>
6324 </ul>
6325
6326 <b>Fatal</b> errors are indicated by the @a fatal parameter set
6327 to @c true. In case of fatal errors, the virtual machine
6328 execution is always paused before calling this notification, and
6329 the notification handler is supposed either to immediately save
6330 the virtual machine state using <link to="IConsole::saveState"/>
6331 or power it off using <link to="IConsole::powerDown"/>.
6332 Resuming the execution can lead to unpredictable results.
6333
6334 <b>Non-fatal</b> errors and warnings are indicated by the
6335 @a fatal parameter set to @c false. If the virtual machine
6336 is in the Paused state by the time the error notification is
6337 received, it means that the user can <i>try to resume</i> the machine
6338 execution after attempting to solve the problem that caused the
6339 error. In this case, the notification handler is supposed
6340 to show an appropriate message to the user (depending on the
6341 value of the @a id parameter) that offers several actions such
6342 as <i>Retry</i>, <i>Save</i> or <i>Power Off</i>. If the user
6343 wants to retry, the notification handler should continue
6344 the machine execution using the <link to="IConsole::resume"/>
6345 call. If the machine execution is not Paused during this
6346 notification, then it means this notification is a <i>warning</i>
6347 (for example, about a fatal condition that can happen very soon);
6348 no immediate action is required from the user, the machine
6349 continues its normal execution.
6350
6351 Note that in either case the notification handler
6352 <b>must not</b> perform any action directly on a thread
6353 where this notification is called. Everything it is allowed to
6354 do is to post a message to another thread that will then talk
6355 to the user and take the corresponding action.
6356
6357 Currently, the following error identifiers are known:
6358 <ul>
6359 <li><tt>"HostMemoryLow"</tt></li>
6360 <li><tt>"HostAudioNotResponding"</tt></li>
6361 <li><tt>"VDIStorageFull"</tt></li>
6362 <li><tt>"3DSupportIncompatibleAdditions"</tt></li>
6363 </ul>
6364
6365 <note>
6366 This notification is not designed to be implemented by
6367 more than one callback at a time. If you have multiple
6368 IConsoleCallback instances registered on the given
6369 IConsole object, make sure you simply do nothing but
6370 return @c S_OK from all but one of them that does actual
6371 user notification and performs necessary actions.
6372 </note>
6373
6374 </desc>
6375 <param name="fatal" type="boolean" dir="in">
6376 <desc>Whether the error is fatal or not</desc>
6377 </param>
6378 <param name="id" type="wstring" dir="in">
6379 <desc>Error identifier</desc>
6380 </param>
6381 <param name="message" type="wstring" dir="in">
6382 <desc>Optional error message</desc>
6383 </param>
6384 </method>
6385
6386 <method name="onCanShowWindow">
6387 <desc>
6388 Notification when a call to
6389 <link to="IMachine::canShowConsoleWindow"/> is made by a
6390 front-end to check if a subsequent call to
6391 <link to="IMachine::showConsoleWindow"/> can succeed.
6392
6393 The callee should give an answer appropriate to the current
6394 machine state in the @a canShow argument. This answer must
6395 remain valid at least until the next
6396 <link to="IConsole::state">machine state</link> change.
6397
6398 <note>
6399 This notification is not designed to be implemented by
6400 more than one callback at a time. If you have multiple
6401 IConsoleCallback instances registered on the given
6402 IConsole object, make sure you simply do nothing but
6403 return @c true and @c S_OK from all but one of them that
6404 actually manages console window activation.
6405 </note>
6406 </desc>
6407 <param name="canShow" type="boolean" dir="return">
6408 <desc>
6409 @c true if the console window can be shown and @c false otherwise.
6410 </desc>
6411 </param>
6412 </method>
6413
6414 <method name="onShowWindow">
6415 <desc>
6416 Notification when a call to
6417 <link to="IMachine::showConsoleWindow"/>
6418 requests the console window to be activated and brought to
6419 foreground on the desktop of the host PC.
6420
6421 This notification should cause the VM console process to
6422 perform the requested action as described above. If it is
6423 impossible to do it at a time of this notification, this
6424 method should return a failure.
6425
6426 Note that many modern window managers on many platforms
6427 implement some sort of focus stealing prevention logic, so
6428 that it may be impossible to activate a window without the
6429 help of the currently active application (which is supposedly
6430 an initiator of this notification). In this case, this method
6431 must return a non-zero identifier that represents the
6432 top-level window of the VM console process. The caller, if it
6433 represents a currently active process, is responsible to use
6434 this identifier (in a platform-dependent manner) to perform
6435 actual window activation.
6436
6437 This method must set @a winId to zero if it has performed all
6438 actions necessary to complete the request and the console
6439 window is now active and in foreground, to indicate that no
6440 further action is required on the caller's side.
6441
6442 <note>
6443 This notification is not designed to be implemented by
6444 more than one callback at a time. If you have multiple
6445 IConsoleCallback instances registered on the given
6446 IConsole object, make sure you simply do nothing but
6447 return @c S_OK from all but one of them that actually
6448 manages console window activation.
6449 </note>
6450 </desc>
6451 <param name="winId" type="unsigned long long" dir="return">
6452 <desc>
6453 Platform-dependent identifier of the top-level VM console
6454 window, or zero if this method has performed all actions
6455 necessary to implement the <i>show window</i> semantics for
6456 the given platform and/or this VirtualBox front-end.
6457 </desc>
6458 </param>
6459 </method>
6460
6461 </interface>
6462
6463 <interface
6464 name="IRemoteDisplayInfo" extends="$unknown"
6465 uuid="b3741084-806f-4c3b-8c42-ebad1a81e45a"
6466 wsmap="struct"
6467 >
6468 <desc>
6469 Contains information about the remote display (VRDP) capabilities and status.
6470 This is used in the <link to="IConsole::remoteDisplayInfo" /> attribute.
6471 </desc>
6472
6473 <attribute name="active" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
6474 <desc>
6475 Whether the remote display connection is active.
6476 </desc>
6477 </attribute>
6478
6479 <attribute name="port" type="long" readonly="yes">
6480 <desc>
6481 VRDP server port number. If this property is equal to <tt>0</tt>, then
6482 the VRDP server failed to start, usually because there are no free TCP
6483 ports to bind to. If this property is equal to <tt>-1</tt>, then the VRDP
6484 server has not yet been started.
6485 </desc>
6486 </attribute>
6487
6488 <attribute name="numberOfClients" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
6489 <desc>
6490 How many times a client connected.
6491 </desc>
6492 </attribute>
6493
6494 <attribute name="beginTime" type="long long" readonly="yes">
6495 <desc>
6496 When the last connection was established, in milliseconds since 1970-01-01 UTC.
6497 </desc>
6498 </attribute>
6499
6500 <attribute name="endTime" type="long long" readonly="yes">
6501 <desc>
6502 When the last connection was terminated or the current time, if
6503 connection is still active, in milliseconds since 1970-01-01 UTC.
6504 </desc>
6505 </attribute>
6506
6507 <attribute name="bytesSent" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
6508 <desc>
6509 How many bytes were sent in last or current, if still active, connection.
6510 </desc>
6511 </attribute>
6512
6513 <attribute name="bytesSentTotal" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
6514 <desc>
6515 How many bytes were sent in all connections.
6516 </desc>
6517 </attribute>
6518
6519 <attribute name="bytesReceived" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
6520 <desc>
6521 How many bytes were received in last or current, if still active, connection.
6522 </desc>
6523 </attribute>
6524
6525 <attribute name="bytesReceivedTotal" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
6526 <desc>
6527 How many bytes were received in all connections.
6528 </desc>
6529 </attribute>
6530
6531 <attribute name="user" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
6532 <desc>
6533 Login user name supplied by the client.
6534 </desc>
6535 </attribute>
6536
6537 <attribute name="domain" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
6538 <desc>
6539 Login domain name supplied by the client.
6540 </desc>
6541 </attribute>
6542
6543 <attribute name="clientName" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
6544 <desc>
6545 The client name supplied by the client.
6546 </desc>
6547 </attribute>
6548
6549 <attribute name="clientIP" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
6550 <desc>
6551 The IP address of the client.
6552 </desc>
6553 </attribute>
6554
6555 <attribute name="clientVersion" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
6556 <desc>
6557 The client software version number.
6558 </desc>
6559 </attribute>
6560
6561 <attribute name="encryptionStyle" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
6562 <desc>
6563 Public key exchange method used when connection was established.
6564 Values: 0 - RDP4 public key exchange scheme.
6565 1 - X509 certificates were sent to client.
6566 </desc>
6567 </attribute>
6568
6569 </interface>
6570
6571 <interface
6572 name="IConsole" extends="$unknown"
6573 uuid="6375231a-c17c-464b-92cb-ae9e128d71c3"
6574 wsmap="managed"
6575 >
6576 <desc>
6577 The IConsole interface represents an interface to control virtual
6578 machine execution.
6579
6580 The console object that implements the IConsole interface is obtained
6581 from a session object after the session for the given machine has been
6582 opened using one of <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/>,
6583 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/> or
6584 <link to="IVirtualBox::openExistingSession"/> methods.
6585
6586 Methods of the IConsole interface allow the caller to query the current
6587 virtual machine execution state, pause the machine or power it down, save
6588 the machine state or take a snapshot, attach and detach removable media
6589 and so on.
6590
6591 <see>ISession</see>
6592 </desc>
6593
6594 <attribute name="machine" type="IMachine" readonly="yes">
6595 <desc>
6596 Machine object this console is sessioned with.
6597 <note>
6598 This is a convenience property, it has the same value as
6599 <link to="ISession::machine"/> of the corresponding session
6600 object.
6601 </note>
6602 </desc>
6603 </attribute>
6604
6605 <attribute name="state" type="MachineState" readonly="yes">
6606 <desc>
6607 Current execution state of the machine.
6608 <note>
6609 This property always returns the same value as the corresponding
6610 property of the IMachine object this console is sessioned with.
6611 For the process that owns (executes) the VM, this is the
6612 preferable way of querying the VM state, because no IPC
6613 calls are made.
6614 </note>
6615 </desc>
6616 </attribute>
6617
6618 <attribute name="guest" type="IGuest" readonly="yes">
6619 <desc>Guest object.</desc>
6620 </attribute>
6621
6622 <attribute name="keyboard" type="IKeyboard" readonly="yes">
6623 <desc>
6624 Virtual keyboard object.
6625 <note>
6626 If the machine is not running, any attempt to use
6627 the returned object will result in an error.
6628 </note>
6629 </desc>
6630 </attribute>
6631
6632 <attribute name="mouse" type="IMouse" readonly="yes">
6633 <desc>
6634 Virtual mouse object.
6635 <note>
6636 If the machine is not running, any attempt to use
6637 the returned object will result in an error.
6638 </note>
6639 </desc>
6640 </attribute>
6641
6642 <attribute name="display" type="IDisplay" readonly="yes">
6643 <desc>Virtual display object.
6644 <note>
6645 If the machine is not running, any attempt to use
6646 the returned object will result in an error.
6647 </note>
6648 </desc>
6649 </attribute>
6650
6651 <attribute name="debugger" type="IMachineDebugger" readonly="yes">
6652 <desc>Debugging interface.</desc>
6653 </attribute>
6654
6655 <attribute name="USBDevices" type="IUSBDevice" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
6656 <desc>
6657 Collection of USB devices currently attached to the virtual
6658 USB controller.
6659 <note>
6660 The collection is empty if the machine is not running.
6661 </note>
6662 </desc>
6663 </attribute>
6664
6665 <attribute name="remoteUSBDevices" type="IHostUSBDevice" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
6666 <desc>
6667 List of USB devices currently attached to the remote VRDP client.
6668 Once a new device is physically attached to the remote host computer,
6669 it appears in this list and remains there until detached.
6670 </desc>
6671 </attribute>
6672
6673 <attribute name="sharedFolders" type="ISharedFolder" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
6674 <desc>
6675 Collection of shared folders for the current session. These folders
6676 are called transient shared folders because they are available to the
6677 guest OS running inside the associated virtual machine only for the
6678 duration of the session (as opposed to
6679 <link to="IMachine::sharedFolders"/> which represent permanent shared
6680 folders). When the session is closed (e.g. the machine is powered down),
6681 these folders are automatically discarded.
6682
6683 New shared folders are added to the collection using
6684 <link to="#createSharedFolder"/>. Existing shared folders can be
6685 removed using <link to="#removeSharedFolder"/>.
6686 </desc>
6687 </attribute>
6688
6689 <attribute name="remoteDisplayInfo" type="IRemoteDisplayInfo" readonly="yes">
6690 <desc>
6691 Interface that provides information on Remote Display (VRDP) connection.
6692 </desc>
6693 </attribute>
6694
6695 <method name="powerUp">
6696 <desc>
6697 Starts the virtual machine execution using the current machine
6698 state (that is, its current execution state, current settings and
6699 current storage devices).
6700
6701 If the machine is powered off or aborted, the execution will
6702 start from the beginning (as if the real hardware were just
6703 powered on).
6704
6705 If the machine is in the <link to="MachineState_Saved"/> state,
6706 it will continue its execution the point where the state has
6707 been saved.
6708
6709 <note>
6710 Unless you are trying to write a new VirtualBox front-end that
6711 performs direct machine execution (like the VirtualBox or VBoxSDL
6712 front-ends), don't call <link to="IConsole::powerUp"/> in a direct
6713 session opened by <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/> and use this
6714 session only to change virtual machine settings. If you simply want to
6715 start virtual machine execution using one of the existing front-ends
6716 (for example the VirtualBox GUI or headless server), simply use
6717 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/>; these front-ends will
6718 power up the machine automatically for you.
6719 </note>
6720
6721 <see>#saveState</see>
6722 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6723 Virtual machine already running.
6724 </result>
6725 <result name="VBOX_E_HOST_ERROR">
6726 Host interface does not exist or name not set.
6727 </result>
6728 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
6729 Invalid saved state file.
6730 </result>
6731 </desc>
6732 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
6733 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
6734 </param>
6735 </method>
6736
6737 <method name="powerUpPaused">
6738 <desc>
6739 Identical to powerUp except that the VM will enter the
6740 <link to="MachineState_Paused"/> state, instead of
6741 <link to="MachineState_Running"/>.
6742
6743 <see>#powerUp</see>
6744 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6745 Virtual machine already running.
6746 </result>
6747 <result name="VBOX_E_HOST_ERROR">
6748 Host interface does not exist or name not set.
6749 </result>
6750 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
6751 Invalid saved state file.
6752 </result>
6753 </desc>
6754 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
6755 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
6756 </param>
6757 </method>
6758
6759 <method name="powerDown">
6760 <desc>
6761 Initiates the power down procedure to stop the virtual machine
6762 execution.
6763
6764 The completion of the power down procedure is tracked using the returned
6765 IProgress object. After the operation is complete, the machine will go
6766 to the PoweredOff state.
6767 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6768 Virtual machine must be Running, Paused or Stuck to be powered down.
6769 </result>
6770 </desc>
6771 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
6772 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
6773 </param>
6774 </method>
6775
6776 <method name="reset">
6777 <desc>Resets the virtual machine.
6778 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6779 Virtual machine not in Running state.
6780 </result>
6781 <result name="VBOX_E_VM_ERROR">
6782 Virtual machine error in reset operation.
6783 </result>
6784 </desc>
6785 </method>
6786
6787 <method name="pause">
6788 <desc>Pauses the virtual machine execution.
6789 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6790 Virtual machine not in Running state.
6791 </result>
6792 <result name="VBOX_E_VM_ERROR">
6793 Virtual machine error in suspend operation.
6794 </result>
6795 </desc>
6796 </method>
6797
6798 <method name="resume">
6799 <desc>Resumes the virtual machine execution.
6800 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6801 Virtual machine not in Paused state.
6802 </result>
6803 <result name="VBOX_E_VM_ERROR">
6804 Virtual machine error in resume operation.
6805 </result>
6806 </desc>
6807 </method>
6808
6809 <method name="powerButton">
6810 <desc>Sends the ACPI power button event to the guest.
6811 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6812 Virtual machine not in Running state.
6813 </result>
6814 <result name="VBOX_E_PDM_ERROR">
6815 Controlled power off failed.
6816 </result>
6817 </desc>
6818 </method>
6819
6820 <method name="sleepButton">
6821 <desc>Sends the ACPI sleep button event to the guest.
6822 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6823 Virtual machine not in Running state.
6824 </result>
6825 <result name="VBOX_E_PDM_ERROR">
6826 Sending sleep button event failed.
6827 </result>
6828 </desc>
6829 </method>
6830
6831 <method name="getPowerButtonHandled">
6832 <desc>Checks if the last power button event was handled by guest.
6833 <result name="VBOX_E_PDM_ERROR">
6834 Checking if the event was handled by the guest OS failed.
6835 </result>
6836 </desc>
6837 <param name="handled" type="boolean" dir="return"/>
6838 </method>
6839
6840 <method name="getGuestEnteredACPIMode">
6841 <desc>Checks if the guest entered the ACPI mode G0 (working) or
6842 G1 (sleeping). If this method returns @c false, the guest will
6843 most likely not respond to external ACPI events.
6844 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6845 Virtual machine not in Running state.
6846 </result>
6847 </desc>
6848 <param name="entered" type="boolean" dir="return"/>
6849 </method>
6850
6851 <method name="saveState">
6852 <desc>
6853 Saves the current execution state of a running virtual machine
6854 and stops its execution.
6855
6856 After this operation completes, the machine will go to the
6857 Saved state. Next time it is powered up, this state will
6858 be restored and the machine will continue its execution from
6859 the place where it was saved.
6860
6861 This operation differs from taking a snapshot to the effect
6862 that it doesn't create new differencing media. Also, once
6863 the machine is powered up from the state saved using this method,
6864 the saved state is deleted, so it will be impossible to return
6865 to this state later.
6866
6867 <note>
6868 On success, this method implicitly calls
6869 <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> to save all current machine
6870 settings (including runtime changes to the DVD medium, etc.).
6871 Together with the impossibility to change any VM settings when it is
6872 in the Saved state, this guarantees adequate hardware
6873 configuration of the machine when it is restored from the saved
6874 state file.
6875 </note>
6876
6877 <note>
6878 The machine must be in the Running or Paused state, otherwise
6879 the operation will fail.
6880 </note>
6881 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6882 Virtual machine state neither Running nor Paused.
6883 </result>
6884 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
6885 Failed to create directory for saved state file.
6886 </result>
6887
6888 <see><link to="#takeSnapshot"/></see>
6889 </desc>
6890 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
6891 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
6892 </param>
6893 </method>
6894
6895 <method name="adoptSavedState">
6896 <desc>
6897 Associates the given saved state file to the virtual machine.
6898
6899 On success, the machine will go to the Saved state. Next time it is
6900 powered up, it will be restored from the adopted saved state and
6901 continue execution from the place where the saved state file was
6902 created.
6903
6904 The specified saved state file path may be absolute or relative to the
6905 folder the VM normally saves the state to (usually,
6906 <link to="IMachine::snapshotFolder"/>).
6907
6908 <note>
6909 It's a caller's responsibility to make sure the given saved state
6910 file is compatible with the settings of this virtual machine that
6911 represent its virtual hardware (memory size, storage disk configuration
6912 etc.). If there is a mismatch, the behavior of the virtual machine
6913 is undefined.
6914 </note>
6915 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6916 Virtual machine state neither PoweredOff nor Aborted.
6917 </result>
6918 </desc>
6919 <param name="savedStateFile" type="wstring" dir="in">
6920 <desc>Path to the saved state file to adopt.</desc>
6921 </param>
6922 </method>
6923
6924 <method name="forgetSavedState">
6925 <desc>
6926 Forgets the saved state of the virtual machine previously created
6927 by <link to="#saveState"/>. Next time the machine is powered up, a
6928 clean boot will occur. If @a remove is @c true the saved state file
6929 is deleted.
6930 <note>
6931 This operation is equivalent to resetting or powering off
6932 the machine without doing a proper shutdown in the guest OS.
6933 </note>
6934 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6935 Virtual machine not in state Saved.
6936 </result>
6937 </desc>
6938 <param name="remove" type="boolean" dir="in">
6939 <desc>If @c true remove the saved state file.</desc>
6940 </param>
6941 </method>
6942
6943 <method name="getDeviceActivity">
6944 <desc>
6945 Gets the current activity type of a given device or device group.
6946 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
6947 Invalid device type.
6948 </result>
6949 </desc>
6950 <param name="type" type="DeviceType" dir="in"/>
6951 <param name="activity" type="DeviceActivity" dir="return"/>
6952 </method>
6953
6954 <method name="attachUSBDevice">
6955 <desc>
6956 Attaches a host USB device with the given UUID to the
6957 USB controller of the virtual machine.
6958
6959 The device needs to be in one of the following states:
6960 <link to="USBDeviceState_Busy"/>,
6961 <link to="USBDeviceState_Available"/> or
6962 <link to="USBDeviceState_Held"/>,
6963 otherwise an error is immediately returned.
6964
6965 When the device state is
6966 <link to="USBDeviceState_Busy">Busy</link>, an error may also
6967 be returned if the host computer refuses to release it for some reason.
6968
6969 <see>IUSBController::deviceFilters, USBDeviceState</see>
6970 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
6971 Virtual machine state neither Running nor Paused.
6972 </result>
6973 <result name="VBOX_E_PDM_ERROR">
6974 Virtual machine does not have a USB controller.
6975 </result>
6976 </desc>
6977 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
6978 <desc>UUID of the host USB device to attach.</desc>
6979 </param>
6980 </method>
6981
6982 <method name="detachUSBDevice">
6983 <desc>
6984 Detaches an USB device with the given UUID from the USB controller
6985 of the virtual machine.
6986
6987 After this method succeeds, the VirtualBox server re-initiates
6988 all USB filters as if the device were just physically attached
6989 to the host, but filters of this machine are ignored to avoid
6990 a possible automatic re-attachment.
6991
6992 <see>IUSBController::deviceFilters, USBDeviceState</see>
6993
6994 <result name="VBOX_E_PDM_ERROR">
6995 Virtual machine does not have a USB controller.
6996 </result>
6997 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
6998 USB device not attached to this virtual machine.
6999 </result>
7000 </desc>
7001 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
7002 <desc>UUID of the USB device to detach.</desc>
7003 </param>
7004 <param name="device" type="IUSBDevice" dir="return">
7005 <desc>Detached USB device.</desc>
7006 </param>
7007 </method>
7008
7009 <method name="findUSBDeviceByAddress">
7010 <desc>
7011 Searches for a USB device with the given host address.
7012
7013 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
7014 Given @c name does not correspond to any USB device.
7015 </result>
7016
7017 <see>IUSBDevice::address</see>
7018 </desc>
7019 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7020 <desc>
7021 Address of the USB device (as assigned by the host) to
7022 search for.
7023 </desc>
7024 </param>
7025 <param name="device" type="IUSBDevice" dir="return">
7026 <desc>Found USB device object.</desc>
7027 </param>
7028 </method>
7029
7030 <method name="findUSBDeviceById">
7031 <desc>
7032 Searches for a USB device with the given UUID.
7033
7034 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
7035 Given @c id does not correspond to any USB device.
7036 </result>
7037
7038 <see>IUSBDevice::id</see>
7039 </desc>
7040 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
7041 <desc>UUID of the USB device to search for.</desc>
7042 </param>
7043 <param name="device" type="IUSBDevice" dir="return">
7044 <desc>Found USB device object.</desc>
7045 </param>
7046 </method>
7047
7048 <method name="createSharedFolder">
7049 <desc>
7050 Creates a transient new shared folder by associating the given logical
7051 name with the given host path, adds it to the collection of shared
7052 folders and starts sharing it. Refer to the description of
7053 <link to="ISharedFolder"/> to read more about logical names.
7054
7055 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
7056 Virtual machine in Saved state or currently changing state.
7057 </result>
7058 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
7059 Shared folder already exists or not accessible.
7060 </result>
7061 </desc>
7062 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7063 <desc>Unique logical name of the shared folder.</desc>
7064 </param>
7065 <param name="hostPath" type="wstring" dir="in">
7066 <desc>Full path to the shared folder in the host file system.</desc>
7067 </param>
7068 <param name="writable" type="boolean" dir="in">
7069 <desc>Whether the share is writable or readonly</desc>
7070 </param>
7071 </method>
7072
7073 <method name="removeSharedFolder">
7074 <desc>
7075 Removes a transient shared folder with the given name previously
7076 created by <link to="#createSharedFolder"/> from the collection of
7077 shared folders and stops sharing it.
7078 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
7079 Virtual machine in Saved state or currently changing state.
7080 </result>
7081 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
7082 Shared folder does not exists.
7083 </result>
7084 </desc>
7085 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7086 <desc>Logical name of the shared folder to remove.</desc>
7087 </param>
7088 </method>
7089
7090 <method name="takeSnapshot">
7091 <desc>
7092 Saves the current execution state
7093 and all settings of the machine and creates differencing images
7094 for all normal (non-independent) media.
7095 See <link to="ISnapshot" /> for an introduction to snapshots.
7096
7097 This method can be called for a PoweredOff, Saved (see
7098 <link to="#saveState"/>), Running or
7099 Paused virtual machine. When the machine is PoweredOff, an
7100 offline snapshot is created. When the machine is Running a live
7101 snapshot is created, and an online snapshot is is created when Paused.
7102
7103 The taken snapshot is always based on the
7104 <link to="IMachine::currentSnapshot">current snapshot</link>
7105 of the associated virtual machine and becomes a new current snapshot.
7106
7107 <note>
7108 This method implicitly calls <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> to
7109 save all current machine settings before taking an offline snapshot.
7110 </note>
7111
7112 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
7113 Virtual machine currently changing state.
7114 </result>
7115 </desc>
7116 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7117 <desc>Short name for the snapshot.</desc>
7118 </param>
7119 <param name="description" type="wstring" dir="in">
7120 <desc>Optional description of the snapshot.</desc>
7121 </param>
7122 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
7123 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
7124 </param>
7125 </method>
7126
7127 <method name="deleteSnapshot">
7128 <desc>
7129 Starts deleting the specified snapshot asynchronously.
7130 See <link to="ISnapshot" /> for an introduction to snapshots.
7131
7132 The execution state and settings of the associated machine stored in
7133 the snapshot will be deleted. The contents of all differencing media of
7134 this snapshot will be merged with the contents of their dependent child
7135 media to keep the medium chain valid (in other words, all changes
7136 represented by media being deleted will be propagated to their child
7137 medium). After that, this snapshot's differencing medium will be
7138 deleted. The parent of this snapshot will become a new parent for all
7139 its child snapshots.
7140
7141 If the deleted snapshot is the current one, its parent snapshot will
7142 become a new current snapshot. The current machine state is not directly
7143 affected in this case, except that currently attached differencing
7144 media based on media of the deleted snapshot will be also merged as
7145 described above.
7146
7147 If the deleted snapshot is the first or current snapshot, then the
7148 respective IMachine attributes will be adjusted. Deleting the current
7149 snapshot will also implicitly call <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/>
7150 to make all current machine settings permanent.
7151
7152 Deleting a snapshot has the following preconditions:
7153
7154 <ul>
7155 <li>Child media of all normal media of the deleted snapshot
7156 must be accessible (see <link to="IMedium::state"/>) for this
7157 operation to succeed. In particular, this means that all virtual
7158 machines, whose media are directly or indirectly based on the
7159 media of deleted snapshot, must be powered off.</li>
7160
7161 <li>You cannot delete the snapshot if a medium attached to it has
7162 more than once child medium (differencing images) because otherwise
7163 merging would be impossible. This might be the case if there is
7164 more than one child snapshot or differencing images were created
7165 for other reason (e.g. implicitly because of multiple machine
7166 attachments).</li>
7167 </ul>
7168
7169
7170 The virtual machine's <link to="IMachine::state">state</link> is changed to "DeletingSnapshot"
7171 while this operation is in progress.
7172
7173 <note>
7174 Merging medium contents can be very time and disk space
7175 consuming, if these media are big in size and have many
7176 children. However, if the snapshot being deleted is the last
7177 (head) snapshot on the branch, the operation will be rather
7178 quick.
7179 </note>
7180 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
7181 Virtual machine is running.
7182 </result>
7183 </desc>
7184 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
7185 <desc>UUID of the snapshot to delete.</desc>
7186 </param>
7187 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
7188 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
7189 </param>
7190 </method>
7191
7192 <method name="restoreSnapshot">
7193 <desc>
7194 Starts resetting the machine's current state to the state contained
7195 in the given snapshot, asynchronously. All current settings of the
7196 machine will be reset and changes stored in differencing media
7197 will be lost.
7198 See <link to="ISnapshot" /> for an introduction to snapshots.
7199
7200 After this operation is successfully completed, new empty differencing
7201 media are created for all normal media of the machine.
7202
7203 If the given snapshot is an online snapshot, the machine will go to
7204 the <link to="MachineState_Saved"> saved state</link>, so that the
7205 next time it is powered on, the execution state will be restored
7206 from the state of the snapshot.
7207
7208 <note>
7209 The machine must not be running, otherwise the operation will fail.
7210 </note>
7211
7212 <note>
7213 If the machine state is <link to="MachineState_Saved">Saved</link>
7214 prior to this operation, the saved state file will be implicitly
7215 deleted (as if <link to="IConsole::forgetSavedState"/> were
7216 called).
7217 </note>
7218
7219 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
7220 Virtual machine is running.
7221 </result>
7222 </desc>
7223 <param name="snapshot" type="ISnapshot" dir="in">
7224 <desc>The snapshot to restore the VM state from.</desc>
7225 </param>
7226 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
7227 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
7228 </param>
7229 </method>
7230
7231 <method name="teleport">
7232 <desc>
7233 Teleport the VM to a different host machine or process.
7234
7235 TODO explain the details.
7236
7237 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
7238 Virtual machine not running or paused.
7239 </result>
7240 </desc>
7241 <param name="hostname" type="wstring" dir="in">
7242 <desc>The name or IP of the host to teleport to.</desc>
7243 </param>
7244 <param name="tcpport" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7245 <desc>The TCP port to connect to (1..65535).</desc>
7246 </param>
7247 <param name="password" type="wstring" dir="in">
7248 <desc>The password.</desc>
7249 </param>
7250 <param name="maxDowntime" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7251 <desc>
7252 The maximum allowed downtime given as milliseconds. 0 is not a valid
7253 value. Recommended value: 250 ms.
7254
7255 The higher the value is, the greater the chance for a successful
7256 teleportation. A small value may easily result in the teleportation
7257 process taking hours and eventually fail.
7258
7259 <note>
7260 The current implementation treats this a guideline, not as an
7261 absolute rule.
7262 </note>
7263 </desc>
7264 </param>
7265 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
7266 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
7267 </param>
7268 </method>
7269
7270 <method name="registerCallback">
7271 <desc>
7272 Registers a new console callback on this instance. The methods of the
7273 callback interface will be called by this instance when the appropriate
7274 event occurs.
7275 </desc>
7276 <param name="callback" type="IConsoleCallback" dir="in"/>
7277 </method>
7278
7279 <method name="unregisterCallback">
7280 <desc>
7281 Unregisters the console callback previously registered using
7282 <link to="#registerCallback"/>.
7283 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
7284 Given @a callback handler is not registered.
7285 </result>
7286 </desc>
7287 <param name="callback" type="IConsoleCallback" dir="in"/>
7288 </method>
7289 </interface>
7290
7291 <!--
7292 // IHost
7293 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
7294 -->
7295
7296 <enum
7297 name="HostNetworkInterfaceMediumType"
7298 uuid="1aa54aaf-2497-45a2-bfb1-8eb225e93d5b"
7299 >
7300 <desc>
7301 Type of encapsulation. Ethernet encapsulation includes both wired and
7302 wireless Ethernet connections.
7303 <see>IHostNetworkInterface</see>
7304 </desc>
7305
7306 <const name="Unknown" value="0">
7307 <desc>
7308 The type of interface cannot be determined.
7309 </desc>
7310 </const>
7311 <const name="Ethernet" value="1">
7312 <desc>
7313 Ethernet frame encapsulation.
7314 </desc>
7315 </const>
7316 <const name="PPP" value="2">
7317 <desc>
7318 Point-to-point protocol encapsulation.
7319 </desc>
7320 </const>
7321 <const name="SLIP" value="3">
7322 <desc>
7323 Serial line IP encapsulation.
7324 </desc>
7325 </const>
7326 </enum>
7327
7328 <enum
7329 name="HostNetworkInterfaceStatus"
7330 uuid="CC474A69-2710-434B-8D99-C38E5D5A6F41"
7331 >
7332 <desc>
7333 Current status of the interface.
7334 <see>IHostNetworkInterface</see>
7335 </desc>
7336
7337 <const name="Unknown" value="0">
7338 <desc>
7339 The state of interface cannot be determined.
7340 </desc>
7341 </const>
7342 <const name="Up" value="1">
7343 <desc>
7344 The interface is fully operational.
7345 </desc>
7346 </const>
7347 <const name="Down" value="2">
7348 <desc>
7349 The interface is not functioning.
7350 </desc>
7351 </const>
7352 </enum>
7353
7354 <enum
7355 name="HostNetworkInterfaceType"
7356 uuid="67431b00-9946-48a2-bc02-b25c5919f4f3"
7357 >
7358 <desc>
7359 Network interface type.
7360 </desc>
7361 <const name="Bridged" value="1"/>
7362 <const name="HostOnly" value="2"/>
7363 </enum>
7364
7365 <interface
7366 name="IHostNetworkInterface" extends="$unknown"
7367 uuid="ce6fae58-7642-4102-b5db-c9005c2320a8"
7368 wsmap="managed"
7369 >
7370 <desc>
7371 Represents one of host's network interfaces. IP V6 address and network
7372 mask are strings of 32 hexdecimal digits grouped by four. Groups are
7373 separated by colons.
7374 For example, fe80:0000:0000:0000:021e:c2ff:fed2:b030.
7375 </desc>
7376 <attribute name="name" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
7377 <desc>Returns the host network interface name.</desc>
7378 </attribute>
7379
7380 <attribute name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" readonly="yes">
7381 <desc>Returns the interface UUID.</desc>
7382 </attribute>
7383
7384 <attribute name="networkName" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
7385 <desc>Returns the name of a virtual network the interface gets attached to.</desc>
7386 </attribute>
7387
7388 <attribute name="dhcpEnabled" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
7389 <desc>Specifies whether the DHCP is enabled for the interface.</desc>
7390 </attribute>
7391
7392 <attribute name="IPAddress" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
7393 <desc>Returns the IP V4 address of the interface.</desc>
7394 </attribute>
7395
7396 <attribute name="networkMask" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
7397 <desc>Returns the network mask of the interface.</desc>
7398 </attribute>
7399
7400 <attribute name="IPV6Supported" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
7401 <desc>Specifies whether the IP V6 is supported/enabled for the interface.</desc>
7402 </attribute>
7403
7404 <attribute name="IPV6Address" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
7405 <desc>Returns the IP V6 address of the interface.</desc>
7406 </attribute>
7407
7408 <attribute name="IPV6NetworkMaskPrefixLength" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7409 <desc>Returns the length IP V6 network mask prefix of the interface.</desc>
7410 </attribute>
7411
7412 <attribute name="hardwareAddress" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
7413 <desc>Returns the hardware address. For Ethernet it is MAC address.</desc>
7414 </attribute>
7415
7416 <attribute name="mediumType" type="HostNetworkInterfaceMediumType" readonly="yes">
7417 <desc>Type of protocol encapsulation used.</desc>
7418 </attribute>
7419
7420 <attribute name="status" type="HostNetworkInterfaceStatus" readonly="yes">
7421 <desc>Status of the interface.</desc>
7422 </attribute>
7423
7424 <attribute name="interfaceType" type="HostNetworkInterfaceType" readonly="yes">
7425 <desc>specifies the host interface type.</desc>
7426 </attribute>
7427
7428 <method name="enableStaticIpConfig">
7429 <desc>sets and enables the static IP V4 configuration for the given interface.</desc>
7430 <param name="IPAddress" type="wstring" dir="in">
7431 <desc>
7432 IP address.
7433 </desc>
7434 </param>
7435 <param name="networkMask" type="wstring" dir="in">
7436 <desc>
7437 network mask.
7438 </desc>
7439 </param>
7440 </method>
7441
7442 <method name="enableStaticIpConfigV6">
7443 <desc>sets and enables the static IP V6 configuration for the given interface.</desc>
7444 <param name="IPV6Address" type="wstring" dir="in">
7445 <desc>
7446 IP address.
7447 </desc>
7448 </param>
7449 <param name="IPV6NetworkMaskPrefixLength" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7450 <desc>
7451 network mask.
7452 </desc>
7453 </param>
7454 </method>
7455
7456 <method name="enableDynamicIpConfig">
7457 <desc>enables the dynamic IP configuration.</desc>
7458 </method>
7459
7460 <method name="dhcpRediscover">
7461 <desc>refreshes the IP configuration for dhcp-enabled interface.</desc>
7462 </method>
7463
7464 </interface>
7465
7466 <interface
7467 name="IHost" extends="$unknown"
7468 uuid="e380cbfc-ae65-4fa6-899e-45ded6b3132a"
7469 wsmap="managed"
7470 >
7471 <desc>
7472 The IHost interface represents the physical machine that this VirtualBox
7473 installation runs on.
7474
7475 An object implementing this interface is returned by the
7476 <link to="IVirtualBox::host" /> attribute. This interface contains
7477 read-only information about the host's physical hardware (such as what
7478 processors and disks are available, what the host operating system is,
7479 and so on) and also allows for manipulating some of the host's hardware,
7480 such as global USB device filters and host interface networking.
7481
7482 </desc>
7483 <attribute name="DVDDrives" type="IMedium" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
7484 <desc>List of DVD drives available on the host.</desc>
7485 </attribute>
7486
7487 <attribute name="floppyDrives" type="IMedium" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
7488 <desc>List of floppy drives available on the host.</desc>
7489 </attribute>
7490
7491 <attribute name="USBDevices" type="IHostUSBDevice" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
7492 <desc>
7493 List of USB devices currently attached to the host.
7494 Once a new device is physically attached to the host computer,
7495 it appears in this list and remains there until detached.
7496
7497 <note>
7498 If USB functionality is not available in the given edition of
7499 VirtualBox, this method will set the result code to @c E_NOTIMPL.
7500 </note>
7501 </desc>
7502 </attribute>
7503
7504 <attribute name="USBDeviceFilters" type="IHostUSBDeviceFilter" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
7505 <desc>
7506 List of USB device filters in action.
7507 When a new device is physically attached to the host computer,
7508 filters from this list are applied to it (in order they are stored
7509 in the list). The first matched filter will determine the
7510 <link to="IHostUSBDeviceFilter::action">action</link>
7511 performed on the device.
7512
7513 Unless the device is ignored by these filters, filters of all
7514 currently running virtual machines
7515 (<link to="IUSBController::deviceFilters"/>) are applied to it.
7516
7517 <note>
7518 If USB functionality is not available in the given edition of
7519 VirtualBox, this method will set the result code to @c E_NOTIMPL.
7520 </note>
7521
7522 <see>IHostUSBDeviceFilter, USBDeviceState</see>
7523 </desc>
7524 </attribute>
7525
7526 <attribute name="networkInterfaces" type="IHostNetworkInterface" safearray="yes" readonly="yes">
7527 <desc>List of host network interfaces currently defined on the host.</desc>
7528 </attribute>
7529
7530 <attribute name="processorCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7531 <desc>Number of (logical) CPUs installed in the host system.</desc>
7532 </attribute>
7533
7534 <attribute name="processorOnlineCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7535 <desc>Number of (logical) CPUs online in the host system.</desc>
7536 </attribute>
7537
7538 <method name="getProcessorSpeed">
7539 <desc>Query the (approximate) maximum speed of a specified host CPU in
7540 Megahertz.
7541 </desc>
7542 <param name="cpuId" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7543 <desc>
7544 Identifier of the CPU.
7545 </desc>
7546 </param>
7547 <param name="speed" type="unsigned long" dir="return">
7548 <desc>
7549 Speed value. 0 is returned if value is not known or @a cpuId is
7550 invalid.
7551 </desc>
7552 </param>
7553 </method>
7554
7555 <method name="getProcessorFeature">
7556 <desc>Query whether a CPU feature is supported or not.</desc>
7557 <param name="feature" type="ProcessorFeature" dir="in">
7558 <desc>
7559 CPU Feature identifier.
7560 </desc>
7561 </param>
7562 <param name="supported" type="boolean" dir="return">
7563 <desc>
7564 Feature is supported or not.
7565 </desc>
7566 </param>
7567 </method>
7568
7569 <method name="getProcessorDescription">
7570 <desc>Query the model string of a specified host CPU.
7571 </desc>
7572 <param name="cpuId" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7573 <desc>
7574 Identifier of the CPU.
7575 <note>
7576 The current implementation might not necessarily return the
7577 description for this exact CPU.
7578 </note>
7579 </desc>
7580 </param>
7581 <param name="description" type="wstring" dir="return">
7582 <desc>
7583 Model string. An empty string is returned if value is not known or
7584 @a cpuId is invalid.
7585 </desc>
7586 </param>
7587 </method>
7588
7589 <method name="getProcessorCPUIDLeaf">
7590 <desc>
7591 Returns the CPU cpuid information for the specified leaf.
7592 </desc>
7593 <param name="cpuId" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7594 <desc>
7595 Identifier of the CPU. The CPU most be online.
7596 <note>
7597 The current implementation might not necessarily return the
7598 description for this exact CPU.
7599 </note>
7600 </desc>
7601 </param>
7602 <param name="leaf" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7603 <desc>
7604 CPUID leaf index (eax).
7605 </desc>
7606 </param>
7607 <param name="subLeaf" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7608 <desc>
7609 CPUID leaf sub index (ecx). This currently only applies to cache
7610 information on Intel CPUs. Use 0 if retriving values for
7611 <link to="IMachine::setCPUIDLeaf"/>.
7612 </desc>
7613 </param>
7614 <param name="valEax" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
7615 <desc>
7616 CPUID leaf value for register eax.
7617 </desc>
7618 </param>
7619 <param name="valEbx" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
7620 <desc>
7621 CPUID leaf value for register ebx.
7622 </desc>
7623 </param>
7624 <param name="valEcx" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
7625 <desc>
7626 CPUID leaf value for register ecx.
7627 </desc>
7628 </param>
7629 <param name="valEdx" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
7630 <desc>
7631 CPUID leaf value for register edx.
7632 </desc>
7633 </param>
7634 </method>
7635
7636 <attribute name="memorySize" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7637 <desc>Amount of system memory in megabytes installed in the host system.</desc>
7638 </attribute>
7639
7640 <attribute name="memoryAvailable" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7641 <desc>Available system memory in the host system.</desc>
7642 </attribute>
7643
7644 <attribute name="operatingSystem" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
7645 <desc>Name of the host system's operating system.</desc>
7646 </attribute>
7647
7648 <attribute name="OSVersion" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
7649 <desc>Host operating system's version string.</desc>
7650 </attribute>
7651
7652 <attribute name="UTCTime" type="long long" readonly="yes">
7653 <desc>Returns the current host time in milliseconds since 1970-01-01 UTC.</desc>
7654 </attribute>
7655
7656 <attribute name="Acceleration3DAvailable" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
7657 <desc>Returns @c true when the host supports 3D hardware acceleration.</desc>
7658 </attribute>
7659
7660 <method name="createHostOnlyNetworkInterface">
7661 <desc>
7662 Creates a new adapter for Host Only Networking.
7663 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
7664 Host network interface @a name already exists.
7665 </result>
7666 </desc>
7667 <param name="hostInterface" type="IHostNetworkInterface" dir="out">
7668 <desc>
7669 Created host interface object.
7670 </desc>
7671 </param>
7672 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
7673 <desc>
7674 Progress object to track the operation completion.
7675 </desc>
7676 </param>
7677 </method>
7678
7679 <method name="removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface">
7680 <desc>
7681 Removes the given Host Only Networking interface.
7682 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
7683 No host network interface matching @a id found.
7684 </result>
7685 </desc>
7686 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
7687 <desc>
7688 Adapter GUID.
7689 </desc>
7690 </param>
7691 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
7692 <desc>
7693 Progress object to track the operation completion.
7694 </desc>
7695 </param>
7696 </method>
7697
7698 <method name="createUSBDeviceFilter">
7699 <desc>
7700 Creates a new USB device filter. All attributes except
7701 the filter name are set to empty (any match),
7702 <i>active</i> is @c false (the filter is not active).
7703
7704 The created filter can be added to the list of filters using
7705 <link to="#insertUSBDeviceFilter"/>.
7706
7707 <see>#USBDeviceFilters</see>
7708 </desc>
7709 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7710 <desc>
7711 Filter name. See <link to="IHostUSBDeviceFilter::name"/>
7712 for more info.
7713 </desc>
7714 </param>
7715 <param name="filter" type="IHostUSBDeviceFilter" dir="return">
7716 <desc>Created filter object.</desc>
7717 </param>
7718 </method>
7719
7720 <method name="insertUSBDeviceFilter">
7721 <desc>
7722 Inserts the given USB device to the specified position
7723 in the list of filters.
7724
7725 Positions are numbered starting from @c 0. If the specified
7726 position is equal to or greater than the number of elements in
7727 the list, the filter is added at the end of the collection.
7728
7729 <note>
7730 Duplicates are not allowed, so an attempt to insert a
7731 filter already in the list is an error.
7732 </note>
7733 <note>
7734 If USB functionality is not available in the given edition of
7735 VirtualBox, this method will set the result code to @c E_NOTIMPL.
7736 </note>
7737
7738 <see>#USBDeviceFilters</see>
7739
7740 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
7741 USB device filter is not created within this VirtualBox instance.
7742 </result>
7743 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
7744 USB device filter already in list.
7745 </result>
7746
7747 </desc>
7748 <param name="position" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7749 <desc>Position to insert the filter to.</desc>
7750 </param>
7751 <param name="filter" type="IHostUSBDeviceFilter" dir="in">
7752 <desc>USB device filter to insert.</desc>
7753 </param>
7754 </method>
7755
7756 <method name="removeUSBDeviceFilter">
7757 <desc>
7758 Removes a USB device filter from the specified position in the
7759 list of filters.
7760
7761 Positions are numbered starting from @c 0. Specifying a
7762 position equal to or greater than the number of elements in
7763 the list will produce an error.
7764
7765 <note>
7766 If USB functionality is not available in the given edition of
7767 VirtualBox, this method will set the result code to @c E_NOTIMPL.
7768 </note>
7769
7770 <see>#USBDeviceFilters</see>
7771
7772 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
7773 USB device filter list empty or invalid @a position.
7774 </result>
7775
7776 </desc>
7777 <param name="position" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
7778 <desc>Position to remove the filter from.</desc>
7779 </param>
7780 </method>
7781
7782 <method name="findHostDVDDrive">
7783 <desc>
7784 Searches for a host DVD drive with the given @c name.
7785
7786 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
7787 Given @c name does not correspond to any host drive.
7788 </result>
7789
7790 </desc>
7791 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7792 <desc>Name of the host drive to search for</desc>
7793 </param>
7794 <param name="drive" type="IMedium" dir="return">
7795 <desc>Found host drive object</desc>
7796 </param>
7797 </method>
7798
7799 <method name="findHostFloppyDrive">
7800 <desc>
7801 Searches for a host floppy drive with the given @c name.
7802
7803 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
7804 Given @c name does not correspond to any host floppy drive.
7805 </result>
7806
7807 </desc>
7808 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7809 <desc>Name of the host floppy drive to search for</desc>
7810 </param>
7811 <param name="drive" type="IMedium" dir="return">
7812 <desc>Found host floppy drive object</desc>
7813 </param>
7814 </method>
7815
7816 <method name="findHostNetworkInterfaceByName">
7817 <desc>
7818 Searches through all host network interfaces for an interface with
7819 the given @c name.
7820 <note>
7821 The method returns an error if the given @c name does not
7822 correspond to any host network interface.
7823 </note>
7824 </desc>
7825 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7826 <desc>Name of the host network interface to search for.</desc>
7827 </param>
7828 <param name="networkInterface" type="IHostNetworkInterface" dir="return">
7829 <desc>Found host network interface object.</desc>
7830 </param>
7831 </method>
7832 <method name="findHostNetworkInterfaceById">
7833 <desc>
7834 Searches through all host network interfaces for an interface with
7835 the given GUID.
7836 <note>
7837 The method returns an error if the given GUID does not
7838 correspond to any host network interface.
7839 </note>
7840 </desc>
7841 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
7842 <desc>GUID of the host network interface to search for.</desc>
7843 </param>
7844 <param name="networkInterface" type="IHostNetworkInterface" dir="return">
7845 <desc>Found host network interface object.</desc>
7846 </param>
7847 </method>
7848 <method name="findHostNetworkInterfacesOfType">
7849 <desc>
7850 Searches through all host network interfaces and returns a list of interfaces of the specified type
7851 </desc>
7852 <param name="type" type="HostNetworkInterfaceType" dir="in">
7853 <desc>type of the host network interfaces to search for.</desc>
7854 </param>
7855 <param name="networkInterfaces" type="IHostNetworkInterface" safearray="yes" dir="return">
7856 <desc>Found host network interface objects.</desc>
7857 </param>
7858 </method>
7859
7860 <method name="findUSBDeviceById">
7861 <desc>
7862 Searches for a USB device with the given UUID.
7863
7864 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
7865 Given @c id does not correspond to any USB device.
7866 </result>
7867
7868 <see>IHostUSBDevice::id</see>
7869 </desc>
7870 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
7871 <desc>UUID of the USB device to search for.</desc>
7872 </param>
7873 <param name="device" type="IHostUSBDevice" dir="return">
7874 <desc>Found USB device object.</desc>
7875 </param>
7876 </method>
7877
7878 <method name="findUSBDeviceByAddress">
7879 <desc>
7880 Searches for a USB device with the given host address.
7881
7882 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
7883 Given @c name does not correspond to any USB device.
7884 </result>
7885
7886 <see>IHostUSBDevice::address</see>
7887 </desc>
7888 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
7889 <desc>
7890 Address of the USB device (as assigned by the host) to
7891 search for.
7892 </desc>
7893 </param>
7894 <param name="device" type="IHostUSBDevice" dir="return">
7895 <desc>Found USB device object.</desc>
7896 </param>
7897 </method>
7898
7899 </interface>
7900
7901 <!--
7902 // ISystemProperties
7903 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
7904 -->
7905
7906 <interface
7907 name="ISystemProperties"
7908 extends="$unknown"
7909 uuid="07c3ffd8-8f59-49cc-b608-53a332e85cc3"
7910 wsmap="managed"
7911 >
7912 <desc>
7913 The ISystemProperties interface represents global properties of the given
7914 VirtualBox installation.
7915
7916 These properties define limits and default values for various attributes
7917 and parameters. Most of the properties are read-only, but some can be
7918 changed by a user.
7919 </desc>
7920
7921 <attribute name="minGuestRAM" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7922 <desc>Minimum guest system memory in Megabytes.</desc>
7923 </attribute>
7924
7925 <attribute name="maxGuestRAM" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7926 <desc>Maximum guest system memory in Megabytes.</desc>
7927 </attribute>
7928
7929 <attribute name="minGuestVRAM" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7930 <desc>Minimum guest video memory in Megabytes.</desc>
7931 </attribute>
7932
7933 <attribute name="maxGuestVRAM" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7934 <desc>Maximum guest video memory in Megabytes.</desc>
7935 </attribute>
7936
7937 <attribute name="minGuestCPUCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7938 <desc>Minimum CPU count.</desc>
7939 </attribute>
7940
7941 <attribute name="maxGuestCPUCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7942 <desc>Maximum CPU count.</desc>
7943 </attribute>
7944
7945 <attribute name="maxGuestMonitors" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7946 <desc>Maximum of monitors which could be connected.</desc>
7947 </attribute>
7948
7949 <attribute name="maxVDISize" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
7950 <desc>Maximum size of a virtual disk image in Megabytes.</desc>
7951 </attribute>
7952
7953 <attribute name="networkAdapterCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7954 <desc>
7955 Number of network adapters associated with every
7956 <link to="IMachine"/> instance.
7957 </desc>
7958 </attribute>
7959
7960 <attribute name="serialPortCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7961 <desc>
7962 Number of serial ports associated with every
7963 <link to="IMachine"/> instance.
7964 </desc>
7965 </attribute>
7966
7967 <attribute name="parallelPortCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7968 <desc>
7969 Number of parallel ports associated with every
7970 <link to="IMachine"/> instance.
7971 </desc>
7972 </attribute>
7973
7974 <attribute name="maxBootPosition" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
7975 <desc>
7976 Maximum device position in the boot order. This value corresponds
7977 to the total number of devices a machine can boot from, to make it
7978 possible to include all possible devices to the boot list.
7979 <see><link to="IMachine::setBootOrder"/></see>
7980 </desc>
7981 </attribute>
7982
7983 <attribute name="defaultMachineFolder" type="wstring">
7984 <desc>
7985 Full path to the default directory used to create new or open
7986 existing machines when a settings file name contains no
7987 path.
7988
7989 The initial value of this property is
7990 <tt>&lt;</tt><link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">
7991 VirtualBox_home</link><tt>&gt;/Machines</tt>.
7992
7993 <note>
7994 Setting this property to @c null or an empty string will restore the
7995 initial value.
7996 </note>
7997 <note>
7998 When settings this property, the specified path can be
7999 absolute (full path) or relative
8000 to the <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">
8001 VirtualBox home directory</link>.
8002 When reading this property, a full path is
8003 always returned.
8004 </note>
8005 <note>
8006 The specified path may not exist, it will be created
8007 when necessary.
8008 </note>
8009
8010 <see>
8011 <link to="IVirtualBox::createMachine"/>,
8012 <link to="IVirtualBox::openMachine"/>
8013 </see>
8014 </desc>
8015 </attribute>
8016
8017 <attribute name="defaultHardDiskFolder" type="wstring">
8018 <desc>
8019 Full path to the default directory used to create new or open existing
8020 virtual disks.
8021
8022 This path is used when the storage unit of a hard disk is a regular file
8023 in the host's file system and only a file name that contains no path is
8024 given.
8025
8026 The initial value of this property is
8027 <tt>&lt;</tt>
8028 <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">VirtualBox_home</link>
8029 <tt>&gt;/HardDisks</tt>.
8030
8031 <note>
8032 Setting this property to @c null or empty string will restore the
8033 initial value.
8034 </note>
8035 <note>
8036 When settings this property, the specified path can be relative
8037 to the
8038 <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">VirtualBox home directory</link> or
8039 absolute. When reading this property, a full path is
8040 always returned.
8041 </note>
8042 <note>
8043 The specified path may not exist, it will be created
8044 when necessary.
8045 </note>
8046
8047 <see>
8048 IMedium,
8049 <link to="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk"/>,
8050 <link to="IVirtualBox::openHardDisk"/>,
8051 <link to="IMedium::location"/>
8052 </see>
8053 </desc>
8054 </attribute>
8055
8056 <attribute name="mediumFormats" type="IMediumFormat" safearray="yes" readonly="yes">
8057 <desc>
8058 List of all medium storage formats supported by this VirtualBox
8059 installation.
8060
8061 Keep in mind that the medium format identifier
8062 (<link to="IMediumFormat::id"/>) used in other API calls like
8063 <link to="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk"/> to refer to a particular
8064 medium format is a case-insensitive string. This means that, for
8065 example, all of the following strings:
8066 <pre>
8067 "VDI"
8068 "vdi"
8069 "VdI"</pre>
8070 refer to the same medium format.
8071
8072 Note that the virtual medium framework is backend-based, therefore
8073 the list of supported formats depends on what backends are currently
8074 installed.
8075
8076 <see>
8077 <link to="IMediumFormat"/>,
8078 </see>
8079 </desc>
8080 </attribute>
8081
8082 <attribute name="defaultHardDiskFormat" type="wstring">
8083 <desc>
8084 Identifier of the default medium format used by VirtualBox.
8085
8086 The medium format set by this attribute is used by VirtualBox
8087 when the medium format was not specified explicitly. One example is
8088 <link to="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk"/> with the empty
8089 format argument. A more complex example is implicit creation of
8090 differencing media when taking a snapshot of a virtual machine:
8091 this operation will try to use a format of the parent medium first
8092 and if this format does not support differencing media the default
8093 format specified by this argument will be used.
8094
8095 The list of supported medium formats may be obtained by the
8096 <link to="#mediaFormats"/> call. Note that the default medium
8097 format must have a capability to create differencing media;
8098 otherwise operations that create media implicitly may fail
8099 unexpectedly.
8100
8101 The initial value of this property is <tt>"VDI"</tt> in the current
8102 version of the VirtualBox product, but may change in the future.
8103
8104 <note>
8105 Setting this property to @c null or empty string will restore the
8106 initial value.
8107 </note>
8108
8109 <see>
8110 <link to="#mediaFormats"/>,
8111 <link to="IMediumFormat::id"/>,
8112 <link to="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk"/>
8113 </see>
8114 </desc>
8115 </attribute>
8116
8117 <attribute name="freeDiskSpaceWarning" type="unsigned long long">
8118 <desc>Issue a warning if the free disk space is below (or in some disk
8119 intensive operation is expected to go below) the given size in
8120 Megabytes.</desc>
8121 </attribute>
8122
8123 <attribute name="freeDiskSpacePercentWarning" type="unsigned long">
8124 <desc>Issue a warning if the free disk space is below (or in some disk
8125 intensive operation is expected to go below) the given percentage.</desc>
8126 </attribute>
8127
8128 <attribute name="freeDiskSpaceError" type="unsigned long long">
8129 <desc>Issue an error if the free disk space is below (or in some disk
8130 intensive operation is expected to go below) the given size in
8131 Megabytes.</desc>
8132 </attribute>
8133
8134 <attribute name="freeDiskSpacePercentError" type="unsigned long">
8135 <desc>Issue an error if the free disk space is below (or in some disk
8136 intensive operation is expected to go below) the given percentage.</desc>
8137 </attribute>
8138
8139 <attribute name="remoteDisplayAuthLibrary" type="wstring">
8140 <desc>
8141 Library that provides authentication for VRDP clients. The library
8142 is used if a virtual machine's authentication type is set to "external"
8143 in the VM RemoteDisplay configuration.
8144
8145 The system library extension (".DLL" or ".so") must be omitted.
8146 A full path can be specified; if not, then the library must reside on the
8147 system's default library path.
8148
8149 The default value of this property is <tt>"VRDPAuth"</tt>. There is a library
8150 of that name in one of the default VirtualBox library directories.
8151
8152 For details about VirtualBox authentication libraries and how to implement
8153 them, please refer to the VirtualBox manual.
8154
8155 <note>
8156 Setting this property to @c null or empty string will restore the
8157 initial value.
8158 </note>
8159 </desc>
8160 </attribute>
8161
8162 <attribute name="webServiceAuthLibrary" type="wstring">
8163 <desc>
8164 Library that provides authentication for webservice clients. The library
8165 is used if a virtual machine's authentication type is set to "external"
8166 in the VM RemoteDisplay configuration and will be called from
8167 within the <link to="IWebsessionManager::logon" /> implementation.
8168
8169 As opposed to <link to="ISystemProperties::remoteDisplayAuthLibrary" />,
8170 there is no per-VM setting for this, as the webservice is a global
8171 resource (if it is running). Only for this setting (for the webservice),
8172 setting this value to a literal <tt>"null"</tt> string disables authentication,
8173 meaning that <link to="IWebsessionManager::logon" /> will always succeed,
8174 no matter what user name and password are supplied.
8175
8176 The initial value of this property is <tt>"VRDPAuth"</tt>,
8177 meaning that the webservice will use the same authentication
8178 library that is used by default for VBoxVRDP (again, see
8179 <link to="ISystemProperties::remoteDisplayAuthLibrary" />).
8180 The format and calling convention of authentication libraries
8181 is the same for the webservice as it is for VBoxVRDP.
8182
8183 <note>
8184 Setting this property to @c null or empty string will restore the
8185 initial value.
8186 </note>
8187 </desc>
8188 </attribute>
8189
8190 <attribute name="LogHistoryCount" type="unsigned long">
8191 <desc>
8192 This value specifies how many old release log files are kept.
8193 </desc>
8194 </attribute>
8195
8196 <attribute name="defaultAudioDriver" type="AudioDriverType" readonly="yes">
8197 <desc>This value hold the default audio driver for the current
8198 system.</desc>
8199 </attribute>
8200
8201 <method name="getMaxDevicesPerPortForStorageBus">
8202 <desc>Returns the maximum number of devices which can be attached to a port
8203 for the given storage bus.</desc>
8204
8205 <param name="bus" type="StorageBus" dir="in">
8206 <desc>The storage bus type to get the value for.</desc>
8207 </param>
8208
8209 <param name="maxDevicesPerPort" type="unsigned long" dir="return">
8210 <desc>The maximum number of devices which can eb attached to the port for the given
8211 storage bus.</desc>
8212 </param>
8213 </method>
8214
8215 <method name="getMinPortCountForStorageBus">
8216 <desc>Returns the minimum number of ports the given storage bus supports.</desc>
8217
8218 <param name="bus" type="StorageBus" dir="in">
8219 <desc>The storage bus type to get the value for.</desc>
8220 </param>
8221
8222 <param name="minPortCount" type="unsigned long" dir="return">
8223 <desc>The minimum number of ports for the given storage bus.</desc>
8224 </param>
8225 </method>
8226
8227 <method name="getMaxPortCountForStorageBus">
8228 <desc>Returns the maximum number of ports the given storage bus supports.</desc>
8229
8230 <param name="bus" type="StorageBus" dir="in">
8231 <desc>The storage bus type to get the value for.</desc>
8232 </param>
8233
8234 <param name="maxPortCount" type="unsigned long" dir="return">
8235 <desc>The maximum number of ports for the given storage bus.</desc>
8236 </param>
8237 </method>
8238
8239 <method name="getMaxInstancesOfStorageBus">
8240 <desc>Returns the maximum number of storage bus instances which
8241 can be configured for each VM. This corresponds to the number of
8242 storage controllers one can have.</desc>
8243
8244 <param name="bus" type="StorageBus" dir="in">
8245 <desc>The storage bus type to get the value for.</desc>
8246 </param>
8247
8248 <param name="maxInstances" type="unsigned long" dir="return">
8249 <desc>The maximum number of instances for the given storage bus.</desc>
8250 </param>
8251 </method>
8252
8253 <method name="getDeviceTypesForStorageBus">
8254 <desc>Returns list of all the supported device types
8255 (<link to="DeviceType"/>) for the given type of storage
8256 bus.</desc>
8257
8258 <param name="bus" type="StorageBus" dir="in">
8259 <desc>The storage bus type to get the value for.</desc>
8260 </param>
8261
8262 <param name="deviceTypes" type="DeviceType" safearray="yes" dir="return">
8263 <desc>The list of all supported device types for the given storage bus.</desc>
8264 </param>
8265 </method>
8266 </interface>
8267
8268 <!--
8269 // IGuest
8270 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8271 -->
8272
8273 <interface
8274 name="IGuestOSType" extends="$unknown"
8275 uuid="3fcf2078-3c69-45ca-bd5c-79c3e3c15362"
8276 wsmap="struct"
8277 >
8278 <desc>
8279 </desc>
8280
8281 <attribute name="familyId" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
8282 <desc>Guest OS family identifier string.</desc>
8283 </attribute>
8284
8285 <attribute name="familyDescription" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
8286 <desc>Human readable description of the guest OS family.</desc>
8287 </attribute>
8288
8289 <attribute name="id" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
8290 <desc>Guest OS identifier string.</desc>
8291 </attribute>
8292
8293 <attribute name="description" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
8294 <desc>Human readable description of the guest OS.</desc>
8295 </attribute>
8296
8297 <attribute name="is64Bit" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8298 <desc>Returns @c true if the given OS is 64-bit</desc>
8299 </attribute>
8300
8301 <attribute name="recommendedIOAPIC" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8302 <desc>Returns @c true if IO APIC recommended for this OS type.</desc>
8303 </attribute>
8304
8305 <attribute name="recommendedVirtEx" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8306 <desc>Returns @c true if VT-x or AMD-V recommended for this OS type.</desc>
8307 </attribute>
8308
8309 <attribute name="recommendedRAM" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
8310 <desc>Recommended RAM size in Megabytes.</desc>
8311 </attribute>
8312
8313 <attribute name="recommendedVRAM" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
8314 <desc>Recommended video RAM size in Megabytes.</desc>
8315 </attribute>
8316
8317 <attribute name="recommendedHDD" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
8318 <desc>Recommended hard disk size in Megabytes.</desc>
8319 </attribute>
8320
8321 <attribute name="adapterType" type="NetworkAdapterType" readonly="yes">
8322 <desc>Returns recommended network adapter for this OS type.</desc>
8323 </attribute>
8324
8325 <attribute name="recommendedPae" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8326 <desc>Returns @c true if using PAE is recommended for this OS type.</desc>
8327 </attribute>
8328
8329 <attribute name="recommendedStorageController" type="StorageControllerType" readonly="yes">
8330 <desc>Recommended storage controller type.</desc>
8331 </attribute>
8332
8333 <attribute name="recommendedFirmware" type="FirmwareType" readonly="yes">
8334 <desc>Recommended firmware type.</desc>
8335 </attribute>
8336
8337 <attribute name="recommendedUsbHid" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8338 <desc>Returns @c true if using USB Human Interface Devices, such as keyboard and mouse recommended.</desc>
8339 </attribute>
8340
8341 <attribute name="recommendedHpet" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8342 <desc>Returns @c true if using HPET is recommended for this OS type.</desc>
8343 </attribute>
8344
8345 <attribute name="recommendedUsbTablet" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8346 <desc>Returns @c true if using a USB Tablet is recommended.</desc>
8347 </attribute>
8348
8349 <attribute name="recommendedRtcUseUtc" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8350 <desc>Returns @c true if the RTC of this VM should be set to UTC</desc>
8351 </attribute>
8352
8353 </interface>
8354
8355 <interface
8356 name="IGuest" extends="$unknown"
8357 uuid="8cf03bf9-7478-42de-add8-10b2af75a06d"
8358 wsmap="managed"
8359 >
8360 <desc>
8361 The IGuest interface represents information about the operating system
8362 running inside the virtual machine. Used in
8363 <link to="IConsole::guest"/>.
8364
8365 IGuest provides information about the guest operating system, whether
8366 Guest Additions are installed and other OS-specific virtual machine
8367 properties.
8368 </desc>
8369
8370 <attribute name="OSTypeId" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
8371 <desc>
8372 Identifier of the Guest OS type as reported by the Guest
8373 Additions.
8374 You may use <link to="IVirtualBox::getGuestOSType"/> to obtain
8375 an IGuestOSType object representing details about the given
8376 Guest OS type.
8377 <note>
8378 If Guest Additions are not installed, this value will be
8379 the same as <link to="IMachine::OSTypeId"/>.
8380 </note>
8381 </desc>
8382 </attribute>
8383
8384 <attribute name="additionsActive" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8385 <desc>
8386 Flag whether the Guest Additions are installed and active
8387 in which case their version will be returned by the
8388 <link to="#additionsVersion"/> property.
8389 </desc>
8390 </attribute>
8391
8392 <attribute name="additionsVersion" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
8393 <desc>
8394 Version of the Guest Additions (3 decimal numbers separated
8395 by dots) or empty when the Additions are not installed. The
8396 Additions may also report a version but yet not be active as
8397 the version might be refused by VirtualBox (incompatible) or
8398 other failures occurred.
8399 </desc>
8400 </attribute>
8401
8402 <attribute name="supportsSeamless" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8403 <desc>
8404 Flag whether seamless guest display rendering (seamless desktop
8405 integration) is supported.
8406 </desc>
8407 </attribute>
8408
8409 <attribute name="supportsGraphics" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8410 <desc>
8411 Flag whether the guest is in graphics mode. If it is not, then
8412 seamless rendering will not work, resize hints are not immediately
8413 acted on and guest display resizes are probably not initiated by
8414 the guest additions.
8415 </desc>
8416 </attribute>
8417
8418 <attribute name="memoryBalloonSize" type="unsigned long">
8419 <desc>Guest system memory balloon size in megabytes (transient property).</desc>
8420 </attribute>
8421
8422 <attribute name="statisticsUpdateInterval" type="unsigned long">
8423 <desc>Interval to update guest statistics in seconds.</desc>
8424 </attribute>
8425
8426 <method name="internalGetStatistics">
8427 <desc>
8428 Internal method; do not use as it might change at any time
8429 </desc>
8430 <param name="cpuUser" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8431 <desc>Percentage of processor time spent in user mode as seen by the guest</desc>
8432 </param>
8433 <param name="cpuKernel" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8434 <desc>Percentage of processor time spent in kernel mode as seen by the guest</desc>
8435 </param>
8436 <param name="cpuIdle" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8437 <desc>Percentage of processor time spent idling as seen by the guest</desc>
8438 </param>
8439 <param name="memTotal" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8440 <desc>Total amount of physical guest RAM</desc>
8441 </param>
8442 <param name="memFree" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8443 <desc>Free amount of physical guest RAM</desc>
8444 </param>
8445 <param name="memBalloon" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8446 <desc>Amount of ballooned physical guest RAM</desc>
8447 </param>
8448 <param name="memCache" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8449 <desc>Total amount of guest (disk) cache memory</desc>
8450 </param>
8451 <param name="pagedTotal" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8452 <desc>Total amount of space in the page file</desc>
8453 </param>
8454 <param name="memAllocTotal" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8455 <desc>Total amount of memory allocated by the hypervisor</desc>
8456 </param>
8457 <param name="memFreeTotal" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8458 <desc>Total amount of free memory available in the hypervisor</desc>
8459 </param>
8460 <param name="memBalloonTotal" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8461 <desc>Total amount of memory ballooned by the hypervisor</desc>
8462 </param>
8463 </method>
8464
8465 <method name="setCredentials">
8466 <desc>
8467 Store login credentials that can be queried by guest operating
8468 systems with Additions installed. The credentials are transient
8469 to the session and the guest may also choose to erase them. Note
8470 that the caller cannot determine whether the guest operating system
8471 has queried or made use of the credentials.
8472
8473 <result name="VBOX_E_VM_ERROR">
8474 VMM device is not available.
8475 </result>
8476
8477 </desc>
8478 <param name="userName" type="wstring" dir="in">
8479 <desc>User name string, can be empty</desc>
8480 </param>
8481 <param name="password" type="wstring" dir="in">
8482 <desc>Password string, can be empty</desc>
8483 </param>
8484 <param name="domain" type="wstring" dir="in">
8485 <desc>Domain name (guest logon scheme specific), can be empty</desc>
8486 </param>
8487 <param name="allowInteractiveLogon" type="boolean" dir="in">
8488 <desc>
8489 Flag whether the guest should alternatively allow the user to
8490 interactively specify different credentials. This flag might
8491 not be supported by all versions of the Additions.
8492 </desc>
8493 </param>
8494 </method>
8495
8496 <method name="executeProcess">
8497 <desc>
8498 Executes an existing program inside the guest VM.
8499
8500 <result name="E_NOTIMPL">
8501 Not implemented yet.
8502 </result>
8503
8504 </desc>
8505 <param name="execName" type="wstring" dir="in">
8506 <desc>
8507 Full path name of the command to execute on the guest; the
8508 commands has to exists in the guest VM in order to be executed.
8509 </desc>
8510 </param>
8511 <param name="flags" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
8512 <desc>
8513 Execution flags - currently not supported and therefore
8514 has to be set to 0.
8515 </desc>
8516 </param>
8517 <param name="arguments" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="in">
8518 <desc>
8519 Array of arguments passed to the execution command.
8520 </desc>
8521 </param>
8522 <param name="environment" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="in">
8523 <desc>
8524 Environment variables that can be set while the command is being
8525 executed, in form of "NAME=VALUE"; one pair per entry. To unset a
8526 variable just set its name ("NAME") without a value.
8527 </desc>
8528 </param>
8529 <param name="stdIn" type="wstring" dir="in">
8530 <desc>
8531 What to do with the standard input (stdin) of the command being
8532 executed. Currently not used and has to be set to an empty value.
8533 </desc>
8534 </param>
8535 <param name="stdOut" type="wstring" dir="in">
8536 <desc>
8537 What to do with the standard output (stdout) of the command being
8538 executed. Currently not used and has to be set to an empty value.
8539 </desc>
8540 </param>
8541 <param name="stdErr" type="wstring" dir="in">
8542 <desc>
8543 What to do with the standard error (stderr) of the command being
8544 executed. Currently not used and has to be set to an empty value.
8545 </desc>
8546 </param>
8547 <param name="userName" type="wstring" dir="in">
8548 <desc>
8549 User name under which the command will be executed; has to exist
8550 and have the appropriate rights to execute programs in the VM.
8551 </desc>
8552 </param>
8553 <param name="password" type="wstring" dir="in">
8554 <desc>
8555 Password of the user account specified.
8556 </desc>
8557 </param>
8558 <param name="timeoutMS" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
8559 <desc>
8560 The maximum timeout value (in msec) to wait for finished program
8561 execution. Pass 0 for an infinite timeout.
8562 </desc>
8563 </param>
8564 <param name="pid" type="unsigned long" dir="out">
8565 <desc>
8566 The PID (process ID) of the started command for later reference.
8567 </desc>
8568 </param>
8569 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
8570 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
8571 </param>
8572 </method>
8573
8574 </interface>
8575
8576
8577 <!--
8578 // IProgress
8579 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8580 -->
8581
8582 <interface
8583 name="IProgress" extends="$unknown"
8584 uuid="856aa038-853f-42e2-acf7-6e7b02dbe294"
8585 wsmap="managed"
8586 >
8587 <desc>
8588 The IProgress interface is used to track and control
8589 asynchronous tasks within VirtualBox.
8590
8591 An instance of this is returned every time VirtualBox starts
8592 an asynchronous task (in other words, a separate thread) which
8593 continues to run after a method call returns. For example,
8594 <link to="IConsole::saveState" />, which saves the state of
8595 a running virtual machine, can take a long time to complete.
8596 To be able to display a progress bar, a user interface such as
8597 the VirtualBox graphical user interface can use the IProgress
8598 object returned by that method.
8599
8600 Note that IProgress is a "read-only" interface in the sense
8601 that only the VirtualBox internals behind the Main API can
8602 create and manipulate progress objects, whereas client code
8603 can only use the IProgress object to monitor a task's
8604 progress and, if <link to="#cancelable" /> is @c true,
8605 cancel the task by calling <link to="#cancel" />.
8606
8607 A task represented by IProgress consists of either one or
8608 several sub-operations that run sequentially, one by one (see
8609 <link to="#operation" /> and <link to="#operationCount" />).
8610 Every operation is identified by a number (starting from 0)
8611 and has a separate description.
8612
8613 You can find the individual percentage of completion of the current
8614 operation in <link to="#operationPercent" /> and the
8615 percentage of completion of the task as a whole
8616 in <link to="#percent" />.
8617
8618 Similarly, you can wait for the completion of a particular
8619 operation via <link to="#waitForOperationCompletion" /> or
8620 for the completion of the whole task via
8621 <link to="#waitForCompletion" />.
8622 </desc>
8623
8624 <attribute name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" readonly="yes">
8625 <desc>ID of the task.</desc>
8626 </attribute>
8627
8628 <attribute name="description" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
8629 <desc>Description of the task.</desc>
8630 </attribute>
8631
8632 <attribute name="initiator" type="$unknown" readonly="yes">
8633 <desc>Initiator of the task.</desc>
8634 </attribute>
8635
8636 <attribute name="cancelable" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8637 <desc>Whether the task can be interrupted.</desc>
8638 </attribute>
8639
8640 <attribute name="percent" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
8641 <desc>
8642 Current progress value of the task as a whole, in percent.
8643 This value depends on how many operations are already complete.
8644 Returns 100 if <link to="#completed" /> is @c true.
8645 </desc>
8646 </attribute>
8647
8648 <attribute name="timeRemaining" type="long" readonly="yes">
8649 <desc>
8650 Estimated remaining time until the task completes, in
8651 seconds. Returns 0 once the task has completed; returns -1
8652 if the remaining time cannot be computed, in particular if
8653 the current progress is 0.
8654
8655 Even if a value is returned, the estimate will be unreliable
8656 for low progress values. It will become more reliable as the
8657 task progresses; it is not recommended to display an ETA
8658 before at least 20% of a task have completed.
8659 </desc>
8660 </attribute>
8661
8662 <attribute name="completed" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8663 <desc>Whether the task has been completed.</desc>
8664 </attribute>
8665
8666 <attribute name="canceled" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8667 <desc>Whether the task has been canceled.</desc>
8668 </attribute>
8669
8670 <attribute name="resultCode" type="long" readonly="yes">
8671 <desc>
8672 Result code of the progress task.
8673 Valid only if <link to="#completed"/> is @c true.
8674 </desc>
8675 </attribute>
8676
8677 <attribute name="errorInfo" type="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" readonly="yes">
8678 <desc>
8679 Extended information about the unsuccessful result of the
8680 progress operation. May be @c null if no extended information
8681 is available.
8682 Valid only if <link to="#completed"/> is @c true and
8683 <link to="#resultCode"/> indicates a failure.
8684 </desc>
8685 </attribute>
8686
8687 <attribute name="operationCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
8688 <desc>
8689 Number of sub-operations this task is divided into.
8690 Every task consists of at least one suboperation.
8691 </desc>
8692 </attribute>
8693
8694 <attribute name="operation" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
8695 <desc>Number of the sub-operation being currently executed.</desc>
8696 </attribute>
8697
8698 <attribute name="operationDescription" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
8699 <desc>
8700 Description of the sub-operation being currently executed.
8701 </desc>
8702 </attribute>
8703
8704 <attribute name="operationPercent" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
8705 <desc>Progress value of the current sub-operation only, in percent.</desc>
8706 </attribute>
8707
8708 <attribute name="timeout" type="unsigned long">
8709 <desc>
8710 When non-zero, this specifies the number of milliseconds after which
8711 the operation will automatically be canceled. This can only be set on
8712 cancelable objects.
8713 </desc>
8714 </attribute>
8715
8716 <method name="setCurrentOperationProgress">
8717 <desc>Internal method, not to be called externally.</desc>
8718 <param name="percent" type="unsigned long" dir="in" />
8719 </method>
8720 <method name="setNextOperation">
8721 <desc>Internal method, not to be called externally.</desc>
8722 <param name="nextOperationDescription" type="wstring" dir="in" />
8723 <param name="nextOperationsWeight" type="unsigned long" dir="in" />
8724 </method>
8725
8726 <method name="waitForCompletion">
8727 <desc>
8728 Waits until the task is done (including all sub-operations)
8729 with a given timeout in milliseconds; specify -1 for an indefinite wait.
8730
8731 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
8732 Failed to wait for task completion.
8733 </result>
8734 </desc>
8735
8736 <param name="timeout" type="long" dir="in">
8737 <desc>
8738 Maximum time in milliseconds to wait or -1 to wait indefinitely.
8739 </desc>
8740 </param>
8741 </method>
8742
8743 <method name="waitForOperationCompletion">
8744 <desc>
8745 Waits until the given operation is done with a given timeout in
8746 milliseconds; specify -1 for an indefinite wait.
8747
8748 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
8749 Failed to wait for operation completion.
8750 </result>
8751
8752 </desc>
8753 <param name="operation" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
8754 <desc>
8755 Number of the operation to wait for.
8756 Must be less than <link to="#operationCount"/>.
8757 </desc>
8758 </param>
8759 <param name="timeout" type="long" dir="in">
8760 <desc>
8761 Maximum time in milliseconds to wait or -1 to wait indefinitely.
8762 </desc>
8763 </param>
8764 </method>
8765
8766 <method name="cancel">
8767 <desc>
8768 Cancels the task.
8769 <note>
8770 If <link to="#cancelable"/> is @c false, then this method will fail.
8771 </note>
8772
8773 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
8774 Operation cannot be canceled.
8775 </result>
8776
8777 </desc>
8778 </method>
8779
8780 </interface>
8781
8782
8783 <!--
8784 // ISnapshot
8785 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8786 -->
8787
8788 <interface
8789 name="ISnapshot" extends="$unknown"
8790 uuid="1a2d0551-58a4-4107-857e-ef414fc42ffc"
8791 wsmap="managed"
8792 >
8793 <desc>
8794 The ISnapshot interface represents a snapshot of the virtual
8795 machine.
8796
8797 Together with the differencing media that are created
8798 when a snapshot is taken, a machine can be brought back to
8799 the exact state it was in when the snapshot was taken.
8800
8801 The ISnapshot interface has no methods, only attributes; snapshots
8802 are controlled through methods of the <link to="IConsole" /> interface
8803 which also manage the media associated with the snapshot.
8804 The following operations exist:
8805
8806 <ul>
8807 <li><link to="IConsole::takeSnapshot"/>: creates a new snapshot
8808 by creating new, empty differencing images for the machine's
8809 media and saving the VM settings and (if the VM is running)
8810 the current VM state in the snapshot.
8811
8812 The differencing images will then receive all data written to
8813 the machine's media, while their parent (base) images
8814 remain unmodified after the snapshot has been taken (see
8815 <link to="IMedium" /> for details about differencing images).
8816 This simplifies restoring a machine to the state of a snapshot:
8817 only the differencing images need to be deleted.
8818
8819 The current machine state is not changed by taking a snapshot.
8820 If the machine is running, it will resume execution after the
8821 snapshot has been taken.
8822 </li>
8823
8824 <li><link to="IConsole::restoreSnapshot"/>: this goes back to
8825 a previous snapshot. This resets the machine's state to that of
8826 the previous snapshot by deleting the differencing image of each
8827 of the machine's media and setting the machine's settings
8828 and state to the state that was saved in the snapshot (if any).
8829
8830 This destroys the machine's current state.
8831 </li>
8832
8833 <li><link to="IConsole::deleteSnapshot"/>: deletes a snapshot
8834 without affecting the current machine state.
8835
8836 This does not change the machine, but instead frees the resources
8837 allocated when the snapshot was taken: the settings and machine state
8838 is deleted (if any), and the snapshot's differencing image for each
8839 of the machine's media gets merged with its parent image.
8840
8841 Neither the current machine state nor other snapshots are affected
8842 by this operation, except that parent media will be modified
8843 to contain the disk data associated with the snapshot being deleted.
8844 </li>
8845 </ul>
8846
8847 Each snapshot contains the settings of the virtual machine (hardware
8848 configuration etc.). In addition, if the machine was running when the
8849 snapshot was taken (<link to="IMachine::state"/> is <link to="MachineState_Running"/>),
8850 the current VM state is saved in the snapshot (similarly to what happens
8851 when a VM's state is saved). The snapshot is then said to
8852 be <i>online</i> because when restoring it, the VM will be running.
8853
8854 If the machine is saved (<link to="MachineState_Saved"/>), the snapshot
8855 receives a copy of the execution state file (<link to="IMachine::stateFilePath"/>).
8856
8857 Otherwise, if the machine was not running (<link to="MachineState_PoweredOff"/>
8858 or <link to="MachineState_Aborted"/>), the snapshot is <i>offline</i>;
8859 it then contains a so-called "zero execution state", representing a
8860 machine that is powered off.
8861
8862 <h3>Snapshot branches and the "current" snapshot</h3>
8863
8864 Snapshots can be chained, whereby every next snapshot is based on the
8865 previous one. This chaining is related to medium branching
8866 (see the <link to="IMedium"/> description) in that every time
8867 a new snapshot is created, a new differencing medium is implicitly
8868 created for all normal media attached to the machine.
8869
8870 Each virtual machine has a "current snapshot", identified by
8871 <link to="IMachine::currentSnapshot"/>. Presently, this is always set
8872 to the last snapshot in the chain. In a future version of VirtualBox,
8873 it will be possible to reset a machine's current state to that of an
8874 earlier snapshot without deleting the current state so that it will be
8875 possible to create alternative snapshot paths in a snapshot tree.
8876
8877 In the current implementation, multiple snapshot branches within one
8878 virtual machine are not allowed. Every machine has a single branch,
8879 and <link to="IConsole::takeSnapshot"/> operation adds a new
8880 snapshot to the top of that branch.
8881 </desc>
8882
8883 <attribute name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" readonly="yes">
8884 <desc>UUID of the snapshot.</desc>
8885 </attribute>
8886
8887 <attribute name="name" type="wstring">
8888 <desc>Short name of the snapshot.</desc>
8889 </attribute>
8890
8891 <attribute name="description" type="wstring">
8892 <desc>Optional description of the snapshot.</desc>
8893 </attribute>
8894
8895 <attribute name="timeStamp" type="long long" readonly="yes">
8896 <desc>
8897 Time stamp of the snapshot, in milliseconds since 1970-01-01 UTC.
8898 </desc>
8899 </attribute>
8900
8901 <attribute name="online" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
8902 <desc>
8903 @c true if this snapshot is an online snapshot and @c false otherwise.
8904
8905 When this attribute is @c true, the
8906 <link to="IMachine::stateFilePath"/> attribute of the
8907 <link to="#machine"/> object associated with this snapshot
8908 will point to the saved state file. Otherwise, it will be
8909 an empty string.
8910 </desc>
8911 </attribute>
8912
8913 <attribute name="machine" type="IMachine" readonly="yes">
8914 <desc>
8915 Virtual machine this snapshot is taken on. This object
8916 stores all settings the machine had when taking this snapshot.
8917 <note>
8918 The returned machine object is immutable, i.e. no
8919 any settings can be changed.
8920 </note>
8921 </desc>
8922 </attribute>
8923
8924 <attribute name="parent" type="ISnapshot" readonly="yes">
8925 <desc>
8926 Parent snapshot (a snapshot this one is based on), or
8927 @c null if the snapshot has no parent (i.e. is the first snapshot).
8928 </desc>
8929 </attribute>
8930
8931 <attribute name="children" type="ISnapshot" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
8932 <desc>
8933 Child snapshots (all snapshots having this one as a parent).
8934 </desc>
8935 </attribute>
8936
8937 </interface>
8938
8939
8940 <!--
8941 // IMedium
8942 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8943 -->
8944
8945 <enum
8946 name="MediumState"
8947 uuid="ef41e980-e012-43cd-9dea-479d4ef14d13"
8948 >
8949 <desc>
8950 Virtual medium state.
8951 <see>IMedium</see>
8952 </desc>
8953
8954 <const name="NotCreated" value="0">
8955 <desc>
8956 Associated medium storage does not exist (either was not created yet or
8957 was deleted).
8958 </desc>
8959 </const>
8960 <const name="Created" value="1">
8961 <desc>
8962 Associated storage exists and accessible; this gets set if the
8963 accessibility check performed by <link to="IMedium::refreshState" />
8964 was successful.
8965 </desc>
8966 </const>
8967 <const name="LockedRead" value="2">
8968 <desc>
8969 Medium is locked for reading (see <link to="IMedium::lockRead"/>),
8970 no data modification is possible.
8971 </desc>
8972 </const>
8973 <const name="LockedWrite" value="3">
8974 <desc>
8975 Medium is locked for writing (see <link to="IMedium::lockWrite"/>),
8976 no concurrent data reading or modification is possible.
8977 </desc>
8978 </const>
8979 <const name="Inaccessible" value="4">
8980 <desc>
8981 Medium accessiblity check (see <link to="IMedium::refreshState" />) has
8982 not yet been performed, or else, associated medium storage is not
8983 accessible. In the first case, <link to="IMedium::lastAccessError"/>
8984 is empty, in the second case, it describes the error that occured.
8985 </desc>
8986 </const>
8987 <const name="Creating" value="5">
8988 <desc>
8989 Associated medium storage is being created.
8990 </desc>
8991 </const>
8992 <const name="Deleting" value="6">
8993 <desc>
8994 Associated medium storage is being deleted.
8995 </desc>
8996 </const>
8997 </enum>
8998
8999 <enum
9000 name="MediumType"
9001 uuid="11f6f7a5-0327-409a-9d42-7db6a0cec578"
9002 >
9003 <desc>
9004 Virtual medium type.
9005 <see>IMedium</see>
9006 </desc>
9007
9008 <const name="Normal" value="0">
9009 <desc>
9010 Normal medium (attached directly or indirectly, preserved
9011 when taking snapshots).
9012 </desc>
9013 </const>
9014 <const name="Immutable" value="1">
9015 <desc>
9016 Immutable medium (attached indirectly, changes are wiped out
9017 the next time the virtual machine is started).
9018 </desc>
9019 </const>
9020 <const name="Writethrough" value="2">
9021 <desc>
9022 Write through medium (attached directly, ignored when
9023 taking snapshots).
9024 </desc>
9025 </const>
9026 </enum>
9027
9028 <enum
9029 name="MediumVariant"
9030 uuid="584ea502-143b-4ab0-ad14-d1028fdf0316"
9031 >
9032 <desc>
9033 Virtual medium image variant. More than one flag may be set.
9034 <see>IMedium</see>
9035 </desc>
9036
9037 <const name="Standard" value="0">
9038 <desc>
9039 No particular variant requested, results in using the backend default.
9040 </desc>
9041 </const>
9042 <const name="VmdkSplit2G" value="0x01">
9043 <desc>
9044 VMDK image split in chunks of less than 2GByte.
9045 </desc>
9046 </const>
9047 <const name="VmdkStreamOptimized" value="0x04">
9048 <desc>
9049 VMDK streamOptimized image. Special import/export format which is
9050 read-only/append-only.
9051 </desc>
9052 </const>
9053 <const name="VmdkESX" value="0x08">
9054 <desc>
9055 VMDK format variant used on ESX products.
9056 </desc>
9057 </const>
9058 <const name="Fixed" value="0x10000">
9059 <desc>
9060 Fixed image. Only allowed for base images.
9061 </desc>
9062 </const>
9063 <const name="Diff" value="0x20000">
9064 <desc>
9065 Fixed image. Only allowed for base images.
9066 </desc>
9067 </const>
9068 </enum>
9069
9070 <interface
9071 name="IMediumAttachment" extends="$unknown"
9072 uuid="e58eb3eb-8627-428b-bdf8-34487c848de5"
9073 wsmap="struct"
9074 >
9075 <desc>
9076 The IMediumAttachment interface represents the attachment
9077 of a storage medium to a virtual machine. Each machine contains
9078 an array of its medium attachments in <link to="IMachine::mediumAttachments"/>.
9079
9080 Each medium attachment specifies a storage controller as well as a port
9081 and device number. Fixed media (hard disks) will always also specify
9082 an instance of IMedium in <link to="#medium" />, referring to the hard disk
9083 medium. For removeable media, the IMedia instance is optional; it can be
9084 @c null if no media is mounted (see <link to="IMachine::mountMedium" />).
9085 </desc>
9086
9087 <attribute name="medium" type="IMedium" readonly="yes">
9088 <desc>Medium object associated with this attachment; it
9089 can be @c null for removable devices.</desc>
9090 </attribute>
9091
9092 <attribute name="controller" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
9093 <desc>Name of the storage controller of this attachment; this
9094 refers to one of the controllers in <link to="IMachine::storageControllers" />
9095 by name.</desc>
9096 </attribute>
9097
9098 <attribute name="port" type="long" readonly="yes">
9099 <desc>Port number of this attachment.</desc>
9100 </attribute>
9101
9102 <attribute name="device" type="long" readonly="yes">
9103 <desc>Device slot number of this attachment.</desc>
9104 </attribute>
9105
9106 <attribute name="type" type="DeviceType" readonly="yes">
9107 <desc>Device type of this attachment.</desc>
9108 </attribute>
9109
9110 <attribute name="passthrough" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
9111 <desc>Pass I/O requests through to a device on the host.</desc>
9112 </attribute>
9113
9114 </interface>
9115
9116 <interface
9117 name="IMedium" extends="$unknown"
9118 uuid="aa8167ba-df72-4738-b740-9b84377ba9f1"
9119 wsmap="managed"
9120 >
9121 <desc>
9122 The IMedium interface represents virtual storage for a machine's
9123 hard disks, CD/DVD or floppy drives. It will typically represent
9124 a disk image on the host, for example a VDI or VMDK file representing
9125 a virtual hard disk, or an ISO or RAW file representing virtual
9126 removable media, but can also point to a network location (e.g.
9127 for iSCSI targets).
9128
9129 Instances of IMedium are connected to virtual machines by way of
9130 medium attachments (see <link to="IMediumAttachment" />), which link
9131 the storage medium to a particular device slot of a storage controller
9132 of the virtual machine.
9133 In the VirtualBox API, virtual storage is therefore always represented
9134 by the following chain of object links:
9135
9136 <ul>
9137 <li><link to="IMachine::storageControllers"/> contains an array of
9138 storage controllers (IDE, SATA, SCSI or a floppy controller;
9139 these are instances of <link to="IStorageController"/>).</li>
9140 <li><link to="IMachine::mediumAttachments"/> contains an array of
9141 medium attachments (instances of <link to="IMediumAttachment"/>),
9142 each containing a storage controller from the above array, a
9143 port/device specification, and an instance of IMedium representing
9144 the medium storage (image file).
9145
9146 For removable media, the storage medium is optional; a medium
9147 attachment with no medium represents a CD/DVD or floppy drive
9148 with no medium inserted. By contrast, hard disk attachments
9149 will always have an IMedium object attached.</li>
9150 <li>Each IMedium in turn points to a storage unit (such as a file
9151 on the host computer or a network resource) that holds actual
9152 data. This location is represented by the <link to="#location"/>
9153 attribute.</li>
9154 </ul>
9155
9156 Existing media are opened using the following methods, depending on the
9157 media type:
9158 <ul>
9159 <li><link to="IVirtualBox::openHardDisk"/></li>
9160 <li><link to="IVirtualBox::openDVDImage"/></li>
9161 <li><link to="IVirtualBox::openFloppyImage"/></li>
9162 </ul>
9163
9164 New hard disk media can be created with the VirtualBox API using the
9165 <link to="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk"/> method.
9166
9167 CD/DVD and floppy images (ISO and RAW files) are usually created outside
9168 VirtualBox, e.g. by storing a copy of the real medium of the corresponding
9169 type in a regular file.
9170
9171 Only for CD/DVDs and floppies, an IMedium instance can also represent a host
9172 drive; in that case the <link to="#id" /> attribute contains the UUID of
9173 one of the drives in <link to="IHost::DVDDrives" /> or <link to="IHost::floppyDrives" />.
9174
9175 <h3>Known media</h3>
9176
9177 When an existing medium is opened for the first time, it is automatically
9178 remembered by the given VirtualBox installation or, in other words, becomes
9179 a <i>known medium</i>. Known media are stored in the media
9180 registry transparently maintained by VirtualBox and stored in settings
9181 files so that this registry is preserved when VirtualBox is not running.
9182
9183 Newly created virtual media are remembered only when the associated
9184 storage unit is actually created.
9185
9186 All known media can be enumerated using
9187 <link to="IVirtualBox::hardDisks"/>,
9188 <link to="IVirtualBox::DVDImages"/> and
9189 <link to="IVirtualBox::floppyImages"/> attributes. Individual media can be
9190 quickly found by UUID using <link to="IVirtualBox::getHardDisk"/>
9191 and similar methods or by location using
9192 <link to="IVirtualBox::findHardDisk"/> and similar methods.
9193
9194 Only known media can be attached to virtual machines.
9195
9196 Removing known media from the media registry is performed when the given
9197 medium is closed using the <link to="#close"/> method or when its
9198 associated storage unit is deleted.
9199
9200 <h3>Accessibility checks</h3>
9201
9202 VirtualBox defers media accessibility checks until the <link to="#refreshState" />
9203 method is called explicitly on a medium. This is done to make the VirtualBox object
9204 ready for serving requests as fast as possible and let the end-user
9205 application decide if it needs to check media accessibility right away or not.
9206
9207 As a result, when VirtualBox starts up (e.g. the VirtualBox
9208 object gets created for the first time), all known media are in the
9209 "Inaccessible" state, but the value of the <link to="#lastAccessError"/>
9210 attribute is an empty string because no actual accessibility check has
9211 been made yet.
9212
9213 After calling <link to="#refreshState" />, a medium is considered
9214 <i>accessible</i> if its storage unit can be read. In that case, the
9215 <link to="#state"/> attribute has a value of "Created". If the storage
9216 unit cannot be read (for example, because it is located on a disconnected
9217 network resource, or was accidentally deleted outside VirtualBox),
9218 the medium is considered <i>inaccessible</i>, which is indicated by the
9219 "Inaccessible" state. The exact reason why the medium is inaccessible can be
9220 obtained by reading the <link to="#lastAccessError"/> attribute.
9221
9222 <h3>Medium types</h3>
9223
9224 There are three types of medium behavior (see <link to="MediumType" />):
9225 "normal", "immutable" and "writethrough", represented by the
9226 <link to="#type"/> attribute. The type of the medium defines how the
9227 medium is attached to a virtual machine and what happens when a
9228 <link to="ISnapshot">snapshot</link> of the virtual machine with the
9229 attached medium is taken. At the moment DVD and floppy media are always
9230 of type "writethrough".
9231
9232 All media can be also divided in two groups: <i>base</i> media and
9233 <i>differencing</i> media. A base medium contains all sectors of the
9234 medium data in its own storage and therefore can be used independently.
9235 In contrast, a differencing mediun is a "delta" to some other medium and
9236 contains only those sectors which differ from that other medium, which is
9237 then called a <i>parent</i>. The differencing medium is said to be
9238 <i>linked to</i> that parent. The parent may be itself a differencing
9239 medium, thus forming a chain of linked media. The last element in that
9240 chain must always be a base medium. Note that several differencing
9241 media may be linked to the same parent medium.
9242
9243 Differencing media can be distinguished from base media by querying the
9244 <link to="#parent"/> attribute: base media do not have parents they would
9245 depend on, so the value of this attribute is always @c null for them.
9246 Using this attribute, it is possible to walk up the medium tree (from the
9247 child medium to its parent). It is also possible to walk down the tree
9248 using the <link to="#children"/> attribute.
9249
9250 Note that the type of all differencing media is "Normal"; all other
9251 values are meaningless for them. Base media may be of any type.
9252
9253 <h3>Creating hard disks</h3>
9254
9255 New base hard disks are created using
9256 <link to="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk"/>. Existing hard disks are
9257 opened using <link to="IVirtualBox::openHardDisk"/>. Differencing hard
9258 disks are usually implicitly created by VirtualBox when needed but may
9259 also be created explicitly using <link to="#createDiffStorage"/>.
9260
9261 After the hard disk is successfully created (including the storage unit)
9262 or opened, it becomes a known hard disk (remembered in the internal media
9263 registry). Known hard disks can be attached to a virtual machine, accessed
9264 through <link to="IVirtualBox::getHardDisk"/> and
9265 <link to="IVirtualBox::findHardDisk"/> methods or enumerated using the
9266 <link to="IVirtualBox::hardDisks"/> array (only for base hard disks).
9267
9268 The following methods, besides <link to="IMedium::close"/>,
9269 automatically remove the hard disk from the media registry:
9270 <ul>
9271 <li><link to="#deleteStorage"/></li>
9272 <li><link to="#mergeTo"/></li>
9273 </ul>
9274
9275 If the storage unit of the hard disk is a regular file in the host's
9276 file system then the rules stated in the description of the
9277 <link to="IMedium::location"/> attribute apply when setting its value. In
9278 addition, a plain file name without any path may be given, in which case
9279 the <link to="ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFolder"> default hard disk
9280 folder</link> will be prepended to it.
9281
9282 <h4>Automatic composition of the file name part</h4>
9283
9284 Another extension to the <link to="IMedium::location"/> attribute is that
9285 there is a possibility to cause VirtualBox to compose a unique value for
9286 the file name part of the location using the UUID of the hard disk. This
9287 applies only to hard disks in <link to="MediumState_NotCreated"/> state,
9288 e.g. before the storage unit is created, and works as follows. You set the
9289 value of the <link to="IMedium::location"/> attribute to a location
9290 specification which only contains the path specification but not the file
9291 name part and ends with either a forward slash or a backslash character.
9292 In response, VirtualBox will generate a new UUID for the hard disk and
9293 compose the file name using the following pattern:
9294 <pre>
9295 &lt;path&gt;/{&lt;uuid&gt;}.&lt;ext&gt;
9296 </pre>
9297 where <tt>&lt;path&gt;</tt> is the supplied path specification,
9298 <tt>&lt;uuid&gt;</tt> is the newly generated UUID and <tt>&lt;ext&gt;</tt>
9299 is the default extension for the storage format of this hard disk. After
9300 that, you may call any of the methods that create a new hard disk storage
9301 unit and they will use the generated UUID and file name.
9302
9303 <h3>Attaching Hard Disks</h3>
9304
9305 Hard disks are attached to virtual machines using the
9306 <link to="IMachine::attachDevice"/> method and detached using the
9307 <link to="IMachine::detachDevice"/> method. Depending on their
9308 <link to="#type"/>, hard disks are attached either
9309 <i>directly</i> or <i>indirectly</i>.
9310
9311 When a hard disk is being attached directly, it is associated with the
9312 virtual machine and used for hard disk operations when the machine is
9313 running. When a hard disk is being attached indirectly, a new differencing
9314 hard disk linked to it is implicitly created and this differencing hard
9315 disk is associated with the machine and used for hard disk operations.
9316 This also means that if <link to="IMachine::attachDevice"/> performs
9317 a direct attachment then the same hard disk will be returned in response
9318 to the subsequent <link to="IMachine::getMedium"/> call; however if
9319 an indirect attachment is performed then
9320 <link to="IMachine::getMedium"/> will return the implicitly created
9321 differencing hard disk, not the original one passed to <link
9322 to="IMachine::attachDevice"/>. In detail:
9323
9324 <ul>
9325 <li><b>Normal base</b> hard disks that do not have children (i.e.
9326 differencing hard disks linked to them) and that are not already
9327 attached to virtual machines in snapshots are attached <b>directly</b>.
9328 Otherwise, they are attached <b>indirectly</b> because having
9329 dependent children or being part of the snapshot makes it impossible
9330 to modify hard disk contents without breaking the integrity of the
9331 dependent party. The <link to="#readOnly"/> attribute allows to
9332 quickly determine the kind of the attachment for the given hard
9333 disk. Note that if a normal base hard disk is to be indirectly
9334 attached to a virtual machine with snapshots then a special
9335 procedure called <i>smart attachment</i> is performed (see below).</li>
9336 <li><b>Normal differencing</b> hard disks are like normal base hard disks:
9337 they are attached <b>directly</b> if they do not have children and are
9338 not attached to virtual machines in snapshots, and <b>indirectly</b>
9339 otherwise. Note that the smart attachment procedure is never performed
9340 for differencing hard disks.</li>
9341 <li><b>Immutable</b> hard disks are always attached <b>indirectly</b> because
9342 they are designed to be non-writable. If an immutable hard disk is
9343 attached to a virtual machine with snapshots then a special
9344 procedure called smart attachment is performed (see below).</li>
9345 <li><b>Writethrough</b> hard disks are always attached <b>directly</b>,
9346 also as designed. This also means that writethrough hard disks cannot
9347 have other hard disks linked to them at all.</li>
9348 </ul>
9349
9350 Note that the same hard disk, regardless of its type, may be attached to
9351 more than one virtual machine at a time. In this case, the machine that is
9352 started first gains exclusive access to the hard disk and attempts to
9353 start other machines having this hard disk attached will fail until the
9354 first machine is powered down.
9355
9356 Detaching hard disks is performed in a <i>deferred</i> fashion. This means
9357 that the given hard disk remains associated with the given machine after a
9358 successful <link to="IMachine::detachDevice"/> call until
9359 <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> is called to save all changes to
9360 machine settings to disk. This deferring is necessary to guarantee that
9361 the hard disk configuration may be restored at any time by a call to
9362 <link to="IMachine::discardSettings"/> before the settings
9363 are saved (committed).
9364
9365 Note that if <link to="IMachine::discardSettings"/> is called after
9366 indirectly attaching some hard disks to the machine but before a call to
9367 <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> is made, it will implicitly delete
9368 all differencing hard disks implicitly created by
9369 <link to="IMachine::attachDevice"/> for these indirect attachments.
9370 Such implicitly created hard disks will also be immediately deleted when
9371 detached explicitly using the <link to="IMachine::detachDevice"/>
9372 call if it is made before <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/>. This
9373 implicit deletion is safe because newly created differencing hard
9374 disks do not contain any user data.
9375
9376 However, keep in mind that detaching differencing hard disks that were
9377 implicitly created by <link to="IMachine::attachDevice"/>
9378 before the last <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> call will
9379 <b>not</b> implicitly delete them as they may already contain some data
9380 (for example, as a result of virtual machine execution). If these hard
9381 disks are no more necessary, the caller can always delete them explicitly
9382 using <link to="#deleteStorage"/> after they are actually de-associated
9383 from this machine by the <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> call.
9384
9385 <h3>Smart Attachment</h3>
9386
9387 When normal base or immutable hard disks are indirectly attached to a
9388 virtual machine then some additional steps are performed to make sure the
9389 virtual machine will have the most recent "view" of the hard disk being
9390 attached. These steps include walking through the machine's snapshots
9391 starting from the current one and going through ancestors up to the first
9392 snapshot. Hard disks attached to the virtual machine in all
9393 of the encountered snapshots are checked whether they are descendants of
9394 the given normal base or immutable hard disk. The first found child (which
9395 is the differencing hard disk) will be used instead of the normal base or
9396 immutable hard disk as a parent for creating a new differencing hard disk
9397 that will be actually attached to the machine. And only if no descendants
9398 are found or if the virtual machine does not have any snapshots then the
9399 normal base or immutable hard disk will be used itself as a parent for
9400 this differencing hard disk.
9401
9402 It is easier to explain what smart attachment does using the
9403 following example:
9404 <pre>
9405BEFORE attaching B.vdi: AFTER attaching B.vdi:
9406
9407Snapshot 1 (B.vdi) Snapshot 1 (B.vdi)
9408 Snapshot 2 (D1->B.vdi) Snapshot 2 (D1->B.vdi)
9409 Snapshot 3 (D2->D1.vdi) Snapshot 3 (D2->D1.vdi)
9410 Snapshot 4 (none) Snapshot 4 (none)
9411 CurState (none) CurState (D3->D2.vdi)
9412
9413 NOT
9414 ...
9415 CurState (D3->B.vdi)
9416 </pre>
9417 The first column is the virtual machine configuration before the base hard
9418 disk <tt>B.vdi</tt> is attached, the second column shows the machine after
9419 this hard disk is attached. Constructs like <tt>D1->B.vdi</tt> and similar
9420 mean that the hard disk that is actually attached to the machine is a
9421 differencing hard disk, <tt>D1.vdi</tt>, which is linked to (based on)
9422 another hard disk, <tt>B.vdi</tt>.
9423
9424 As we can see from the example, the hard disk <tt>B.vdi</tt> was detached
9425 from the machine before taking Snapshot 4. Later, after Snapshot 4 was
9426 taken, the user decides to attach <tt>B.vdi</tt> again. <tt>B.vdi</tt> has
9427 dependent child hard disks (<tt>D1.vdi</tt>, <tt>D2.vdi</tt>), therefore
9428 it cannot be attached directly and needs an indirect attachment (i.e.
9429 implicit creation of a new differencing hard disk). Due to the smart
9430 attachment procedure, the new differencing hard disk
9431 (<tt>D3.vdi</tt>) will be based on <tt>D2.vdi</tt>, not on
9432 <tt>B.vdi</tt> itself, since <tt>D2.vdi</tt> is the most recent view of
9433 <tt>B.vdi</tt> existing for this snapshot branch of the given virtual
9434 machine.
9435
9436 Note that if there is more than one descendant hard disk of the given base
9437 hard disk found in a snapshot, and there is an exact device, channel and
9438 bus match, then this exact match will be used. Otherwise, the youngest
9439 descendant will be picked up.
9440
9441 There is one more important aspect of the smart attachment procedure which
9442 is not related to snapshots at all. Before walking through the snapshots
9443 as described above, the backup copy of the current list of hard disk
9444 attachment is searched for descendants. This backup copy is created when
9445 the hard disk configuration is changed for the first time after the last
9446 <link to="IMachine::saveSettings"/> call and used by
9447 <link to="IMachine::discardSettings"/> to undo the recent hard disk
9448 changes. When such a descendant is found in this backup copy, it will be
9449 simply re-attached back, without creating a new differencing hard disk for
9450 it. This optimization is necessary to make it possible to re-attach the
9451 base or immutable hard disk to a different bus, channel or device slot
9452 without losing the contents of the differencing hard disk actually
9453 attached to the machine in place of it.
9454 </desc>
9455
9456 <attribute name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" readonly="yes">
9457 <desc>
9458 UUID of the medium. For a newly created medium, this value is a randomly
9459 generated UUID.
9460
9461 <note>
9462 For media in one of MediumState_NotCreated, MediumState_Creating or
9463 MediumState_Deleting states, the value of this property is undefined
9464 and will most likely be an empty UUID.
9465 </note>
9466 </desc>
9467 </attribute>
9468
9469 <attribute name="description" type="wstring">
9470 <desc>
9471 Optional description of the medium. For a newly created medium the value
9472 of this attribute is an empty string.
9473
9474 Medium types that don't support this attribute will return E_NOTIMPL in
9475 attempt to get or set this attribute's value.
9476
9477 <note>
9478 For some storage types, reading this attribute may return an outdated
9479 (last known) value when <link to="#state"/> is <link
9480 to="MediumState_Inaccessible"/> or <link
9481 to="MediumState_LockedWrite"/> because the value of this attribute is
9482 stored within the storage unit itself. Also note that changing the
9483 attribute value is not possible in such case, as well as when the
9484 medium is the <link to="MediumState_LockedRead"/> state.
9485 </note>
9486 </desc>
9487 </attribute>
9488
9489 <attribute name="state" type="MediumState" readonly="yes">
9490 <desc>
9491 Returns the current medium state, which is the last state set by
9492 the accessibility check performed by <link to="#refreshState"/>.
9493 If that method has not yet been called on the medium, the state
9494 is "Inaccessible"; as opposed to truly inaccessible media, the
9495 value of <link to="#lastAccessError"/> will be an empty string in
9496 that case.
9497
9498 <note>As of version 3.1, this no longer performs an accessibility check
9499 automatically; call <link to="#refreshState"/> for that.
9500 </note>
9501 </desc>
9502 </attribute>
9503
9504 <attribute name="location" type="wstring">
9505 <desc>
9506 Location of the storage unit holding medium data.
9507
9508 The format of the location string is medium type specific. For medium
9509 types using regular files in a host's file system, the location
9510 string is the full file name.
9511
9512 Some medium types may support changing the storage unit location by
9513 simply changing the value of this property. If this operation is not
9514 supported, the implementation will return E_NOTIMPL in attempt to set
9515 this attribute's value.
9516
9517 When setting a value of the location attribute which is a regular file
9518 in the host's file system, the given file name may be either relative to
9519 the <link to="IVirtualBox::homeFolder">VirtualBox home folder</link> or
9520 absolute. Note that if the given location specification does not contain
9521 the file extension part then a proper default extension will be
9522 automatically appended by the implementation depending on the medium type.
9523 </desc>
9524 </attribute>
9525
9526 <attribute name="name" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
9527 <desc>
9528 Name of the storage unit holding medium data.
9529
9530 The returned string is a short version of the <link to="#location"/>
9531 attribute that is suitable for representing the medium in situations
9532 where the full location specification is too long (such as lists
9533 and comboboxes in GUI frontends). This string is also used by frontends
9534 to sort the media list alphabetically when needed.
9535
9536 For example, for locations that are regular files in the host's file
9537 system, the value of this attribute is just the file name (+ extension),
9538 without the path specification.
9539
9540 Note that as opposed to the <link to="#location"/> attribute, the name
9541 attribute will not necessary be unique for a list of media of the
9542 given type and format.
9543 </desc>
9544 </attribute>
9545
9546 <attribute name="deviceType" type="DeviceType" readonly="yes">
9547 <desc>Kind of device (DVD/Floppy/HardDisk) which is applicable to this
9548 medium.</desc>
9549 </attribute>
9550
9551 <attribute name="hostDrive" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
9552 <desc>True if this corresponds to a drive on the host.</desc>
9553 </attribute>
9554
9555 <attribute name="size" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
9556 <desc>
9557 Physical size of the storage unit used to hold medium data (in bytes).
9558
9559 <note>
9560 For media whose <link to="#state"/> is <link
9561 to="MediumState_Inaccessible"/>, the value of this property is the
9562 last known size. For <link to="MediumState_NotCreated"/> media,
9563 the returned value is zero.
9564 </note>
9565 </desc>
9566 </attribute>
9567
9568 <attribute name="format" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
9569 <desc>
9570 Storage format of this medium.
9571
9572 The value of this attribute is a string that specifies a backend used
9573 to store medium data. The storage format is defined when you create a
9574 new medium or automatically detected when you open an existing medium,
9575 and cannot be changed later.
9576
9577 The list of all storage formats supported by this VirtualBox
9578 installation can be obtained using
9579 <link to="ISystemProperties::mediumFormats"/>.
9580 </desc>
9581 </attribute>
9582
9583 <attribute name="type" type="MediumType">
9584 <desc>
9585 Type (role) of this medium.
9586
9587 The following constraints apply when changing the value of this
9588 attribute:
9589 <ul>
9590 <li>If a medium is attached to a virtual machine (either in the
9591 current state or in one of the snapshots), its type cannot be
9592 changed.
9593 </li>
9594 <li>As long as the medium has children, its type cannot be set
9595 to <link to="MediumType_Writethrough"/>.
9596 </li>
9597 <li>The type of all differencing media is
9598 <link to="MediumType_Normal"/> and cannot be changed.
9599 </li>
9600 </ul>
9601
9602 The type of a newly created or opened medium is set to
9603 <link to="MediumType_Normal"/>, except for DVD and floppy media,
9604 which have a type of <link to="MediumType_Writethrough"/>.
9605 </desc>
9606 </attribute>
9607
9608 <attribute name="parent" type="IMedium" readonly="yes">
9609 <desc>
9610 Parent of this medium (the medium this medium is directly based
9611 on).
9612
9613 Only differencing media have parents. For base (non-differencing)
9614 media, @c null is returned.
9615 </desc>
9616 </attribute>
9617
9618 <attribute name="children" type="IMedium" safearray="yes" readonly="yes">
9619 <desc>
9620 Children of this medium (all differencing media directly based
9621 on this medium). A @c null array is returned if this medium
9622 does not have any children.
9623 </desc>
9624 </attribute>
9625
9626 <attribute name="base" type="IMedium" readonly="yes">
9627 <desc>
9628 Base medium of this medium.
9629
9630 If this is a differencing medium, its base medium is the medium
9631 the given medium branch starts from. For all other types of media, this
9632 property returns the medium object itself (i.e. the same object this
9633 property is read on).
9634 </desc>
9635 </attribute>
9636
9637 <attribute name="readOnly" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
9638 <desc>
9639 Returns @c true if this medium is read-only and @c false otherwise.
9640
9641 A medium is considered to be read-only when its contents cannot be
9642 modified without breaking the integrity of other parties that depend on
9643 this medium such as its child media or snapshots of virtual machines
9644 where this medium is attached to these machines. If there are no
9645 children and no such snapshots then there is no dependency and the
9646 medium is not read-only.
9647
9648 The value of this attribute can be used to determine the kind of the
9649 attachment that will take place when attaching this medium to a
9650 virtual machine. If the value is @c false then the medium will
9651 be attached directly. If the value is @c true then the medium
9652 will be attached indirectly by creating a new differencing child
9653 medium for that. See the interface description for more information.
9654
9655 Note that all <link to="MediumType_Immutable">Immutable</link> media
9656 are always read-only while all
9657 <link to="MediumType_Writethrough">Writethrough</link> media are
9658 always not.
9659
9660 <note>
9661 The read-only condition represented by this attribute is related to
9662 the medium type and usage, not to the current
9663 <link to="IMedium::state">medium state</link> and not to the read-only
9664 state of the storage unit.
9665 </note>
9666 </desc>
9667 </attribute>
9668
9669 <attribute name="logicalSize" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
9670 <desc>
9671 Logical size of this medium (in megabytes), as reported to the
9672 guest OS running inside the virtual machine this medium is
9673 attached to. The logical size is defined when the medium is created
9674 and cannot be changed later.
9675
9676 <note>
9677 Reading this property on a differencing medium will return the size
9678 of its <link to="#base"/> medium.
9679 </note>
9680 <note>
9681 For media whose state is <link to="#state"/> is <link
9682 to="MediumState_Inaccessible"/>, the value of this property is the
9683 last known logical size. For <link to="MediumaState_NotCreated"/>
9684 media, the returned value is zero.
9685 </note>
9686 </desc>
9687 </attribute>
9688
9689 <attribute name="autoReset" type="boolean">
9690 <desc>
9691 Whether this differencing medium will be automatically reset each
9692 time a virtual machine it is attached to is powered up. This
9693 attribute is automatically set to @c true for the last
9694 differencing image of an "immutable" medium (see
9695 <link to="MediumType" />).
9696
9697 See <link to="#reset"/> for more information about resetting
9698 differencing media.
9699
9700 <note>
9701 Reading this property on a base (non-differencing) medium will
9702 always @c false. Changing the value of this property in this
9703 case is not supported.
9704 </note>
9705
9706 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED">
9707 This is not a differencing medium (when changing the attribute
9708 value).
9709 </result>
9710 </desc>
9711 </attribute>
9712
9713 <attribute name="lastAccessError" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
9714 <desc>
9715 Text message that represents the result of the last accessibility
9716 check performed by <link to="#refreshState"/>.
9717
9718 An empty string is returned if the last accessibility check
9719 was successful or has not yet been called. As a result, if
9720 <link to="#state" /> is "Inaccessible" and this attribute is empty,
9721 then <link to="#refreshState"/> has yet to be called; this is the
9722 default value of media after VirtualBox initialization.
9723 A non-empty string indicates a failure and should normally describe
9724 a reason of the failure (for example, a file read error).
9725 </desc>
9726 </attribute>
9727
9728 <attribute name="machineIds" type="uuid" mod="string" safearray="yes" readonly="yes">
9729 <desc>
9730 Array of UUIDs of all machines this medium is attached to.
9731
9732 A @c null array is returned if this medium is not attached to any
9733 machine or to any machine's snapshot.
9734
9735 <note>
9736 The returned array will include a machine even if this medium is not
9737 attached to that machine in the current state but attached to it in
9738 one of the machine's snapshots. See <link to="#getSnapshotIds"/> for
9739 details.
9740 </note>
9741 </desc>
9742 </attribute>
9743
9744 <method name="refreshState">
9745 <desc>
9746 If the current medium state (see <link to="MediumState"/>) is one of
9747 "Created", "Inaccessible" or "LockedRead", then this performs an
9748 accessibility check on the medium and sets the value of the <link to="#state"/>
9749 attribute accordingly; that value is also returned for convenience.
9750
9751 For all other state values, this does not perform a refresh but returns
9752 the state only.
9753
9754 The refresh, if performed, may take a long time (several seconds or even
9755 minutes, depending on the storage unit location and format) because it performs an
9756 accessibility check of the storage unit. This check may cause a significant
9757 delay if the storage unit of the given medium is, for example, a file located
9758 on a network share which is not currently accessible due to connectivity
9759 problems. In that case, the call will not return until a timeout
9760 interval defined by the host OS for this operation expires. For this reason,
9761 it is recommended to never read this attribute on the main UI thread to avoid
9762 making the UI unresponsive.
9763
9764 If the last known state of the medium is "Created" and the accessibility
9765 check fails, then the state would be set to "Inaccessible", and
9766 <link to="#lastAccessError"/> may be used to get more details about the
9767 failure. If the state of the medium is "LockedRead", then it remains the
9768 same, and a non-empty value of <link to="#lastAccessError"/> will
9769 indicate a failed accessibility check in this case.
9770
9771 Note that not all medium states are applicable to all medium types.
9772 </desc>
9773 <param name="state" type="MediumState" dir="return">
9774 <desc>
9775 New medium state.
9776 </desc>
9777 </param>
9778 </method>
9779
9780 <method name="getSnapshotIds">
9781 <desc>
9782 Returns an array of UUIDs of all snapshots of the given machine where
9783 this medium is attached to.
9784
9785 If the medium is attached to the machine in the current state, then the
9786 first element in the array will always be the ID of the queried machine
9787 (i.e. the value equal to the @c machineId argument), followed by
9788 snapshot IDs (if any).
9789
9790 If the medium is not attached to the machine in the current state, then
9791 the array will contain only snapshot IDs.
9792
9793 The returned array may be @c null if this medium is not attached
9794 to the given machine at all, neither in the current state nor in one of
9795 the snapshots.
9796 </desc>
9797 <param name="machineId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
9798 <desc>
9799 UUID of the machine to query.
9800 </desc>
9801 </param>
9802 <param name="snapshotIds" type="uuid" mod="string" safearray="yes" dir="return">
9803 <desc>
9804 Array of snapshot UUIDs of the given machine using this medium.
9805 </desc>
9806 </param>
9807 </method>
9808
9809 <method name="lockRead">
9810 <desc>
9811 Locks this medium for reading.
9812
9813 A read lock is shared: many clients can simultaneously lock the
9814 same medium for reading unless it is already locked for writing (see
9815 <link to="#lockWrite"/>) in which case an error is returned.
9816
9817 When the medium is locked for reading, it cannot be modified
9818 from within VirtualBox. This means that any method that changes
9819 the properties of this medium or contents of the storage unit
9820 will return an error (unless explicitly stated otherwise). That
9821 includes an attempt to start a virtual machine that wants to
9822 write to the the medium.
9823
9824 When the virtual machine is started up, it locks for reading all
9825 media it uses in read-only mode. If some medium cannot be locked
9826 for reading, the startup procedure will fail.
9827 A medium is typically locked for reading while it is used by a running
9828 virtual machine but has a depending differencing image that receives
9829 the actual write operations. This way one base medium can have
9830 multiple child differencing images which can be written to
9831 simultaneously. Read-only media such as DVD and floppy images are
9832 also locked for reading only (so they can be in use by multiple
9833 machines simultaneously).
9834
9835 A medium is also locked for reading when it is the source of a
9836 write operation such as <link to="#cloneTo"/> or <link to="#mergeTo"/>.
9837
9838 The medium locked for reading must be unlocked using the <link
9839 to="#unlockRead"/> method. Calls to <link to="#lockRead"/>
9840 can be nested and must be followed by the same number of paired
9841 <link to="#unlockRead"/> calls.
9842
9843 This method sets the medium state (see <link to="#state"/>) to
9844 "LockedRead" on success. The medium's previous state must be
9845 one of "Created", "Inaccessible" or "LockedRead".
9846
9847 Locking an inaccessible medium is not an error; this method performs
9848 a logical lock that prevents modifications of this medium through
9849 the VirtualBox API, not a physical file-system lock of the underlying
9850 storage unit.
9851
9852 This method returns the current state of the medium
9853 <i>before</i> the operation.
9854
9855 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
9856 Invalid medium state (e.g. not created, locked, inaccessible,
9857 creating, deleting).
9858 </result>
9859
9860 </desc>
9861 <param name="state" type="MediumState" dir="return">
9862 <desc>
9863 State of the medium after the operation.
9864 </desc>
9865 </param>
9866 </method>
9867
9868 <method name="unlockRead">
9869 <desc>
9870 Cancels the read lock previously set by <link to="#lockRead"/>.
9871
9872 For both success and failure, this method returns the current state
9873 of the medium <i>after</i> the operation.
9874
9875 See <link to="#lockRead"/> for more details.
9876
9877 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
9878 Medium not locked for reading.
9879 </result>
9880
9881 </desc>
9882 <param name="state" type="MediumState" dir="return">
9883 <desc>
9884 State of the medium after the operation.
9885 </desc>
9886 </param>
9887 </method>
9888
9889 <method name="lockWrite">
9890 <desc>
9891 Locks this medium for writing.
9892
9893 A write lock, as opposed to <link to="#lockRead"/>, is
9894 exclusive: there may be only one client holding a write lock,
9895 and there may be no read locks while the write lock is held.
9896 As a result, read-locking fails if a write lock is held, and
9897 write-locking fails if either a read or another write lock is held.
9898
9899 When a medium is locked for writing, it cannot be modified
9900 from within VirtualBox, and it is not guaranteed that the values
9901 of its properties are up-to-date. Any method that changes the
9902 properties of this medium or contents of the storage unit will
9903 return an error (unless explicitly stated otherwise).
9904
9905 When a virtual machine is started up, it locks for writing all
9906 media it uses to write data to. If any medium could not be locked
9907 for writing, the startup procedure will fail. If a medium has
9908 differencing images, then while the machine is running, only
9909 the last ("leaf") differencing image is locked for writing,
9910 whereas its parents are locked for reading only.
9911
9912 A medium is also locked for writing when it is the target of a
9913 write operation such as <link to="#cloneTo"/> or <link to="#mergeTo"/>.
9914
9915 The medium locked for writing must be unlocked using the <link
9916 to="#unlockWrite"/> method. Write locks <i>cannot</i> be nested.
9917
9918 This method sets the medium state (see <link to="#state"/>) to
9919 "LockedWrite" on success. The medium's previous state must be
9920 either "Created" or "Inaccessible".
9921
9922 Locking an inaccessible medium is not an error; this method performs
9923 a logical lock that prevents modifications of this medium through
9924 the VirtualBox API, not a physical file-system lock of the underlying
9925 storage unit.
9926
9927 For both, success and failure, this method returns the current
9928 state of the medium <i>before</i> the operation.
9929
9930 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
9931 Invalid medium state (e.g. not created, locked, inaccessible,
9932 creating, deleting).
9933 </result>
9934
9935 </desc>
9936 <param name="state" type="MediumState" dir="return">
9937 <desc>
9938 State of the medium after the operation.
9939 </desc>
9940 </param>
9941 </method>
9942
9943 <method name="unlockWrite">
9944 <desc>
9945 Cancels the write lock previously set by <link to="#lockWrite"/>.
9946
9947 For both success and failure, this method returns the current
9948 state of the medium <i>after</i> the operation.
9949
9950 See <link to="#lockWrite"/> for more details.
9951
9952 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
9953 Medium not locked for writing.
9954 </result>
9955
9956 </desc>
9957 <param name="state" type="MediumState" dir="return">
9958 <desc>
9959 State of the medium after the operation.
9960 </desc>
9961 </param>
9962 </method>
9963
9964 <method name="close">
9965 <desc>
9966 Closes this medium.
9967
9968 The medium must not be attached to any known virtual machine
9969 and must not have any known child media, otherwise the
9970 operation will fail.
9971
9972 When the medium is successfully closed, it gets removed from
9973 the list of remembered media, but its storage unit is not
9974 deleted. In particular, this means that this medium can be
9975 later opened again using the <link
9976 to="IVirtualBox::openHardDisk"/> call.
9977
9978 Note that after this method successfully returns, the given medium
9979 object becomes uninitialized. This means that any attempt
9980 to call any of its methods or attributes will fail with the
9981 <tt>"Object not ready" (E_ACCESSDENIED)</tt> error.
9982
9983 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
9984 Invalid medium state (other than not created, created or
9985 inaccessible).
9986 </result>
9987 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_IN_USE">
9988 Medium attached to virtual machine.
9989 </result>
9990 <result name="VBOX_E_FILE_ERROR">
9991 Settings file not accessible.
9992 </result>
9993 <result name="VBOX_E_XML_ERROR">
9994 Could not parse the settings file.
9995 </result>
9996
9997 </desc>
9998 </method>
9999
10000 <!-- storage methods -->
10001
10002 <method name="getProperty">
10003 <desc>
10004 Returns the value of the custom medium property with the given name.
10005
10006 The list of all properties supported by the given medium format can
10007 be obtained with <link to="IMediumFormat::describeProperties"/>.
10008
10009 Note that if this method returns an empty string in @a value, the
10010 requested property is supported but currently not assigned any value.
10011
10012 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
10013 Requested property does not exist (not supported by the format).
10014 </result>
10015 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">@a name is @c null or empty.</result>
10016 </desc>
10017 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
10018 <desc>Name of the property to get.</desc>
10019 </param>
10020 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="return">
10021 <desc>Current property value.</desc>
10022 </param>
10023 </method>
10024
10025 <method name="setProperty">
10026 <desc>
10027 Sets the value of the custom medium property with the given name.
10028
10029 The list of all properties supported by the given medium format can
10030 be obtained with <link to="IMediumFormat::describeProperties"/>.
10031
10032 Note that setting the property value to @c null or an empty string is
10033 equivalent to deleting the existing value. A default value (if it is
10034 defined for this property) will be used by the format backend in this
10035 case.
10036
10037 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_NOT_FOUND">
10038 Requested property does not exist (not supported by the format).
10039 </result>
10040 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">@a name is @c null or empty.</result>
10041 </desc>
10042 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
10043 <desc>Name of the property to set.</desc>
10044 </param>
10045 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in">
10046 <desc>Property value to set.</desc>
10047 </param>
10048 </method>
10049
10050 <method name="getProperties">
10051 <desc>
10052 Returns values for a group of properties in one call.
10053
10054 The names of the properties to get are specified using the @a names
10055 argument which is a list of comma-separated property names or
10056 an empty string if all properties are to be returned. Note that currently
10057 the value of this argument is ignored and the method always returns all
10058 existing properties.
10059
10060 The list of all properties supported by the given medium format can
10061 be obtained with <link to="IMediumFormat::describeProperties"/>.
10062
10063 The method returns two arrays, the array of property names corresponding
10064 to the @a names argument and the current values of these properties.
10065 Both arrays have the same number of elements with each elemend at the
10066 given index in the first array corresponds to an element at the same
10067 index in the second array.
10068
10069 Note that for properties that do not have assigned values,
10070 an empty string is returned at the appropriate index in the
10071 @a returnValues array.
10072
10073 </desc>
10074 <param name="names" type="wstring" dir="in">
10075 <desc>
10076 Names of properties to get.
10077 </desc>
10078 </param>
10079 <param name="returnNames" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="out">
10080 <desc>Names of returned properties.</desc>
10081 </param>
10082 <param name="returnValues" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="return">
10083 <desc>Values of returned properties.</desc>
10084 </param>
10085 </method>
10086
10087 <method name="setProperties">
10088 <desc>
10089 Sets values for a group of properties in one call.
10090
10091 The names of the properties to set are passed in the @a names
10092 array along with the new values for them in the @a values array. Both
10093 arrays have the same number of elements with each elemend at the given
10094 index in the first array corresponding to an element at the same index
10095 in the second array.
10096
10097 If there is at least one property name in @a names that is not valid,
10098 the method will fail before changing the values of any other properties
10099 from the @a names array.
10100
10101 Using this method over <link to="#setProperty"/> is preferred if you
10102 need to set several properties at once since it will result into less
10103 IPC calls.
10104
10105 The list of all properties supported by the given medium format can
10106 be obtained with <link to="IMediumFormat::describeProperties"/>.
10107
10108 Note that setting the property value to @c null or an empty string is
10109 equivalent to deleting the existing value. A default value (if it is
10110 defined for this property) will be used by the format backend in this
10111 case.
10112 </desc>
10113 <param name="names" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="in">
10114 <desc>Names of properties to set.</desc>
10115 </param>
10116 <param name="values" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="in">
10117 <desc>Values of properties to set.</desc>
10118 </param>
10119 </method>
10120
10121 <!-- storage methods -->
10122
10123 <method name="createBaseStorage">
10124 <desc>
10125 Starts creating a hard disk storage unit (fixed/dynamic, according
10126 to the variant flags) in in the background. The previous storage unit
10127 created for this object, if any, must first be deleted using
10128 <link to="#deleteStorage"/>, otherwise the operation will fail.
10129
10130 Before the operation starts, the medium is placed in
10131 <link to="MediumState_Creating"/> state. If the create operation
10132 fails, the medium will be placed back in <link to="MediumState_NotCreated"/>
10133 state.
10134
10135 After the returned progress object reports that the operation has
10136 successfully completed, the medium state will be set to <link
10137 to="MediumState_Created"/>, the medium will be remembered by this
10138 VirtualBox installation and may be attached to virtual machines.
10139
10140 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED">
10141 The variant of storage creation operation is not supported. See <link
10142 to="IMediumFormat::capabilities"/>.
10143 </result>
10144 </desc>
10145 <param name="logicalSize" type="unsigned long long" dir="in">
10146 <desc>Maximum logical size of the medium in megabytes.</desc>
10147 </param>
10148 <param name="variant" type="MediumVariant" dir="in">
10149 <desc>Exact image variant which should be created.</desc>
10150 </param>
10151 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
10152 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
10153 </param>
10154 </method>
10155
10156 <method name="deleteStorage">
10157 <desc>
10158 Starts deleting the storage unit of this medium.
10159
10160 The medium must not be attached to any known virtual machine and must
10161 not have any known child media, otherwise the operation will fail.
10162 It will also fail if there is no storage unit to delete or if deletion
10163 is already in progress, or if the medium is being in use (locked for
10164 read or for write) or inaccessible. Therefore, the only valid state for
10165 this operation to succeed is <link to="MediumState_Created"/>.
10166
10167 Before the operation starts, the medium is placed in
10168 <link to="MediumState_Deleting"/> state and gets removed from the list
10169 of remembered hard disks (media registry). If the delete operation
10170 fails, the medium will be remembered again and placed back to
10171 <link to="MediumState_Created"/> state.
10172
10173 After the returned progress object reports that the operation is
10174 complete, the medium state will be set to
10175 <link to="MediumState_NotCreated"/> and you will be able to use one of
10176 the storage creation methods to create it again.
10177
10178 <see>#close()</see>
10179
10180 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_IN_USE">
10181 Medium is attached to a virtual machine.
10182 </result>
10183 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED">
10184 Storage deletion is not allowed because neither of storage creation
10185 operations are supported. See
10186 <link to="IMediumFormat::capabilities"/>.
10187 </result>
10188
10189 <note>
10190 If the deletion operation fails, it is not guaranteed that the storage
10191 unit still exists. You may check the <link to="IMedium::state"/> value
10192 to answer this question.
10193 </note>
10194 </desc>
10195 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
10196 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
10197 </param>
10198 </method>
10199
10200 <!-- diff methods -->
10201
10202 <method name="createDiffStorage">
10203 <desc>
10204 Starts creating an empty differencing storage unit based on this
10205 medium in the format and at the location defined by the @a target
10206 argument.
10207
10208 The target medium must be in <link to="MediumState_NotCreated"/>
10209 state (i.e. must not have an existing storage unit). Upon successful
10210 completion, this operation will set the type of the target medium to
10211 <link to="MediumType_Normal"/> and create a storage unit necessary to
10212 represent the differencing medium data in the given format (according
10213 to the storage format of the target object).
10214
10215 After the returned progress object reports that the operation is
10216 successfully complete, the target medium gets remembered by this
10217 VirtualBox installation and may be attached to virtual machines.
10218
10219 <note>
10220 The medium will be set to <link to="MediumState_LockedRead"/>
10221 state for the duration of this operation.
10222 </note>
10223 <result name="VBOX_E_OBJECT_IN_USE">
10224 Medium not in @c NotCreated state.
10225 </result>
10226 </desc>
10227 <param name="target" type="IMedium" dir="in">
10228 <desc>Target medium.</desc>
10229 </param>
10230 <param name="variant" type="MediumVariant" dir="in">
10231 <desc>Exact image variant which should be created.</desc>
10232 </param>
10233 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
10234 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
10235 </param>
10236 </method>
10237
10238 <method name="mergeTo">
10239 <desc>
10240 Starts merging the contents of this medium and all intermediate
10241 differencing media in the chain to the given target medium.
10242
10243 The target medium must be either a descendant of this medium or
10244 its ancestor (otherwise this method will immediately return a failure).
10245 It follows that there are two logical directions of the merge operation:
10246 from ancestor to descendant (<i>forward merge</i>) and from descendant to
10247 ancestor (<i>backward merge</i>). Let us consider the following medium
10248 chain:
10249
10250 <pre>Base &lt;- Diff_1 &lt;- Diff_2</pre>
10251
10252 Here, calling this method on the <tt>Base</tt> medium object with
10253 <tt>Diff_2</tt> as an argument will be a forward merge; calling it on
10254 <tt>Diff_2</tt> with <tt>Base</tt> as an argument will be a backward
10255 merge. Note that in both cases the contents of the resulting medium
10256 will be the same, the only difference is the medium object that takes
10257 the result of the merge operation. In case of the forward merge in the
10258 above example, the result will be written to <tt>Diff_2</tt>; in case of
10259 the backward merge, the result will be written to <tt>Base</tt>. In
10260 other words, the result of the operation is always stored in the target
10261 medium.
10262
10263 Upon successful operation completion, the storage units of all media in
10264 the chain between this (source) medium and the target medium, including
10265 the source medium itself, will be automatically deleted and the
10266 relevant medium objects (including this medium) will become
10267 uninitialized. This means that any attempt to call any of
10268 their methods or attributes will fail with the
10269 <tt>"Object not ready" (E_ACCESSDENIED)</tt> error. Applied to the above
10270 example, the forward merge of <tt>Base</tt> to <tt>Diff_2</tt> will
10271 delete and uninitialize both <tt>Base</tt> and <tt>Diff_1</tt> media.
10272 Note that <tt>Diff_2</tt> in this case will become a base medium
10273 itself since it will no longer be based on any other medium.
10274
10275 Considering the above, all of the following conditions must be met in
10276 order for the merge operation to succeed:
10277 <ul>
10278 <li>
10279 Neither this (source) medium nor any intermediate
10280 differencing medium in the chain between it and the target
10281 medium is attached to any virtual machine.
10282 </li>
10283 <li>
10284 Neither the source medium nor the target medium is an
10285 <link to="MediumType_Immutable"/> medium.
10286 </li>
10287 <li>
10288 The part of the medium tree from the source medium to the
10289 target medium is a linear chain, i.e. all medium in this
10290 chain have exactly one child which is the next medium in this
10291 chain. The only exception from this rule is the target medium in
10292 the forward merge operation; it is allowed to have any number of
10293 child media because the merge operation will not change its
10294 logical contents (as it is seen by the guest OS or by children).
10295 </li>
10296 <li>
10297 None of the involved media are in
10298 <link to="MediumState_LockedRead"/> or
10299 <link to="MediumState_LockedWrite"/> state.
10300 </li>
10301 </ul>
10302
10303 <note>
10304 This (source) medium and all intermediates will be placed to <link
10305 to="MediumState_Deleting"/> state and the target medium will be
10306 placed to <link to="MediumState_LockedWrite"/> state and for the
10307 duration of this operation.
10308 </note>
10309 </desc>
10310 <param name="targetId" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in">
10311 <desc>UUID of the target ancestor or descendant medium.</desc>
10312 </param>
10313 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
10314 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
10315 </param>
10316 </method>
10317
10318 <!-- clone method -->
10319
10320 <method name="cloneTo">
10321 <desc>
10322 Starts creating a clone of this medium in the format and at the
10323 location defined by the @a target argument.
10324
10325 The target medium must be either in <link to="MediumState_NotCreated"/>
10326 state (i.e. must not have an existing storage unit) or in
10327 <link to="MediumState_Created"/> state (i.e. created and not locked, and
10328 big enough to hold the data or else the copy will be partial). Upon
10329 successful completion, the cloned medium will contain exactly the
10330 same sector data as the medium being cloned, except that in the
10331 first case a new UUID for the clone will be randomly generated, and in
10332 the second case the UUID will remain unchanged.
10333
10334 The @a parent argument defines which medium will be the parent
10335 of the clone. Passing a @c null reference indicates that the clone will
10336 be a base image, i.e. completely independent. It is possible to specify
10337 an arbitrary medium for this parameter, including the parent of the
10338 medium which is being cloned. Even cloning to a child of the source
10339 medium is possible. Note that when cloning to an existing image, the
10340 @a parent irgument is ignored.
10341
10342 After the returned progress object reports that the operation is
10343 successfully complete, the target medium gets remembered by this
10344 VirtualBox installation and may be attached to virtual machines.
10345
10346 <note>
10347 This medium will be placed to <link to="MediumState_LockedRead"/>
10348 state for the duration of this operation.
10349 </note>
10350 <result name="E_NOTIMPL">
10351 The specified cloning variant is not supported at the moment.
10352 </result>
10353 </desc>
10354 <param name="target" type="IMedium" dir="in">
10355 <desc>Target medium.</desc>
10356 </param>
10357 <param name="variant" type="MediumVariant" dir="in">
10358 <desc>Exact image variant which should be created.</desc>
10359 </param>
10360 <param name="parent" type="IMedium" dir="in">
10361 <desc>Parent of the cloned medium.</desc>
10362 </param>
10363 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
10364 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
10365 </param>
10366 </method>
10367
10368 <!-- other methods -->
10369
10370 <method name="compact">
10371 <desc>
10372 Starts compacting of this medium. This means that the medium is
10373 transformed into a possibly more compact storage representation.
10374 This potentially creates temporary images, which can require a
10375 substantial amount of additional disk space.
10376
10377 This medium will be placed to <link to="MediumState_LockedWrite"/>
10378 state and all its parent media (if any) will be placed to
10379 <link to="MediumState_LockedRead"/> state for the duration of this
10380 operation.
10381
10382 Please note that the results can be either returned straight away,
10383 or later as the result of the background operation via the object
10384 returned via the @a progress parameter.
10385
10386 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED">
10387 Medium format does not support compacting (but potentially
10388 needs it).
10389 </result>
10390 </desc>
10391 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
10392 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
10393 </param>
10394 </method>
10395
10396 <method name="resize">
10397 <desc>
10398 Starts resizing this medium. This means that the nominal size of the
10399 medium is set to the new value. Both increasing and decreasing the
10400 size is possible, and there are no safety checks, since VirtualBox
10401 does not make any assumptions about the medium contents.
10402
10403 Resizing usually needs additional disk space, and possibly also
10404 some temporary disk space. Note that resize does not create a full
10405 temporary copy of the medium, so the additional disk space requirement
10406 is usually much lower than using the clone operation.
10407
10408 This medium will be placed to <link to="MediumState_LockedWrite"/>
10409 state for the duration of this operation.
10410
10411 Please note that the results can be either returned straight away,
10412 or later as the result of the background operation via the object
10413 returned via the @a progress parameter.
10414
10415 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED">
10416 Medium format does not support resizing.
10417 </result>
10418 </desc>
10419 <param name="logicalSize" type="unsigned long long" dir="in">
10420 <desc>New nominal capacity of the medium in megabytes.</desc>
10421 </param>
10422 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
10423 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
10424 </param>
10425 </method>
10426
10427 <method name="reset">
10428 <desc>
10429 Starts erasing the contents of this differencing medium.
10430
10431 This operation will reset the differencing medium to its initial
10432 state when it does not contain any sector data and any read operation is
10433 redirected to its parent medium. This automatically gets called
10434 during VM power-up for every medium whose <link to="#autoReset" />
10435 attribute is @c true.
10436
10437 The medium will be write-locked for the duration of this operation (see
10438 <link to="#lockWrite" />).
10439
10440 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED">
10441 This is not a differencing medium.
10442 </result>
10443 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
10444 Medium is not in <link to="MediumState_Created"/> or
10445 <link to="MediumState_Inaccessible"/> state.
10446 </result>
10447 </desc>
10448 <param name="progress" type="IProgress" dir="return">
10449 <desc>Progress object to track the operation completion.</desc>
10450 </param>
10451 </method>
10452
10453 </interface>
10454
10455
10456 <!--
10457 // IMediumFormat
10458 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
10459 -->
10460
10461 <enum
10462 name="DataType"
10463 uuid="d90ea51e-a3f1-4a01-beb1-c1723c0d3ba7"
10464 >
10465 <const name="Int32" value="0"/>
10466 <const name="Int8" value="1"/>
10467 <const name="String" value="2"/>
10468 </enum>
10469
10470 <enum
10471 name="DataFlags"
10472 uuid="86884dcf-1d6b-4f1b-b4bf-f5aa44959d60"
10473 >
10474 <const name="None" value="0x00"/>
10475 <const name="Mandatory" value="0x01"/>
10476 <const name="Expert" value="0x02"/>
10477 <const name="Array" value="0x04"/>
10478 <const name="FlagMask" value="0x07"/>
10479 </enum>
10480
10481 <enum
10482 name="MediumFormatCapabilities"
10483 uuid="70fcf810-99e8-4edc-aee4-7f51d489e657"
10484 >
10485 <desc>
10486 Medium format capability flags.
10487 </desc>
10488
10489 <const name="Uuid" value="0x01">
10490 <desc>
10491 Supports UUIDs as expected by VirtualBox code.
10492 </desc>
10493 </const>
10494
10495 <const name="CreateFixed" value="0x02">
10496 <desc>
10497 Supports creating fixed size images, allocating all space instantly.
10498 </desc>
10499 </const>
10500
10501 <const name="CreateDynamic" value="0x04">
10502 <desc>
10503 Supports creating dynamically growing images, allocating space on
10504 demand.
10505 </desc>
10506 </const>
10507
10508 <const name="CreateSplit2G" value="0x08">
10509 <desc>
10510 Supports creating images split in chunks of a bit less than 2 GBytes.
10511 </desc>
10512 </const>
10513
10514 <const name="Differencing" value="0x10">
10515 <desc>
10516 Supports being used as a format for differencing media (see <link
10517 to="IMedium::createDiffStorage"/>).
10518 </desc>
10519 </const>
10520
10521 <const name="Asynchronous" value="0x20">
10522 <desc>
10523 Supports asynchronous I/O operations for at least some configurations.
10524 </desc>
10525 </const>
10526
10527 <const name="File" value="0x40">
10528 <desc>
10529 The format backend operates on files (the <link to="IMedium::location"/>
10530 attribute of the medium specifies a file used to store medium
10531 data; for a list of supported file extensions see
10532 <link to="IMediumFormat::fileExtensions"/>).
10533 </desc>
10534 </const>
10535
10536 <const name="Properties" value="0x80">
10537 <desc>
10538 The format backend uses the property interface to configure the storage
10539 location and properties (the <link to="IMediumFormat::describeProperties"/>
10540 method is used to get access to properties supported by the given medium format).
10541 </desc>
10542 </const>
10543
10544 <const name="CapabilityMask" value="0xFF"/>
10545 </enum>
10546
10547 <interface
10548 name="IMediumFormat" extends="$unknown"
10549 uuid="89f52554-d469-4799-9fad-1705e86a08b1"
10550 wsmap="managed"
10551 >
10552 <desc>
10553 The IMediumFormat interface represents a medium format.
10554
10555 Each medium format has an associated backend which is used to handle
10556 media stored in this format. This interface provides information
10557 about the properties of the associated backend.
10558
10559 Each medium format is identified by a string represented by the
10560 <link to="#id"/> attribute. This string is used in calls like
10561 <link to="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk"/> to specify the desired
10562 format.
10563
10564 The list of all supported medium formats can be obtained using
10565 <link to="ISystemProperties::mediaFormats"/>.
10566
10567 <see>IMedium</see>
10568 </desc>
10569
10570 <attribute name="id" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
10571 <desc>
10572 Identifier of this format.
10573
10574 The format identifier is a non-@c null non-empty ASCII string. Note that
10575 this string is case-insensitive. This means that, for example, all of
10576 the following strings:
10577 <pre>
10578 "VDI"
10579 "vdi"
10580 "VdI"</pre>
10581 refer to the same medium format.
10582
10583 This string is used in methods of other interfaces where it is necessary
10584 to specify a medium format, such as
10585 <link to="IVirtualBox::createHardDisk"/>.
10586 </desc>
10587 </attribute>
10588
10589 <attribute name="name" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
10590 <desc>
10591 Human readable description of this format.
10592
10593 Mainly for use in file open dialogs.
10594 </desc>
10595 </attribute>
10596
10597 <attribute name="fileExtensions" type="wstring" safearray="yes" readonly="yes">
10598 <desc>
10599 Array of strings containing the supported file extensions.
10600
10601 The first extension in the array is the extension preferred by the
10602 backend. It is recommended to use this extension when specifying a
10603 location of the storage unit for a new medium.
10604
10605 Note that some backends do not work on files, so this array may be
10606 empty.
10607
10608 <see>IMediumFormat::capabilities</see>
10609 </desc>
10610 </attribute>
10611
10612 <attribute name="capabilities" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
10613 <desc>
10614 Capabilities of the format as a set of bit flags.
10615
10616 For the meaning of individual capability flags see
10617 <link to="MediumFormatCapabilities"/>.
10618 </desc>
10619 </attribute>
10620
10621 <method name="describeProperties">
10622 <desc>
10623 Returns several arrays describing the properties supported by this
10624 format.
10625
10626 An element with the given index in each array describes one
10627 property. Thus, the number of elements in each returned array is the
10628 same and corresponds to the number of supported properties.
10629
10630 The returned arrays are filled in only if the
10631 <link to="MediumFormatCapabilities_Properties"/> flag is set.
10632 All arguments must be non-@c null.
10633
10634 <see>DataType</see>
10635 <see>DataFlags</see>
10636 </desc>
10637
10638 <param name="names" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="out">
10639 <desc>Array of property names.</desc>
10640 </param>
10641 <param name="description" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="out">
10642 <desc>Array of property descriptions.</desc>
10643 </param>
10644 <param name="types" type="DataType" safearray="yes" dir="out">
10645 <desc>Array of property types.</desc>
10646 </param>
10647 <param name="flags" type="unsigned long" safearray="yes" dir="out">
10648 <desc>Array of property flags.</desc>
10649 </param>
10650 <param name="defaults" type="wstring" safearray="yes" dir="out">
10651 <desc>Array of default property values.</desc>
10652 </param>
10653 </method>
10654
10655 </interface>
10656
10657
10658 <!--
10659 // IKeyboard
10660 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
10661 -->
10662
10663 <interface
10664 name="IKeyboard" extends="$unknown"
10665 uuid="2d1a531b-4c6e-49cc-8af6-5c857b78b5d7"
10666 wsmap="managed"
10667 >
10668 <desc>
10669 The IKeyboard interface represents the virtual machine's keyboard. Used
10670 in <link to="IConsole::keyboard"/>.
10671
10672 Use this interface to send keystrokes or the Ctrl-Alt-Del sequence
10673 to the virtual machine.
10674
10675 </desc>
10676 <method name="putScancode">
10677 <desc>Sends a scancode to the keyboard.
10678
10679 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
10680 Could not send scan code to virtual keyboard.
10681 </result>
10682
10683 </desc>
10684 <param name="scancode" type="long" dir="in"/>
10685 </method>
10686
10687 <method name="putScancodes">
10688 <desc>Sends an array of scancodes to the keyboard.
10689
10690 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
10691 Could not send all scan codes to virtual keyboard.
10692 </result>
10693
10694 </desc>
10695 <param name="scancodes" type="long" dir="in" safearray="yes"/>
10696 <param name="codesStored" type="unsigned long" dir="return"/>
10697 </method>
10698
10699 <method name="putCAD">
10700 <desc>Sends the Ctrl-Alt-Del sequence to the keyboard. This
10701 function is nothing special, it is just a convenience function
10702 calling <link to="IKeyboard::putScancodes"/> with the proper scancodes.
10703
10704 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
10705 Could not send all scan codes to virtual keyboard.
10706 </result>
10707
10708 </desc>
10709 </method>
10710
10711 </interface>
10712
10713
10714 <!--
10715 // IMouse
10716 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
10717 -->
10718
10719 <enum
10720 name="MouseButtonState"
10721 uuid="9ee094b8-b28a-4d56-a166-973cb588d7f8"
10722 >
10723 <desc>
10724 Mouse button state.
10725 </desc>
10726
10727 <const name="LeftButton" value="0x01"/>
10728 <const name="RightButton" value="0x02"/>
10729 <const name="MiddleButton" value="0x04"/>
10730 <const name="WheelUp" value="0x08"/>
10731 <const name="WheelDown" value="0x10"/>
10732 <const name="XButton1" value="0x20"/>
10733 <const name="XButton2" value="0x40"/>
10734 <const name="MouseStateMask" value="0x7F"/>
10735 </enum>
10736
10737 <interface
10738 name="IMouse" extends="$unknown"
10739 uuid="7c0f2eae-f92d-498c-b802-e1a3763774dc"
10740 wsmap="managed"
10741 >
10742 <desc>
10743 The IMouse interface represents the virtual machine's mouse. Used in
10744 <link to="IConsole::mouse"/>.
10745
10746 Through this interface, the virtual machine's virtual mouse can be
10747 controlled.
10748 </desc>
10749
10750 <attribute name="absoluteSupported" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
10751 <desc>
10752 Whether the guest OS supports absolute mouse pointer positioning
10753 or not.
10754 <note>
10755 You can use the <link to="IConsoleCallback::onMouseCapabilityChange"/>
10756 callback to be instantly informed about changes of this attribute
10757 during virtual machine execution.
10758 </note>
10759 <see><link to="#putMouseEventAbsolute"/></see>
10760 </desc>
10761 </attribute>
10762
10763 <attribute name="relativeSupported" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
10764 <desc>
10765 Whether the guest OS supports relative mouse pointer positioning
10766 or not.
10767 <note>
10768 You can use the <link to="IConsoleCallback::onMouseCapabilityChange"/>
10769 callback to be instantly informed about changes of this attribute
10770 during virtual machine execution.
10771 </note>
10772 <see><link to="#putMouseEvent"/></see>
10773 </desc>
10774 </attribute>
10775
10776 <attribute name="needsHostCursor" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
10777 <desc>
10778 Whether the guest OS can currently switch to drawing it's own mouse
10779 cursor on demand.
10780 <note>
10781 You can use the <link to="IConsoleCallback::onMouseCapabilityChange"/>
10782 callback to be instantly informed about changes of this attribute
10783 during virtual machine execution.
10784 </note>
10785 <see><link to="#putMouseEvent"/></see>
10786 </desc>
10787 </attribute>
10788
10789 <method name="putMouseEvent">
10790 <desc>
10791 Initiates a mouse event using relative pointer movements
10792 along x and y axis.
10793
10794 <result name="E_ACCESSDENIED">
10795 Console not powered up.
10796 </result>
10797 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
10798 Could not send mouse event to virtual mouse.
10799 </result>
10800
10801 </desc>
10802
10803 <param name="dx" type="long" dir="in">
10804 <desc>
10805 Amount of pixels the mouse should move to the right.
10806 Negative values move the mouse to the left.
10807 </desc>
10808 </param>
10809 <param name="dy" type="long" dir="in">
10810 <desc>
10811 Amount of pixels the mouse should move downwards.
10812 Negative values move the mouse upwards.
10813 </desc>
10814 </param>
10815 <param name="dz" type="long" dir="in">
10816 <desc>
10817 Amount of mouse wheel moves.
10818 Positive values describe clockwise wheel rotations,
10819 negative values describe counterclockwise rotations.
10820 </desc>
10821 </param>
10822 <param name="dw" type="long" dir="in">
10823 <desc>
10824 Amount of horizontal mouse wheel moves.
10825 Positive values describe a movement to the left,
10826 negative values describe a movement to the right.
10827 </desc>
10828 </param>
10829 <param name="buttonState" type="long" dir="in">
10830 <desc>
10831 The current state of mouse buttons. Every bit represents
10832 a mouse button as follows:
10833 <table>
10834 <tr><td>Bit 0 (<tt>0x01</tt>)</td><td>left mouse button</td></tr>
10835 <tr><td>Bit 1 (<tt>0x02</tt>)</td><td>right mouse button</td></tr>
10836 <tr><td>Bit 2 (<tt>0x04</tt>)</td><td>middle mouse button</td></tr>
10837 </table>
10838 A value of <tt>1</tt> means the corresponding button is pressed.
10839 otherwise it is released.
10840 </desc>
10841 </param>
10842 </method>
10843
10844 <method name="putMouseEventAbsolute">
10845 <desc>
10846 Positions the mouse pointer using absolute x and y coordinates.
10847 These coordinates are expressed in pixels and
10848 start from <tt>[1,1]</tt> which corresponds to the top left
10849 corner of the virtual display.
10850
10851 <result name="E_ACCESSDENIED">
10852 Console not powered up.
10853 </result>
10854 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
10855 Could not send mouse event to virtual mouse.
10856 </result>
10857
10858 <note>
10859 This method will have effect only if absolute mouse
10860 positioning is supported by the guest OS.
10861 </note>
10862
10863 <see><link to="#absoluteSupported"/></see>
10864 </desc>
10865
10866 <param name="x" type="long" dir="in">
10867 <desc>
10868 X coordinate of the pointer in pixels, starting from @c 1.
10869 </desc>
10870 </param>
10871 <param name="y" type="long" dir="in">
10872 <desc>
10873 Y coordinate of the pointer in pixels, starting from @c 1.
10874 </desc>
10875 </param>
10876 <param name="dz" type="long" dir="in">
10877 <desc>
10878 Amount of mouse wheel moves.
10879 Positive values describe clockwise wheel rotations,
10880 negative values describe counterclockwise rotations.
10881 </desc>
10882 </param>
10883 <param name="dw" type="long" dir="in">
10884 <desc>
10885 Amount of horizontal mouse wheel moves.
10886 Positive values describe a movement to the left,
10887 negative values describe a movement to the right.
10888 </desc>
10889 </param>
10890 <param name="buttonState" type="long" dir="in">
10891 <desc>
10892 The current state of mouse buttons. Every bit represents
10893 a mouse button as follows:
10894 <table>
10895 <tr><td>Bit 0 (<tt>0x01</tt>)</td><td>left mouse button</td></tr>
10896 <tr><td>Bit 1 (<tt>0x02</tt>)</td><td>right mouse button</td></tr>
10897 <tr><td>Bit 2 (<tt>0x04</tt>)</td><td>middle mouse button</td></tr>
10898 </table>
10899 A value of @c 1 means the corresponding button is pressed.
10900 otherwise it is released.
10901 </desc>
10902 </param>
10903 </method>
10904
10905 </interface>
10906
10907 <!--
10908 // IDisplay
10909 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
10910 -->
10911
10912 <enum
10913 name="FramebufferPixelFormat"
10914 uuid="7acfd5ed-29e3-45e3-8136-73c9224f3d2d"
10915 >
10916 <desc>
10917 Format of the video memory buffer. Constants represented by this enum can
10918 be used to test for particular values of <link
10919 to="IFramebuffer::pixelFormat"/>. See also <link
10920 to="IFramebuffer::requestResize"/>.
10921
10922 See also www.fourcc.org for more information about FOURCC pixel formats.
10923 </desc>
10924
10925 <const name="Opaque" value="0">
10926 <desc>
10927 Unknown buffer format (the user may not assume any particular format of
10928 the buffer).
10929 </desc>
10930 </const>
10931 <const name="FOURCC_RGB" value="0x32424752">
10932 <desc>
10933 Basic RGB format (<link to="IFramebuffer::bitsPerPixel"/> determines the
10934 bit layout).
10935 </desc>
10936 </const>
10937 </enum>
10938
10939 <interface
10940 name="IFramebuffer" extends="$unknown"
10941 uuid="b7ed347a-5765-40a0-ae1c-f543eb4ddeaf"
10942 wsmap="suppress"
10943 >
10944 <attribute name="address" type="octet" mod="ptr" readonly="yes">
10945 <desc>Address of the start byte of the frame buffer.</desc>
10946 </attribute>
10947
10948 <attribute name="width" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
10949 <desc>Frame buffer width, in pixels.</desc>
10950 </attribute>
10951
10952 <attribute name="height" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
10953 <desc>Frame buffer height, in pixels.</desc>
10954 </attribute>
10955
10956 <attribute name="bitsPerPixel" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
10957 <desc>
10958 Color depth, in bits per pixel. When <link to="#pixelFormat"/> is <link
10959 to="FramebufferPixelFormat_FOURCC_RGB">FOURCC_RGB</link>, valid values
10960 are: 8, 15, 16, 24 and 32.
10961 </desc>
10962 </attribute>
10963
10964 <attribute name="bytesPerLine" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
10965 <desc>
10966 Scan line size, in bytes. When <link to="#pixelFormat"/> is <link
10967 to="FramebufferPixelFormat_FOURCC_RGB">FOURCC_RGB</link>, the
10968 size of the scan line must be aligned to 32 bits.
10969 </desc>
10970 </attribute>
10971
10972 <attribute name="pixelFormat" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
10973 <desc>
10974 Frame buffer pixel format. It's either one of the values defined by <link
10975 to="FramebufferPixelFormat"/> or a raw FOURCC code.
10976 <note>
10977 This attribute must never return <link
10978 to="FramebufferPixelFormat_Opaque"/> -- the format of the buffer
10979 <link to="#address"/> points to must be always known.
10980 </note>
10981 </desc>
10982 </attribute>
10983
10984 <attribute name="usesGuestVRAM" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
10985 <desc>
10986 Defines whether this frame buffer uses the virtual video card's memory
10987 buffer (guest VRAM) directly or not. See <link
10988 to="IFramebuffer::requestResize"/> for more information.
10989 </desc>
10990 </attribute>
10991
10992 <attribute name="heightReduction" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
10993 <desc>
10994 Hint from the frame buffer about how much of the standard
10995 screen height it wants to use for itself. This information is
10996 exposed to the guest through the VESA BIOS and VMMDev interface
10997 so that it can use it for determining its video mode table. It
10998 is not guaranteed that the guest respects the value.
10999 </desc>
11000 </attribute>
11001
11002 <attribute name="overlay" type="IFramebufferOverlay" readonly="yes">
11003 <desc>
11004 An alpha-blended overlay which is superposed over the frame buffer.
11005 The initial purpose is to allow the display of icons providing
11006 information about the VM state, including disk activity, in front
11007 ends which do not have other means of doing that. The overlay is
11008 designed to controlled exclusively by IDisplay. It has no locking
11009 of its own, and any changes made to it are not guaranteed to be
11010 visible until the affected portion of IFramebuffer is updated. The
11011 overlay can be created lazily the first time it is requested. This
11012 attribute can also return @c null to signal that the overlay is not
11013 implemented.
11014 </desc>
11015 </attribute>
11016
11017 <attribute name="winId" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
11018 <desc>
11019 Platform-dependent identifier of the window where context of this
11020 frame buffer is drawn, or zero if there's no such window.
11021 </desc>
11022 </attribute>
11023
11024 <method name="lock">
11025 <desc>
11026 Locks the frame buffer.
11027 Gets called by the IDisplay object where this frame buffer is
11028 bound to.
11029 </desc>
11030 </method>
11031
11032 <method name="unlock">
11033 <desc>
11034 Unlocks the frame buffer.
11035 Gets called by the IDisplay object where this frame buffer is
11036 bound to.
11037 </desc>
11038 </method>
11039
11040 <method name="notifyUpdate">
11041 <desc>
11042 Informs about an update.
11043 Gets called by the display object where this buffer is
11044 registered.
11045 </desc>
11046 <param name="x" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11047 <param name="y" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11048 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11049 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11050 </method>
11051
11052 <method name="requestResize">
11053 <desc>
11054 Requests a size and pixel format change.
11055
11056 There are two modes of working with the video buffer of the virtual
11057 machine. The <i>indirect</i> mode implies that the IFramebuffer
11058 implementation allocates a memory buffer for the requested display mode
11059 and provides it to the virtual machine. In <i>direct</i> mode, the
11060 IFramebuffer implementation uses the memory buffer allocated and owned
11061 by the virtual machine. This buffer represents the video memory of the
11062 emulated video adapter (so called <i>guest VRAM</i>). The direct mode is
11063 usually faster because the implementation gets a raw pointer to the
11064 guest VRAM buffer which it can directly use for visualizing the contents
11065 of the virtual display, as opposed to the indirect mode where the
11066 contents of guest VRAM are copied to the memory buffer provided by
11067 the implementation every time a display update occurs.
11068
11069 It is important to note that the direct mode is really fast only when
11070 the implementation uses the given guest VRAM buffer directly, for
11071 example, by blitting it to the window representing the virtual machine's
11072 display, which saves at least one copy operation comparing to the
11073 indirect mode. However, using the guest VRAM buffer directly is not
11074 always possible: the format and the color depth of this buffer may be
11075 not supported by the target window, or it may be unknown (opaque) as in
11076 case of text or non-linear multi-plane VGA video modes. In this case,
11077 the indirect mode (that is always available) should be used as a
11078 fallback: when the guest VRAM contents are copied to the
11079 implementation-provided memory buffer, color and format conversion is
11080 done automatically by the underlying code.
11081
11082 The @a pixelFormat parameter defines whether the direct mode is
11083 available or not. If @a pixelFormat is <link
11084 to="FramebufferPixelFormat_Opaque"/> then direct access to the guest
11085 VRAM buffer is not available -- the @a VRAM, @a bitsPerPixel and
11086 @a bytesPerLine parameters must be ignored and the implementation must use
11087 the indirect mode (where it provides its own buffer in one of the
11088 supported formats). In all other cases, @a pixelFormat together with
11089 @a bitsPerPixel and @a bytesPerLine define the format of the video memory
11090 buffer pointed to by the @a VRAM parameter and the implementation is
11091 free to choose which mode to use. To indicate that this frame buffer uses
11092 the direct mode, the implementation of the <link to="#usesGuestVRAM"/>
11093 attribute must return @c true and <link to="#address"/> must
11094 return exactly the same address that is passed in the @a VRAM parameter
11095 of this method; otherwise it is assumed that the indirect strategy is
11096 chosen.
11097
11098 The @a width and @a height parameters represent the size of the
11099 requested display mode in both modes. In case of indirect mode, the
11100 provided memory buffer should be big enough to store data of the given
11101 display mode. In case of direct mode, it is guaranteed that the given
11102 @a VRAM buffer contains enough space to represent the display mode of the
11103 given size. Note that this frame buffer's <link to="#width"/> and <link
11104 to="#height"/> attributes must return exactly the same values as
11105 passed to this method after the resize is completed (see below).
11106
11107 The @a finished output parameter determines if the implementation has
11108 finished resizing the frame buffer or not. If, for some reason, the
11109 resize cannot be finished immediately during this call, @a finished
11110 must be set to @c false, and the implementation must call
11111 <link to="IDisplay::resizeCompleted"/> after it has returned from
11112 this method as soon as possible. If @a finished is @c false, the
11113 machine will not call any frame buffer methods until
11114 <link to="IDisplay::resizeCompleted"/> is called.
11115
11116 Note that if the direct mode is chosen, the <link to="#bitsPerPixel"/>,
11117 <link to="#bytesPerLine"/> and <link to="#pixelFormat"/> attributes of
11118 this frame buffer must return exactly the same values as specified in the
11119 parameters of this method, after the resize is completed. If the
11120 indirect mode is chosen, these attributes must return values describing
11121 the format of the implementation's own memory buffer <link
11122 to="#address"/> points to. Note also that the <link to="#bitsPerPixel"/>
11123 value must always correlate with <link to="#pixelFormat"/>. Note that
11124 the <link to="#pixelFormat"/> attribute must never return <link
11125 to="FramebufferPixelFormat_Opaque"/> regardless of the selected mode.
11126
11127 <note>
11128 This method is called by the IDisplay object under the
11129 <link to="#lock"/> provided by this IFramebuffer
11130 implementation. If this method returns @c false in @a finished, then
11131 this lock is not released until
11132 <link to="IDisplay::resizeCompleted"/> is called.
11133 </note>
11134 </desc>
11135 <param name="screenId" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11136 <desc>
11137 Logical screen number. Must be used in the corresponding call to
11138 <link to="IDisplay::resizeCompleted"/> if this call is made.
11139 </desc>
11140 </param>
11141 <param name="pixelFormat" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11142 <desc>
11143 Pixel format of the memory buffer pointed to by @a VRAM.
11144 See also <link to="FramebufferPixelFormat"/>.
11145 </desc>
11146 </param>
11147 <param name="VRAM" type="octet" mod="ptr" dir="in">
11148 <desc>Pointer to the virtual video card's VRAM (may be @c null).</desc>
11149 </param>
11150 <param name="bitsPerPixel" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11151 <desc>Color depth, bits per pixel.</desc>
11152 </param>
11153 <param name="bytesPerLine" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11154 <desc>Size of one scan line, in bytes.</desc>
11155 </param>
11156 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11157 <desc>Width of the guest display, in pixels.</desc>
11158 </param>
11159 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11160 <desc>Height of the guest display, in pixels.</desc>
11161 </param>
11162 <param name="finished" type="boolean" dir="return">
11163 <desc>
11164 Can the VM start using the new frame buffer immediately
11165 after this method returns or it should wait for
11166 <link to="IDisplay::resizeCompleted"/>.
11167 </desc>
11168 </param>
11169 </method>
11170
11171 <method name="videoModeSupported">
11172 <desc>
11173 Returns whether the frame buffer implementation is willing to
11174 support a given video mode. In case it is not able to render
11175 the video mode (or for some reason not willing), it should
11176 return @c false. Usually this method is called when the guest
11177 asks the VMM device whether a given video mode is supported
11178 so the information returned is directly exposed to the guest.
11179 It is important that this method returns very quickly.
11180 </desc>
11181 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11182 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11183 <param name="bpp" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11184 <param name="supported" type="boolean" dir="return"/>
11185 </method>
11186
11187 <method name="getVisibleRegion">
11188 <desc>
11189 Returns the visible region of this frame buffer.
11190
11191 If the @a rectangles parameter is @c null then the value of the
11192 @a count parameter is ignored and the number of elements necessary to
11193 describe the current visible region is returned in @a countCopied.
11194
11195 If @a rectangles is not @c null but @a count is less
11196 than the required number of elements to store region data, the method
11197 will report a failure. If @a count is equal or greater than the
11198 required number of elements, then the actual number of elements copied
11199 to the provided array will be returned in @a countCopied.
11200
11201 <note>
11202 The address of the provided array must be in the process space of
11203 this IFramebuffer object.
11204 </note>
11205 <note>
11206 Method not yet implemented.
11207 </note>
11208 </desc>
11209 <param name="rectangles" type="octet" mod="ptr" dir="in">
11210 <desc>Pointer to the @c RTRECT array to receive region data.</desc>
11211 </param>
11212 <param name="count" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11213 <desc>Number of @c RTRECT elements in the @a rectangles array.</desc>
11214 </param>
11215 <param name="countCopied" type="unsigned long" dir="return">
11216 <desc>Number of elements copied to the @a rectangles array.</desc>
11217 </param>
11218 </method>
11219
11220 <method name="setVisibleRegion">
11221 <desc>
11222 Suggests a new visible region to this frame buffer. This region
11223 represents the area of the VM display which is a union of regions of
11224 all top-level windows of the guest operating system running inside the
11225 VM (if the Guest Additions for this system support this
11226 functionality). This information may be used by the frontends to
11227 implement the seamless desktop integration feature.
11228
11229 <note>
11230 The address of the provided array must be in the process space of
11231 this IFramebuffer object.
11232 </note>
11233 <note>
11234 The IFramebuffer implementation must make a copy of the provided
11235 array of rectangles.
11236 </note>
11237 <note>
11238 Method not yet implemented.
11239 </note>
11240 </desc>
11241 <param name="rectangles" type="octet" mod="ptr" dir="in">
11242 <desc>Pointer to the @c RTRECT array.</desc>
11243 </param>
11244 <param name="count" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11245 <desc>Number of @c RTRECT elements in the @a rectangles array.</desc>
11246 </param>
11247 </method>
11248
11249 <method name="processVHWACommand">
11250 <desc>
11251 Posts a Video HW Acceleration Command to the frame buffer for processing.
11252 The commands used for 2D video acceleration (DDraw surface creation/destroying, blitting, scaling, color covnersion, overlaying, etc.)
11253 are posted from quest to the host to be processed by the host hardware.
11254
11255 <note>
11256 The address of the provided command must be in the process space of
11257 this IFramebuffer object.
11258 </note>
11259 </desc>
11260
11261 <param name="command" type="octet" mod="ptr" dir="in">
11262 <desc>Pointer to VBOXVHWACMD containing the command to execute.</desc>
11263 </param>
11264 </method>
11265
11266 </interface>
11267
11268 <interface
11269 name="IFramebufferOverlay" extends="IFramebuffer"
11270 uuid="0bcc1c7e-e415-47d2-bfdb-e4c705fb0f47"
11271 wsmap="suppress"
11272 >
11273 <desc>
11274 The IFramebufferOverlay interface represents an alpha blended overlay
11275 for displaying status icons above an IFramebuffer. It is always created
11276 not visible, so that it must be explicitly shown. It only covers a
11277 portion of the IFramebuffer, determined by its width, height and
11278 co-ordinates. It is always in packed pixel little-endian 32bit ARGB (in
11279 that order) format, and may be written to directly. Do re-read the
11280 width though, after setting it, as it may be adjusted (increased) to
11281 make it more suitable for the front end.
11282 </desc>
11283 <attribute name="x" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
11284 <desc>X position of the overlay, relative to the frame buffer.</desc>
11285 </attribute>
11286
11287 <attribute name="y" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
11288 <desc>Y position of the overlay, relative to the frame buffer.</desc>
11289 </attribute>
11290
11291 <attribute name="visible" type="boolean" readonly="no">
11292 <desc>
11293 Whether the overlay is currently visible.
11294 </desc>
11295 </attribute>
11296
11297 <attribute name="alpha" type="unsigned long" readonly="no">
11298 <desc>
11299 The global alpha value for the overlay. This may or may not be
11300 supported by a given front end.
11301 </desc>
11302 </attribute>
11303
11304 <method name="move">
11305 <desc>
11306 Changes the overlay's position relative to the IFramebuffer.
11307 </desc>
11308 <param name="x" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11309 <param name="y" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11310 </method>
11311
11312 </interface>
11313
11314 <interface
11315 name="IDisplay" extends="$unknown"
11316 uuid="1fa79e39-0cc9-4ab3-9df3-ed3e96b42496"
11317 wsmap="managed"
11318 >
11319 <desc>
11320 The IDisplay interface represents the virtual machine's display.
11321
11322 The object implementing this interface is contained in each
11323 <link to="IConsole::display"/> attribute and represents the visual
11324 output of the virtual machine.
11325
11326 The virtual display supports pluggable output targets represented by the
11327 IFramebuffer interface. Examples of the output target are a window on
11328 the host computer or an RDP session's display on a remote computer.
11329 </desc>
11330 <method name="getScreenResolution">
11331 <desc>Queries display width, height and color depth for given screen.</desc>
11332 <param name="screenId" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11333 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="out"/>
11334 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="out"/>
11335 <param name="bitsPerPixel" type="unsigned long" dir="out"/>
11336 </method>
11337
11338 <method name="setFramebuffer">
11339 <desc>
11340 Sets the framebuffer for given screen.
11341 </desc>
11342 <param name="screenId" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11343 <param name="framebuffer" type="IFramebuffer" dir="in"/>
11344 </method>
11345
11346 <method name="getFramebuffer">
11347 <desc>
11348 Queries the framebuffer for given screen.
11349 </desc>
11350 <param name="screenId" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11351 <param name="framebuffer" type="IFramebuffer" dir="out"/>
11352 <param name="xOrigin" type="long" dir="out"/>
11353 <param name="yOrigin" type="long" dir="out"/>
11354 </method>
11355
11356 <method name="setVideoModeHint">
11357 <desc>
11358 Asks VirtualBox to request the given video mode from
11359 the guest. This is just a hint and it cannot be guaranteed
11360 that the requested resolution will be used. Guest Additions
11361 are required for the request to be seen by guests. The caller
11362 should issue the request and wait for a resolution change and
11363 after a timeout retry.
11364
11365 Specifying @c 0 for either @a width, @a height or @a bitsPerPixel
11366 parameters means that the corresponding values should be taken from the
11367 current video mode (i.e. left unchanged).
11368
11369 If the guest OS supports multi-monitor configuration then the @a display
11370 parameter specifies the number of the guest display to send the hint to:
11371 @c 0 is the primary display, @c 1 is the first secondary and
11372 so on. If the multi-monitor configuration is not supported, @a display
11373 must be @c 0.
11374
11375 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
11376 The @a display is not associated with any monitor.
11377 </result>
11378
11379 </desc>
11380 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11381 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11382 <param name="bitsPerPixel" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11383 <param name="display" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11384 </method>
11385
11386 <method name="setSeamlessMode">
11387 <desc>
11388 Enables or disables seamless guest display rendering (seamless desktop
11389 integration) mode.
11390 <note>
11391 Calling this method has no effect if <link
11392 to="IGuest::supportsSeamless"/> returns @c false.
11393 </note>
11394 </desc>
11395 <param name="enabled" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
11396 </method>
11397
11398 <method name="takeScreenShot">
11399 <desc>
11400 Takes a screen shot of the requested size and copies it to the
11401 32-bpp buffer allocated by the caller and pointed to by @a address.
11402 A pixel consists of 4 bytes in order: B, G, R, 0.
11403
11404 <note>This API can be used only by the COM/XPCOM C++ API as it
11405 requires pointer support. Use <link to="#takeScreenShotToArray" />
11406 with other language bindings.
11407 </note>
11408
11409 <result name="E_NOTIMPL">
11410 Feature not implemented.
11411 </result>
11412 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
11413 Could not take a screenshot.
11414 </result>
11415
11416 </desc>
11417 <param name="screenId" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11418 <param name="address" type="octet" mod="ptr" dir="in"/>
11419 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11420 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11421 </method>
11422
11423 <method name="takeScreenShotToArray">
11424 <desc>
11425 Takes a guest screen shot of the requested size and returns it as
11426 an array of bytes in uncompressed 32-bit RGBA format.
11427 A pixel consists of 4 bytes in order: R, G, B, 0xFF.
11428
11429 This API is slow, but could be the only option to get guest screenshot
11430 for scriptable languages not allowed to manipulate with addresses
11431 directly.
11432
11433 <result name="E_NOTIMPL">
11434 Feature not implemented.
11435 </result>
11436 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
11437 Could not take a screenshot.
11438 </result>
11439 </desc>
11440 <param name="screenId" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11441 <desc>
11442 Monitor to take screenshot from.
11443 </desc>
11444 </param>
11445 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11446 <desc>
11447 Desired image width.
11448 </desc>
11449 </param>
11450 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11451 <desc>
11452 Desired image height.
11453 </desc>
11454 </param>
11455 <param name="screenData" type="octet" dir="return" safearray="yes">
11456 <desc>
11457 Array with resulting screen data.
11458 </desc>
11459 </param>
11460 </method>
11461
11462 <method name="drawToScreen">
11463 <desc>
11464 Draws a 32-bpp image of the specified size from the given buffer
11465 to the given point on the VM display.
11466
11467 <result name="E_NOTIMPL">
11468 Feature not implemented.
11469 </result>
11470 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
11471 Could not draw to screen.
11472 </result>
11473
11474 </desc>
11475 <param name="screenId" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11476 <param name="address" type="octet" mod="ptr" dir="in"/>
11477 <param name="x" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11478 <desc>Relative to the screen top left corner.</desc>
11479 </param>
11480 <param name="y" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
11481 <desc>Relative to the screen top left corner.</desc>
11482 </param>
11483 <param name="width" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11484 <param name="height" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11485 </method>
11486
11487 <method name="invalidateAndUpdate">
11488 <desc>
11489 Does a full invalidation of the VM display and instructs the VM
11490 to update it.
11491
11492 <result name="VBOX_E_IPRT_ERROR">
11493 Could not invalidate and update screen.
11494 </result>
11495
11496 </desc>
11497 </method>
11498
11499 <method name="resizeCompleted">
11500 <desc>
11501 Signals that a framebuffer has completed the resize operation.
11502
11503 <result name="VBOX_E_NOT_SUPPORTED">
11504 Operation only valid for external frame buffers.
11505 </result>
11506
11507 </desc>
11508 <param name="screenId" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
11509 </method>
11510
11511 <method name="completeVHWACommand">
11512 <desc>
11513 Signals that the Video HW Acceleration command has completed.
11514 </desc>
11515
11516 <param name="command" type="octet" mod="ptr" dir="in">
11517 <desc>Pointer to VBOXVHWACMD containing the completed command.</desc>
11518 </param>
11519 </method>
11520
11521 </interface>
11522
11523 <!--
11524 // INetworkAdapter
11525 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
11526 -->
11527
11528 <enum
11529 name="NetworkAttachmentType"
11530 uuid="44bce1ee-99f7-4e8e-89fc-80597fd9eeaf"
11531 >
11532 <desc>
11533 Network attachment type.
11534 </desc>
11535
11536 <const name="Null" value="0">
11537 <desc>Null value, also means "not attached".</desc>
11538 </const>
11539 <const name="NAT" value="1"/>
11540 <const name="Bridged" value="2"/>
11541 <const name="Internal" value="3"/>
11542 <const name="HostOnly" value="4"/>
11543 </enum>
11544
11545 <enum
11546 name="NetworkAdapterType"
11547 uuid="3c2281e4-d952-4e87-8c7d-24379cb6a81c"
11548 >
11549 <desc>
11550 Network adapter type.
11551 </desc>
11552
11553 <const name="Null" value="0">
11554 <desc>Null value (never used by the API).</desc>
11555 </const>
11556 <const name="Am79C970A" value="1">
11557 <desc>AMD PCNet-PCI II network card (Am79C970A).</desc>
11558 </const>
11559 <const name="Am79C973" value="2">
11560 <desc>AMD PCNet-FAST III network card (Am79C973).</desc>
11561 </const>
11562 <const name="I82540EM" value="3">
11563 <desc>Intel PRO/1000 MT Desktop network card (82540EM).</desc>
11564 </const>
11565 <const name="I82543GC" value="4">
11566 <desc>Intel PRO/1000 T Server network card (82543GC).</desc>
11567 </const>
11568 <const name="I82545EM" value="5">
11569 <desc>Intel PRO/1000 MT Server network card (82545EM).</desc>
11570 </const>
11571 <const name="Virtio" value="6">
11572 <desc>Virtio network device.</desc>
11573 </const>
11574 </enum>
11575
11576 <interface
11577 name="INetworkAdapter" extends="$unknown"
11578 uuid="5bdb9df8-a5e1-4322-a139-b7a4a734c790"
11579 wsmap="managed"
11580 >
11581 <desc>
11582 Represents a virtual network adapter that is attached to a virtual machine.
11583 Each virtual machine has a fixed number of network adapter slots with one
11584 instance of this attached to each of them. Call
11585 <link to="IMachine::getNetworkAdapter" /> to get the network adapter that
11586 is attached to a given slot in a given machine.
11587
11588 Each network adapter can be in one of five attachment modes, which are
11589 represented by the <link to="NetworkAttachmentType" /> enumeration;
11590 see the <link to="#attachmentType" /> attribute.
11591 </desc>
11592
11593 <attribute name="adapterType" type="NetworkAdapterType">
11594 <desc>
11595 Type of the virtual network adapter. Depending on this value,
11596 VirtualBox will provide a different virtual network hardware
11597 to the guest.
11598 </desc>
11599 </attribute>
11600
11601 <attribute name="slot" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
11602 <desc>
11603 Slot number this adapter is plugged into. Corresponds to
11604 the value you pass to <link to="IMachine::getNetworkAdapter"/>
11605 to obtain this instance.
11606 </desc>
11607 </attribute>
11608
11609 <attribute name="enabled" type="boolean">
11610 <desc>
11611 Flag whether the network adapter is present in the
11612 guest system. If disabled, the virtual guest hardware will
11613 not contain this network adapter. Can only be changed when
11614 the VM is not running.
11615 </desc>
11616 </attribute>
11617
11618 <attribute name="MACAddress" type="wstring">
11619 <desc>
11620 Ethernet MAC address of the adapter, 12 hexadecimal characters. When setting
11621 it to @c null or an empty string, VirtualBox will generate a unique MAC address.
11622 </desc>
11623 </attribute>
11624
11625 <attribute name="attachmentType" type="NetworkAttachmentType" readonly="yes"/>
11626
11627 <attribute name="hostInterface" type="wstring">
11628 <desc>
11629 Name of the host network interface the VM is attached to.
11630 </desc>
11631 </attribute>
11632
11633 <attribute name="internalNetwork" type="wstring">
11634 <desc>
11635 Name of the internal network the VM is attached to.
11636 </desc>
11637 </attribute>
11638
11639 <attribute name="NATNetwork" type="wstring">
11640 <desc>
11641 Name of the NAT network the VM is attached to.
11642 </desc>
11643 </attribute>
11644
11645 <attribute name="cableConnected" type="boolean">
11646 <desc>
11647 Flag whether the adapter reports the cable as connected or not.
11648 It can be used to report offline situations to a VM.
11649 </desc>
11650 </attribute>
11651
11652 <attribute name="lineSpeed" type="unsigned long">
11653 <desc>
11654 Line speed reported by custom drivers, in units of 1 kbps.
11655 </desc>
11656 </attribute>
11657
11658 <attribute name="traceEnabled" type="boolean">
11659 <desc>
11660 Flag whether network traffic from/to the network card should be traced.
11661 Can only be toggled when the VM is turned off.
11662 </desc>
11663 </attribute>
11664
11665 <attribute name="traceFile" type="wstring">
11666 <desc>
11667 Filename where a network trace will be stored. If not set, VBox-pid.pcap
11668 will be used.
11669 </desc>
11670 </attribute>
11671
11672 <attribute name="natDriver" type="INATEngine" readonly="yes">
11673 <desc>
11674 Points to the NAT engine which handles the network address translation
11675 for this interface. This is active only when the interface actually uses
11676 NAT (see <link to="#attachToNAT" />).
11677 </desc>
11678 </attribute>
11679
11680 <attribute name="bootPriority" type="unsigned long">
11681 <desc>
11682 Network boot priority of the adapter. Priority 1 is highest. If not set,
11683 the priority is considered to be at the lowest possible setting.
11684 </desc>
11685 </attribute>
11686
11687 <method name="attachToNAT">
11688 <desc>
11689 Attach the network adapter to the Network Address Translation (NAT) interface.
11690 </desc>
11691 </method>
11692
11693 <method name="attachToBridgedInterface">
11694 <desc>
11695 Attach the network adapter to a bridged host interface.
11696 </desc>
11697 </method>
11698
11699 <method name="attachToInternalNetwork">
11700 <desc>
11701 Attach the network adapter to an internal network.
11702 </desc>
11703 </method>
11704
11705 <method name="attachToHostOnlyInterface">
11706 <desc>
11707 Attach the network adapter to the host-only network.
11708 </desc>
11709 </method>
11710
11711 <method name="detach">
11712 <desc>
11713 Detach the network adapter
11714 </desc>
11715 </method>
11716 </interface>
11717
11718
11719 <!--
11720 // ISerialPort
11721 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
11722 -->
11723
11724 <enum
11725 name="PortMode"
11726 uuid="533b5fe3-0185-4197-86a7-17e37dd39d76"
11727 >
11728 <desc>
11729 The PortMode enumeration represents possible communication modes for
11730 the virtual serial port device.
11731 </desc>
11732
11733 <const name="Disconnected" value="0">
11734 <desc>Virtual device is not attached to any real host device.</desc>
11735 </const>
11736 <const name="HostPipe" value="1">
11737 <desc>Virtual device is attached to a host pipe.</desc>
11738 </const>
11739 <const name="HostDevice" value="2">
11740 <desc>Virtual device is attached to a host device.</desc>
11741 </const>
11742 <const name="RawFile" value="3">
11743 <desc>Virtual device is attached to a raw file.</desc>
11744 </const>
11745 </enum>
11746
11747 <interface
11748 name="ISerialPort" extends="$unknown"
11749 uuid="937f6970-5103-4745-b78e-d28dcf1479a8"
11750 wsmap="managed"
11751 >
11752
11753 <desc>
11754 The ISerialPort interface represents the virtual serial port device.
11755
11756 The virtual serial port device acts like an ordinary serial port
11757 inside the virtual machine. This device communicates to the real
11758 serial port hardware in one of two modes: host pipe or host device.
11759
11760 In host pipe mode, the #path attribute specifies the path to the pipe on
11761 the host computer that represents a serial port. The #server attribute
11762 determines if this pipe is created by the virtual machine process at
11763 machine startup or it must already exist before starting machine
11764 execution.
11765
11766 In host device mode, the #path attribute specifies the name of the
11767 serial port device on the host computer.
11768
11769 There is also a third communication mode: the disconnected mode. In this
11770 mode, the guest OS running inside the virtual machine will be able to
11771 detect the serial port, but all port write operations will be discarded
11772 and all port read operations will return no data.
11773
11774 <see>IMachine::getSerialPort</see>
11775 </desc>
11776
11777 <attribute name="slot" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
11778 <desc>
11779 Slot number this serial port is plugged into. Corresponds to
11780 the value you pass to <link to="IMachine::getSerialPort"/>
11781 to obtain this instance.
11782 </desc>
11783 </attribute>
11784
11785 <attribute name="enabled" type="boolean">
11786 <desc>
11787 Flag whether the serial port is enabled. If disabled,
11788 the serial port will not be reported to the guest OS.
11789 </desc>
11790 </attribute>
11791
11792 <attribute name="IOBase" type="unsigned long">
11793 <desc>Base I/O address of the serial port.</desc>
11794 </attribute>
11795
11796 <attribute name="IRQ" type="unsigned long">
11797 <desc>IRQ number of the serial port.</desc>
11798 </attribute>
11799
11800 <attribute name="hostMode" type="PortMode">
11801 <desc>
11802 How is this port connected to the host.
11803 <note>
11804 Changing this attribute may fail if the conditions for
11805 <link to="#path"/> are not met.
11806 </note>
11807 </desc>
11808 </attribute>
11809
11810 <attribute name="server" type="boolean">
11811 <desc>
11812 Flag whether this serial port acts as a server (creates a new pipe on
11813 the host) or as a client (uses the existing pipe). This attribute is
11814 used only when <link to="#hostMode"/> is PortMode_HostPipe.
11815 </desc>
11816 </attribute>
11817
11818 <attribute name="path" type="wstring">
11819 <desc>
11820 Path to the serial port's pipe on the host when <link to="ISerialPort::hostMode"/> is
11821 PortMode_HostPipe, or the host serial device name when
11822 <link to="ISerialPort::hostMode"/> is PortMode_HostDevice. For both
11823 cases, setting a @c null or empty string as the attribute's value
11824 is an error. Otherwise, the value of this property is ignored.
11825 </desc>
11826 </attribute>
11827
11828 </interface>
11829
11830 <!--
11831 // IParallelPort
11832 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
11833 -->
11834
11835 <interface
11836 name="IParallelPort" extends="$unknown"
11837 uuid="0c925f06-dd10-4b77-8de8-294d738c3214"
11838 wsmap="managed"
11839 >
11840
11841 <desc>
11842 The IParallelPort interface represents the virtual parallel port device.
11843
11844 The virtual parallel port device acts like an ordinary parallel port
11845 inside the virtual machine. This device communicates to the real
11846 parallel port hardware using the name of the parallel device on the host
11847 computer specified in the #path attribute.
11848
11849 Each virtual parallel port device is assigned a base I/O address and an
11850 IRQ number that will be reported to the guest operating system and used
11851 to operate the given parallel port from within the virtual machine.
11852
11853 <see>IMachine::getParallelPort</see>
11854 </desc>
11855
11856 <attribute name="slot" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
11857 <desc>
11858 Slot number this parallel port is plugged into. Corresponds to
11859 the value you pass to <link to="IMachine::getParallelPort"/>
11860 to obtain this instance.
11861 </desc>
11862 </attribute>
11863
11864 <attribute name="enabled" type="boolean">
11865 <desc>
11866 Flag whether the parallel port is enabled. If disabled,
11867 the parallel port will not be reported to the guest OS.
11868 </desc>
11869 </attribute>
11870
11871 <attribute name="IOBase" type="unsigned long">
11872 <desc>Base I/O address of the parallel port.</desc>
11873 </attribute>
11874
11875 <attribute name="IRQ" type="unsigned long">
11876 <desc>IRQ number of the parallel port.</desc>
11877 </attribute>
11878
11879 <attribute name="path" type="wstring">
11880 <desc>
11881 Host parallel device name. If this parallel port is enabled, setting a
11882 @c null or an empty string as this attribute's value will result into
11883 an error.
11884 </desc>
11885 </attribute>
11886
11887 </interface>
11888
11889
11890 <!--
11891 // IMachineDebugger
11892 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
11893 -->
11894
11895 <interface
11896 name="IMachineDebugger" extends="$unknown"
11897 uuid="b0b2a2dd-0627-4502-91c2-ddc5e77609e0"
11898 wsmap="suppress"
11899 >
11900 <method name="resetStats">
11901 <desc>
11902 Reset VM statistics.
11903 </desc>
11904 <param name="pattern" type="wstring" dir="in">
11905 <desc>The selection pattern. A bit similar to filename globbing.</desc>
11906 </param>
11907 </method>
11908
11909 <method name="dumpStats">
11910 <desc>
11911 Dumps VM statistics.
11912 </desc>
11913 <param name="pattern" type="wstring" dir="in">
11914 <desc>The selection pattern. A bit similar to filename globbing.</desc>
11915 </param>
11916 </method>
11917
11918 <method name="getStats">
11919 <desc>
11920 Get the VM statistics in a XMLish format.
11921 </desc>
11922 <param name="pattern" type="wstring" dir="in">
11923 <desc>The selection pattern. A bit similar to filename globbing.</desc>
11924 </param>
11925 <param name="withDescriptions" type="boolean" dir="in">
11926 <desc>Whether to include the descriptions.</desc>
11927 </param>
11928 <param name="stats" type="wstring" dir="out">
11929 <desc>The XML document containing the statistics.</desc>
11930 </param>
11931 </method>
11932
11933 <method name="injectNMI">
11934 <desc>
11935 Inject an NMI into a running VT-x/AMD-V VM.
11936 </desc>
11937 </method>
11938
11939 <attribute name="singlestep" type="boolean">
11940 <desc>Switch for enabling singlestepping.</desc>
11941 </attribute>
11942
11943 <attribute name="recompileUser" type="boolean">
11944 <desc>Switch for forcing code recompilation for user mode code.</desc>
11945 </attribute>
11946
11947 <attribute name="recompileSupervisor" type="boolean">
11948 <desc>Switch for forcing code recompilation for supervisor mode code.</desc>
11949 </attribute>
11950
11951 <attribute name="PATMEnabled" type="boolean">
11952 <desc>Switch for enabling and disabling the PATM component.</desc>
11953 </attribute>
11954
11955 <attribute name="CSAMEnabled" type="boolean">
11956 <desc>Switch for enabling and disabling the CSAM component.</desc>
11957 </attribute>
11958
11959 <attribute name="logEnabled" type="boolean">
11960 <desc>Switch for enabling and disabling logging.</desc>
11961 </attribute>
11962
11963 <attribute name="HWVirtExEnabled" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
11964 <desc>
11965 Flag indicating whether the VM is currently making use of CPU hardware
11966 virtualization extensions.
11967 </desc>
11968 </attribute>
11969
11970 <attribute name="HWVirtExNestedPagingEnabled" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
11971 <desc>
11972 Flag indicating whether the VM is currently making use of the nested paging
11973 CPU hardware virtualization extension.
11974 </desc>
11975 </attribute>
11976
11977 <attribute name="HWVirtExVPIDEnabled" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
11978 <desc>
11979 Flag indicating whether the VM is currently making use of the VPID
11980 VT-x extension.
11981 </desc>
11982 </attribute>
11983
11984 <attribute name="PAEEnabled" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
11985 <desc>
11986 Flag indicating whether the VM is currently making use of the Physical
11987 Address Extension CPU feature.
11988 </desc>
11989 </attribute>
11990
11991 <attribute name="virtualTimeRate" type="unsigned long">
11992 <desc>
11993 The rate at which the virtual time runs expressed as a percentage.
11994 The accepted range is 2% to 20000%.
11995 </desc>
11996 </attribute>
11997
11998 <!-- @todo method for setting log flags, groups and destination! -->
11999
12000 <attribute name="VM" type="unsigned long long" readonly="yes">
12001 <desc>
12002 Gets the VM handle. This is only for internal use while
12003 we carve the details of this interface.
12004 </desc>
12005 </attribute>
12006
12007 </interface>
12008
12009 <!--
12010 // IUSBController
12011 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12012 -->
12013
12014 <interface
12015 name="IUSBController" extends="$unknown"
12016 uuid="6fdcccc5-abd3-4fec-9387-2ad3914fc4a8"
12017 wsmap="managed"
12018 >
12019 <attribute name="enabled" type="boolean">
12020 <desc>
12021 Flag whether the USB controller is present in the
12022 guest system. If disabled, the virtual guest hardware will
12023 not contain any USB controller. Can only be changed when
12024 the VM is powered off.
12025 </desc>
12026 </attribute>
12027
12028 <attribute name="enabledEhci" type="boolean">
12029 <desc>
12030 Flag whether the USB EHCI controller is present in the
12031 guest system. If disabled, the virtual guest hardware will
12032 not contain a USB EHCI controller. Can only be changed when
12033 the VM is powered off.
12034 </desc>
12035 </attribute>
12036
12037 <attribute name="proxyAvailable" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
12038 <desc>
12039 Flag whether there is an USB proxy available.
12040 </desc>
12041 </attribute>
12042
12043 <attribute name="USBStandard" type="unsigned short" readonly="yes">
12044 <desc>
12045 USB standard version which the controller implements.
12046 This is a BCD which means that the major version is in the
12047 high byte and minor version is in the low byte.
12048 </desc>
12049 </attribute>
12050
12051 <attribute name="deviceFilters" type="IUSBDeviceFilter" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
12052 <desc>
12053 List of USB device filters associated with the machine.
12054
12055 If the machine is currently running, these filters are activated
12056 every time a new (supported) USB device is attached to the host
12057 computer that was not ignored by global filters
12058 (<link to="IHost::USBDeviceFilters"/>).
12059
12060 These filters are also activated when the machine is powered up.
12061 They are run against a list of all currently available USB
12062 devices (in states
12063 <link to="USBDeviceState_Available"/>,
12064 <link to="USBDeviceState_Busy"/>,
12065 <link to="USBDeviceState_Held"/>) that were not previously
12066 ignored by global filters.
12067
12068 If at least one filter matches the USB device in question, this
12069 device is automatically captured (attached to) the virtual USB
12070 controller of this machine.
12071
12072 <see>IUSBDeviceFilter, ::IUSBController</see>
12073 </desc>
12074 </attribute>
12075
12076 <method name="createDeviceFilter">
12077 <desc>
12078 Creates a new USB device filter. All attributes except
12079 the filter name are set to empty (any match),
12080 <i>active</i> is @c false (the filter is not active).
12081
12082 The created filter can then be added to the list of filters using
12083 <link to="#insertDeviceFilter"/>.
12084
12085 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12086 The virtual machine is not mutable.
12087 </result>
12088
12089 <see>#deviceFilters</see>
12090 </desc>
12091 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
12092 <desc>
12093 Filter name. See <link to="IUSBDeviceFilter::name"/>
12094 for more info.
12095 </desc>
12096 </param>
12097 <param name="filter" type="IUSBDeviceFilter" dir="return">
12098 <desc>Created filter object.</desc>
12099 </param>
12100 </method>
12101
12102 <method name="insertDeviceFilter">
12103 <desc>
12104 Inserts the given USB device to the specified position
12105 in the list of filters.
12106
12107 Positions are numbered starting from <tt>0</tt>. If the specified
12108 position is equal to or greater than the number of elements in
12109 the list, the filter is added to the end of the collection.
12110
12111 <note>
12112 Duplicates are not allowed, so an attempt to insert a
12113 filter that is already in the collection, will return an
12114 error.
12115 </note>
12116
12117 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12118 Virtual machine is not mutable.
12119 </result>
12120 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
12121 USB device filter not created within this VirtualBox instance.
12122 </result>
12123 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
12124 USB device filter already in list.
12125 </result>
12126
12127 <see>#deviceFilters</see>
12128 </desc>
12129 <param name="position" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
12130 <desc>Position to insert the filter to.</desc>
12131 </param>
12132 <param name="filter" type="IUSBDeviceFilter" dir="in">
12133 <desc>USB device filter to insert.</desc>
12134 </param>
12135 </method>
12136
12137 <method name="removeDeviceFilter">
12138 <desc>
12139 Removes a USB device filter from the specified position in the
12140 list of filters.
12141
12142 Positions are numbered starting from <tt>0</tt>. Specifying a
12143 position equal to or greater than the number of elements in
12144 the list will produce an error.
12145
12146 <see>#deviceFilters</see>
12147
12148 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12149 Virtual machine is not mutable.
12150 </result>
12151 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
12152 USB device filter list empty or invalid @a position.
12153 </result>
12154
12155 </desc>
12156 <param name="position" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
12157 <desc>Position to remove the filter from.</desc>
12158 </param>
12159 <param name="filter" type="IUSBDeviceFilter" dir="return">
12160 <desc>Removed USB device filter.</desc>
12161 </param>
12162 </method>
12163
12164 </interface>
12165
12166
12167 <!--
12168 // IUSBDevice
12169 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12170 -->
12171
12172 <interface
12173 name="IUSBDevice" extends="$unknown"
12174 uuid="f8967b0b-4483-400f-92b5-8b675d98a85b"
12175 wsmap="managed"
12176 >
12177 <desc>
12178 The IUSBDevice interface represents a virtual USB device attached to the
12179 virtual machine.
12180
12181 A collection of objects implementing this interface is stored in the
12182 <link to="IConsole::USBDevices"/> attribute which lists all USB devices
12183 attached to a running virtual machine's USB controller.
12184 </desc>
12185
12186 <attribute name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" readonly="yes">
12187 <desc>
12188 Unique USB device ID. This ID is built from #vendorId,
12189 #productId, #revision and #serialNumber.
12190 </desc>
12191 </attribute>
12192
12193 <attribute name="vendorId" type="unsigned short" readonly="yes">
12194 <desc>Vendor ID.</desc>
12195 </attribute>
12196
12197 <attribute name="productId" type="unsigned short" readonly="yes">
12198 <desc>Product ID.</desc>
12199 </attribute>
12200
12201 <attribute name="revision" type="unsigned short" readonly="yes">
12202 <desc>
12203 Product revision number. This is a packed BCD represented as
12204 unsigned short. The high byte is the integer part and the low
12205 byte is the decimal.
12206 </desc>
12207 </attribute>
12208
12209 <attribute name="manufacturer" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
12210 <desc>Manufacturer string.</desc>
12211 </attribute>
12212
12213 <attribute name="product" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
12214 <desc>Product string.</desc>
12215 </attribute>
12216
12217 <attribute name="serialNumber" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
12218 <desc>Serial number string.</desc>
12219 </attribute>
12220
12221 <attribute name="address" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
12222 <desc>Host specific address of the device.</desc>
12223 </attribute>
12224
12225 <attribute name="port" type="unsigned short" readonly="yes">
12226 <desc>
12227 Host USB port number the device is physically
12228 connected to.
12229 </desc>
12230 </attribute>
12231
12232 <attribute name="version" type="unsigned short" readonly="yes">
12233 <desc>
12234 The major USB version of the device - 1 or 2.
12235 </desc>
12236 </attribute>
12237
12238 <attribute name="portVersion" type="unsigned short" readonly="yes">
12239 <desc>
12240 The major USB version of the host USB port the device is
12241 physically connected to - 1 or 2. For devices not connected to
12242 anything this will have the same value as the version attribute.
12243 </desc>
12244 </attribute>
12245
12246 <attribute name="remote" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
12247 <desc>
12248 Whether the device is physically connected to a remote VRDP
12249 client or to a local host machine.
12250 </desc>
12251 </attribute>
12252
12253 </interface>
12254
12255
12256 <!--
12257 // IUSBDeviceFilter
12258 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12259 -->
12260
12261 <interface
12262 name="IUSBDeviceFilter" extends="$unknown"
12263 uuid="d6831fb4-1a94-4c2c-96ef-8d0d6192066d"
12264 wsmap="managed"
12265 >
12266 <desc>
12267 The IUSBDeviceFilter interface represents an USB device filter used
12268 to perform actions on a group of USB devices.
12269
12270 This type of filters is used by running virtual machines to
12271 automatically capture selected USB devices once they are physically
12272 attached to the host computer.
12273
12274 A USB device is matched to the given device filter if and only if all
12275 attributes of the device match the corresponding attributes of the
12276 filter (that is, attributes are joined together using the logical AND
12277 operation). On the other hand, all together, filters in the list of
12278 filters carry the semantics of the logical OR operation. So if it is
12279 desirable to create a match like "this vendor id OR this product id",
12280 one needs to create two filters and specify "any match" (see below)
12281 for unused attributes.
12282
12283 All filter attributes used for matching are strings. Each string
12284 is an expression representing a set of values of the corresponding
12285 device attribute, that will match the given filter. Currently, the
12286 following filtering expressions are supported:
12287
12288 <ul>
12289 <li><i>Interval filters</i>. Used to specify valid intervals for
12290 integer device attributes (Vendor ID, Product ID and Revision).
12291 The format of the string is:
12292
12293 <tt>int:((m)|([m]-[n]))(,(m)|([m]-[n]))*</tt>
12294
12295 where <tt>m</tt> and <tt>n</tt> are integer numbers, either in octal
12296 (starting from <tt>0</tt>), hexadecimal (starting from <tt>0x</tt>)
12297 or decimal (otherwise) form, so that <tt>m &lt; n</tt>. If <tt>m</tt>
12298 is omitted before a dash (<tt>-</tt>), the minimum possible integer
12299 is assumed; if <tt>n</tt> is omitted after a dash, the maximum
12300 possible integer is assumed.
12301 </li>
12302 <li><i>Boolean filters</i>. Used to specify acceptable values for
12303 boolean device attributes. The format of the string is:
12304
12305 <tt>true|false|yes|no|0|1</tt>
12306
12307 </li>
12308 <li><i>Exact match</i>. Used to specify a single value for the given
12309 device attribute. Any string that doesn't start with <tt>int:</tt>
12310 represents the exact match. String device attributes are compared to
12311 this string including case of symbols. Integer attributes are first
12312 converted to a string (see individual filter attributes) and then
12313 compared ignoring case.
12314
12315 </li>
12316 <li><i>Any match</i>. Any value of the corresponding device attribute
12317 will match the given filter. An empty or @c null string is
12318 used to construct this type of filtering expressions.
12319
12320 </li>
12321 </ul>
12322
12323 <note>
12324 On the Windows host platform, interval filters are not currently
12325 available. Also all string filter attributes
12326 (<link to="#manufacturer"/>, <link to="#product"/>,
12327 <link to="#serialNumber"/>) are ignored, so they behave as
12328 <i>any match</i> no matter what string expression is specified.
12329 </note>
12330
12331 <see>IUSBController::deviceFilters, IHostUSBDeviceFilter</see>
12332 </desc>
12333
12334 <attribute name="name" type="wstring">
12335 <desc>
12336 Visible name for this filter.
12337 This name is used to visually distinguish one filter from another,
12338 so it can neither be @c null nor an empty string.
12339 </desc>
12340 </attribute>
12341
12342 <attribute name="active" type="boolean">
12343 <desc>Whether this filter active or has been temporarily disabled.</desc>
12344 </attribute>
12345
12346 <attribute name="vendorId" type="wstring">
12347 <desc>
12348 <link to="IUSBDevice::vendorId">Vendor ID</link> filter.
12349 The string representation for the <i>exact matching</i>
12350 has the form <tt>XXXX</tt>, where <tt>X</tt> is the hex digit
12351 (including leading zeroes).
12352 </desc>
12353 </attribute>
12354
12355 <attribute name="productId" type="wstring">
12356 <desc>
12357 <link to="IUSBDevice::productId">Product ID</link> filter.
12358 The string representation for the <i>exact matching</i>
12359 has the form <tt>XXXX</tt>, where <tt>X</tt> is the hex digit
12360 (including leading zeroes).
12361 </desc>
12362 </attribute>
12363
12364 <attribute name="revision" type="wstring">
12365 <desc>
12366 <link to="IUSBDevice::productId">Product revision number</link>
12367 filter. The string representation for the <i>exact matching</i>
12368 has the form <tt>IIFF</tt>, where <tt>I</tt> is the decimal digit
12369 of the integer part of the revision, and <tt>F</tt> is the
12370 decimal digit of its fractional part (including leading and
12371 trailing zeros).
12372 Note that for interval filters, it's best to use the hexadecimal
12373 form, because the revision is stored as a 16 bit packed BCD value;
12374 so the expression <tt>int:0x0100-0x0199</tt> will match any
12375 revision from <tt>1.0</tt> to <tt>1.99</tt>.
12376 </desc>
12377 </attribute>
12378
12379 <attribute name="manufacturer" type="wstring">
12380 <desc>
12381 <link to="IUSBDevice::manufacturer">Manufacturer</link> filter.
12382 </desc>
12383 </attribute>
12384
12385 <attribute name="product" type="wstring">
12386 <desc>
12387 <link to="IUSBDevice::product">Product</link> filter.
12388 </desc>
12389 </attribute>
12390
12391 <attribute name="serialNumber" type="wstring">
12392 <desc>
12393 <link to="IUSBDevice::serialNumber">Serial number</link> filter.
12394 </desc>
12395 </attribute>
12396
12397 <attribute name="port" type="wstring">
12398 <desc>
12399 <link to="IUSBDevice::port">Host USB port</link> filter.
12400 </desc>
12401 </attribute>
12402
12403 <attribute name="remote" type="wstring">
12404 <desc>
12405 <link to="IUSBDevice::remote">Remote state</link> filter.
12406 <note>
12407 This filter makes sense only for machine USB filters,
12408 i.e. it is ignored by IHostUSBDeviceFilter objects.
12409 </note>
12410 </desc>
12411 </attribute>
12412
12413 <attribute name="maskedInterfaces" type="unsigned long">
12414 <desc>
12415 This is an advanced option for hiding one or more USB interfaces
12416 from the guest. The value is a bit mask where the bits that are set
12417 means the corresponding USB interface should be hidden, masked off
12418 if you like.
12419 This feature only works on Linux hosts.
12420 </desc>
12421 </attribute>
12422
12423 </interface>
12424
12425
12426 <!--
12427 // IHostUSBDevice
12428 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12429 -->
12430
12431 <enum
12432 name="USBDeviceState"
12433 uuid="b99a2e65-67fb-4882-82fd-f3e5e8193ab4"
12434 >
12435 <desc>
12436 USB device state. This enumeration represents all possible states
12437 of the USB device physically attached to the host computer regarding
12438 its state on the host computer and availability to guest computers
12439 (all currently running virtual machines).
12440
12441 Once a supported USB device is attached to the host, global USB
12442 filters (<link to="IHost::USBDeviceFilters"/>) are activated. They can
12443 either ignore the device, or put it to USBDeviceState_Held state, or do
12444 nothing. Unless the device is ignored by global filters, filters of all
12445 currently running guests (<link to="IUSBController::deviceFilters"/>) are
12446 activated that can put it to USBDeviceState_Captured state.
12447
12448 If the device was ignored by global filters, or didn't match
12449 any filters at all (including guest ones), it is handled by the host
12450 in a normal way. In this case, the device state is determined by
12451 the host and can be one of USBDeviceState_Unavailable, USBDeviceState_Busy
12452 or USBDeviceState_Available, depending on the current device usage.
12453
12454 Besides auto-capturing based on filters, the device can be manually
12455 captured by guests (<link to="IConsole::attachUSBDevice"/>) if its
12456 state is USBDeviceState_Busy, USBDeviceState_Available or
12457 USBDeviceState_Held.
12458
12459 <note>
12460 Due to differences in USB stack implementations in Linux and Win32,
12461 states USBDeviceState_Busy and USBDeviceState_vailable are applicable
12462 only to the Linux version of the product. This also means that (<link
12463 to="IConsole::attachUSBDevice"/>) can only succeed on Win32 if the
12464 device state is USBDeviceState_Held.
12465 </note>
12466
12467 <see>IHostUSBDevice, IHostUSBDeviceFilter</see>
12468 </desc>
12469
12470 <const name="NotSupported" value="0">
12471 <desc>
12472 Not supported by the VirtualBox server, not available to guests.
12473 </desc>
12474 </const>
12475 <const name="Unavailable" value="1">
12476 <desc>
12477 Being used by the host computer exclusively,
12478 not available to guests.
12479 </desc>
12480 </const>
12481 <const name="Busy" value="2">
12482 <desc>
12483 Being used by the host computer, potentially available to guests.
12484 </desc>
12485 </const>
12486 <const name="Available" value="3">
12487 <desc>
12488 Not used by the host computer, available to guests (the host computer
12489 can also start using the device at any time).
12490 </desc>
12491 </const>
12492 <const name="Held" value="4">
12493 <desc>
12494 Held by the VirtualBox server (ignored by the host computer),
12495 available to guests.
12496 </desc>
12497 </const>
12498 <const name="Captured" value="5">
12499 <desc>
12500 Captured by one of the guest computers, not available
12501 to anybody else.
12502 </desc>
12503 </const>
12504 </enum>
12505
12506 <interface
12507 name="IHostUSBDevice" extends="IUSBDevice"
12508 uuid="173b4b44-d268-4334-a00d-b6521c9a740a"
12509 wsmap="managed"
12510 >
12511 <desc>
12512 The IHostUSBDevice interface represents a physical USB device attached
12513 to the host computer.
12514
12515 Besides properties inherited from IUSBDevice, this interface adds the
12516 <link to="#state"/> property that holds the current state of the USB
12517 device.
12518
12519 <see>IHost::USBDevices, IHost::USBDeviceFilters</see>
12520 </desc>
12521
12522 <attribute name="state" type="USBDeviceState" readonly="yes">
12523 <desc>
12524 Current state of the device.
12525 </desc>
12526 </attribute>
12527
12528 <!-- @todo add class, subclass, bandwidth, configs, interfaces endpoints and such later. -->
12529
12530 </interface>
12531
12532
12533 <!--
12534 // IHostUSBDeviceFilter
12535 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12536 -->
12537
12538 <enum
12539 name="USBDeviceFilterAction"
12540 uuid="cbc30a49-2f4e-43b5-9da6-121320475933"
12541 >
12542 <desc>
12543 Actions for host USB device filters.
12544 <see>IHostUSBDeviceFilter, USBDeviceState</see>
12545 </desc>
12546
12547 <const name="Null" value="0">
12548 <desc>Null value (never used by the API).</desc>
12549 </const>
12550 <const name="Ignore" value="1">
12551 <desc>Ignore the matched USB device.</desc>
12552 </const>
12553 <const name="Hold" value="2">
12554 <desc>Hold the matched USB device.</desc>
12555 </const>
12556 </enum>
12557
12558 <interface
12559 name="IHostUSBDeviceFilter" extends="IUSBDeviceFilter"
12560 uuid="4cc70246-d74a-400f-8222-3900489c0374"
12561 wsmap="managed"
12562 >
12563 <desc>
12564 The IHostUSBDeviceFilter interface represents a global filter for a
12565 physical USB device used by the host computer. Used indirectly in
12566 <link to="IHost::USBDeviceFilters"/>.
12567
12568 Using filters of this type, the host computer determines the initial
12569 state of the USB device after it is physically attached to the
12570 host's USB controller.
12571
12572 <note>
12573 The <link to="#remote"/> attribute is ignored by this type of
12574 filters, because it makes sense only for
12575 <link to="IUSBController::deviceFilters">machine USB filters</link>.
12576 </note>
12577
12578 <see>IHost::USBDeviceFilters</see>
12579 </desc>
12580
12581 <attribute name="action" type="USBDeviceFilterAction">
12582 <desc>
12583 Action performed by the host when an attached USB device
12584 matches this filter.
12585 </desc>
12586 </attribute>
12587
12588 </interface>
12589
12590 <!--
12591 // IAudioAdapter
12592 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12593 -->
12594
12595 <enum
12596 name="AudioDriverType"
12597 uuid="4bcc3d73-c2fe-40db-b72f-0c2ca9d68496"
12598 >
12599 <desc>
12600 Host audio driver type.
12601 </desc>
12602
12603 <const name="Null" value="0">
12604 <desc>Null value, also means "dummy audio driver".</desc>
12605 </const>
12606 <const name="WinMM" value="1">
12607 <desc>Windows multimedia (Windows hosts only).</desc>
12608 </const>
12609 <const name="OSS" value="2">
12610 <desc>Open Sound System (Linux hosts only).</desc>
12611 </const>
12612 <const name="ALSA" value="3">
12613 <desc>Advanced Linux Sound Architecture (Linux hosts only).</desc>
12614 </const>
12615 <const name="DirectSound" value="4">
12616 <desc>DirectSound (Windows hosts only).</desc>
12617 </const>
12618 <const name="CoreAudio" value="5">
12619 <desc>CoreAudio (Mac hosts only).</desc>
12620 </const>
12621 <const name="MMPM" value="6">
12622 <desc>Reserved for historical reasons.</desc>
12623 </const>
12624 <const name="Pulse" value="7">
12625 <desc>PulseAudio (Linux hosts only).</desc>
12626 </const>
12627 <const name="SolAudio" value="8">
12628 <desc>Solaris audio (Solaris hosts only).</desc>
12629 </const>
12630 </enum>
12631
12632 <enum
12633 name="AudioControllerType"
12634 uuid="7afd395c-42c3-444e-8788-3ce80292f36c"
12635 >
12636 <desc>
12637 Virtual audio controller type.
12638 </desc>
12639
12640 <const name="AC97" value="0"/>
12641 <const name="SB16" value="1"/>
12642 </enum>
12643
12644 <interface
12645 name="IAudioAdapter" extends="$unknown"
12646 uuid="921873db-5f3f-4b69-91f9-7be9e535a2cb"
12647 wsmap="managed"
12648 >
12649 <desc>
12650 The IAudioAdapter interface represents the virtual audio adapter of
12651 the virtual machine. Used in <link to="IMachine::audioAdapter"/>.
12652 </desc>
12653 <attribute name="enabled" type="boolean">
12654 <desc>
12655 Flag whether the audio adapter is present in the
12656 guest system. If disabled, the virtual guest hardware will
12657 not contain any audio adapter. Can only be changed when
12658 the VM is not running.
12659 </desc>
12660 </attribute>
12661 <attribute name="audioController" type="AudioControllerType">
12662 <desc>
12663 The audio hardware we emulate.
12664 </desc>
12665 </attribute>
12666 <attribute name="audioDriver" type="AudioDriverType">
12667 <desc>
12668 Audio driver the adapter is connected to. This setting
12669 can only be changed when the VM is not running.
12670 </desc>
12671 </attribute>
12672 </interface>
12673
12674 <!--
12675 // IVRDPServer
12676 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12677 -->
12678
12679 <enum
12680 name="VRDPAuthType"
12681 uuid="3d91887a-b67f-4b33-85bf-2da7ab1ea83a"
12682 >
12683 <desc>
12684 VRDP authentication type.
12685 </desc>
12686
12687 <const name="Null" value="0">
12688 <desc>Null value, also means "no authentication".</desc>
12689 </const>
12690 <const name="External" value="1"/>
12691 <const name="Guest" value="2"/>
12692 </enum>
12693
12694 <interface
12695 name="IVRDPServer" extends="$unknown"
12696 uuid="72e671bc-1712-4052-ad6b-e45e76d9d3e4"
12697 wsmap="managed"
12698 >
12699 <attribute name="enabled" type="boolean">
12700 <desc>VRDP server status.</desc>
12701 </attribute>
12702
12703 <attribute name="ports" type="wstring">
12704 <desc>
12705 VRDP server port numbers. The server will try to bind to one of free ports from the list.
12706 <note>
12707 This is a string of comma separated TCP port numbers or port number ranges.
12708 Example <tt>5000,5010-5012,5015</tt>
12709 </note>
12710 </desc>
12711 </attribute>
12712
12713 <attribute name="netAddress" type="wstring">
12714 <desc>VRDP server address.</desc>
12715 </attribute>
12716
12717 <attribute name="authType" type="VRDPAuthType">
12718 <desc>VRDP authentication method.</desc>
12719 </attribute>
12720
12721 <attribute name="authTimeout" type="unsigned long">
12722 <desc>Timeout for guest authentication. Milliseconds.</desc>
12723 </attribute>
12724
12725 <attribute name="allowMultiConnection" type="boolean">
12726 <desc>
12727 Flag whether multiple simultaneous connections to the VM are permitted.
12728 Note that this will be replaced by a more powerful mechanism in the future.
12729 </desc>
12730 </attribute>
12731
12732 <attribute name="reuseSingleConnection" type="boolean">
12733 <desc>
12734 Flag whether the existing connection must be dropped and a new connection
12735 must be established by the VRDP server, when a new client connects in single
12736 connection mode.
12737 </desc>
12738 </attribute>
12739
12740 </interface>
12741
12742
12743 <!--
12744 // ISharedFolder
12745 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12746 -->
12747
12748 <interface
12749 name="ISharedFolder" extends="$unknown"
12750 uuid="64637bb2-9e17-471c-b8f3-f8968dd9884e"
12751 wsmap="struct"
12752 >
12753 <desc>
12754 The ISharedFolder interface represents a folder in the host computer's
12755 file system accessible from the guest OS running inside a virtual
12756 machine using an associated logical name.
12757
12758 There are three types of shared folders:
12759 <ul>
12760 <li><i>Global</i> (<link to="IVirtualBox::sharedFolders"/>), shared
12761 folders available to all virtual machines.</li>
12762 <li><i>Permanent</i> (<link to="IMachine::sharedFolders"/>),
12763 VM-specific shared folders available to the given virtual machine at
12764 startup.</li>
12765 <li><i>Transient</i> (<link to="IConsole::sharedFolders"/>),
12766 VM-specific shared folders created in the session context (for
12767 example, when the virtual machine is running) and automatically
12768 discarded when the session is closed (the VM is powered off).</li>
12769 </ul>
12770
12771 Logical names of shared folders must be unique within the given scope
12772 (global, permanent or transient). However, they do not need to be unique
12773 across scopes. In this case, the definition of the shared folder in a
12774 more specific scope takes precedence over definitions in all other
12775 scopes. The order of precedence is (more specific to more general):
12776 <ol>
12777 <li>Transient definitions</li>
12778 <li>Permanent definitions</li>
12779 <li>Global definitions</li>
12780 </ol>
12781
12782 For example, if MyMachine has a shared folder named
12783 <tt>C_DRIVE</tt> (that points to <tt>C:\\</tt>), then creating a
12784 transient shared folder named <tt>C_DRIVE</tt> (that points
12785 to <tt>C:\\\\WINDOWS</tt>) will change the definition
12786 of <tt>C_DRIVE</tt> in the guest OS so
12787 that <tt>\\\\VBOXSVR\\C_DRIVE</tt> will give access
12788 to <tt>C:\\WINDOWS</tt> instead of <tt>C:\\</tt> on the host
12789 PC. Removing the transient shared folder <tt>C_DRIVE</tt> will restore
12790 the previous (permanent) definition of <tt>C_DRIVE</tt> that points
12791 to <tt>C:\\</tt> if it still exists.
12792
12793 Note that permanent and transient shared folders of different machines
12794 are in different name spaces, so they don't overlap and don't need to
12795 have unique logical names.
12796
12797 <note>
12798 Global shared folders are not implemented in the current version of the
12799 product.
12800 </note>
12801 </desc>
12802
12803 <attribute name="name" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
12804 <desc>Logical name of the shared folder.</desc>
12805 </attribute>
12806
12807 <attribute name="hostPath" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
12808 <desc>Full path to the shared folder in the host file system.</desc>
12809 </attribute>
12810
12811 <attribute name="accessible" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
12812 <desc>
12813 Whether the folder defined by the host path is currently
12814 accessible or not.
12815 For example, the folder can be unaccessible if it is placed
12816 on the network share that is not available by the time
12817 this property is read.
12818 </desc>
12819 </attribute>
12820
12821 <attribute name="writable" type="boolean" readonly="yes">
12822 <desc>
12823 Whether the folder defined by the host path is writable or
12824 not.
12825 </desc>
12826 </attribute>
12827
12828 <attribute name="lastAccessError" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
12829 <desc>
12830 Text message that represents the result of the last accessibility
12831 check.
12832
12833 Accessibility checks are performed each time the <link to="#accessible"/>
12834 attribute is read. An empty string is returned if the last
12835 accessibility check was successful. A non-empty string indicates a
12836 failure and should normally describe a reason of the failure (for
12837 example, a file read error).
12838 </desc>
12839 </attribute>
12840
12841 </interface>
12842
12843 <!--
12844 // ISession
12845 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
12846 -->
12847
12848 <interface
12849 name="IInternalSessionControl" extends="$unknown"
12850 uuid="f9aac6d0-41b3-46b7-bea4-6370b4036de6"
12851 internal="yes"
12852 wsmap="suppress"
12853 >
12854 <method name="getPID">
12855 <desc>PID of the process that has created this Session object.
12856 </desc>
12857 <param name="pid" type="unsigned long" dir="return"/>
12858 </method>
12859
12860 <method name="getRemoteConsole">
12861 <desc>
12862 Returns the console object suitable for remote control.
12863
12864 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12865 Session state prevents operation.
12866 </result>
12867 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
12868 Session type prevents operation.
12869 </result>
12870
12871 </desc>
12872 <param name="console" type="IConsole" dir="return"/>
12873 </method>
12874
12875 <method name="assignMachine">
12876 <desc>
12877 Assigns the machine object associated with this direct-type
12878 session or informs the session that it will be a remote one
12879 (if @a machine == @c null).
12880
12881 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12882 Session state prevents operation.
12883 </result>
12884 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
12885 Session type prevents operation.
12886 </result>
12887
12888 </desc>
12889 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="in"/>
12890 </method>
12891
12892 <method name="assignRemoteMachine">
12893 <desc>
12894 Assigns the machine and the (remote) console object associated with
12895 this remote-type session.
12896
12897 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12898 Session state prevents operation.
12899 </result>
12900
12901 </desc>
12902 <param name="machine" type="IMachine" dir="in"/>
12903 <param name="console" type="IConsole" dir="in"/>
12904 </method>
12905
12906 <method name="updateMachineState">
12907 <desc>
12908 Updates the machine state in the VM process.
12909 Must be called only in certain cases
12910 (see the method implementation).
12911
12912 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12913 Session state prevents operation.
12914 </result>
12915 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
12916 Session type prevents operation.
12917 </result>
12918
12919 </desc>
12920 <param name="aMachineState" type="MachineState" dir="in"/>
12921 </method>
12922
12923 <method name="uninitialize">
12924 <desc>
12925 Uninitializes (closes) this session. Used by VirtualBox to close
12926 the corresponding remote session when the direct session dies
12927 or gets closed.
12928
12929 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12930 Session state prevents operation.
12931 </result>
12932
12933 </desc>
12934 </method>
12935
12936 <method name="onNetworkAdapterChange">
12937 <desc>
12938 Triggered when settings of a network adapter of the
12939 associated virtual machine have changed.
12940
12941 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12942 Session state prevents operation.
12943 </result>
12944 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
12945 Session type prevents operation.
12946 </result>
12947
12948 </desc>
12949 <param name="networkAdapter" type="INetworkAdapter" dir="in"/>
12950 <param name="changeAdapter" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
12951 </method>
12952
12953 <method name="onSerialPortChange">
12954 <desc>
12955 Triggered when settings of a serial port of the
12956 associated virtual machine have changed.
12957
12958 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12959 Session state prevents operation.
12960 </result>
12961 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
12962 Session type prevents operation.
12963 </result>
12964
12965 </desc>
12966 <param name="serialPort" type="ISerialPort" dir="in"/>
12967 </method>
12968
12969 <method name="onParallelPortChange">
12970 <desc>
12971 Triggered when settings of a parallel port of the
12972 associated virtual machine have changed.
12973
12974 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12975 Session state prevents operation.
12976 </result>
12977 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
12978 Session type prevents operation.
12979 </result>
12980
12981 </desc>
12982 <param name="parallelPort" type="IParallelPort" dir="in"/>
12983 </method>
12984
12985 <method name="onStorageControllerChange">
12986 <desc>
12987 Triggered when settings of a storage controller of the
12988 associated virtual machine have changed.
12989
12990 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
12991 Session state prevents operation.
12992 </result>
12993 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
12994 Session type prevents operation.
12995 </result>
12996
12997 </desc>
12998 </method>
12999
13000 <method name="onMediumChange">
13001 <desc>
13002 Triggered when attached media of the
13003 associated virtual machine have changed.
13004
13005 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
13006 Session state prevents operation.
13007 </result>
13008 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13009 Session type prevents operation.
13010 </result>
13011
13012 </desc>
13013
13014 <param name="mediumAttachment" type="IMediumAttachment" dir="in"/>
13015 <param name="force" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
13016 </method>
13017
13018 <method name="onCPUChange">
13019 <desc>
13020 Notification when a CPU changes.
13021 </desc>
13022 <param name="cpu" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
13023 <desc>The CPU which changed</desc>
13024 </param>
13025 <param name="add" type="boolean" dir="in">
13026 <desc>Flag whether the CPU was added or removed</desc>
13027 </param>
13028 </method>
13029
13030 <method name="onVRDPServerChange">
13031 <desc>
13032 Triggered when settings of the VRDP server object of the
13033 associated virtual machine have changed.
13034
13035 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
13036 Session state prevents operation.
13037 </result>
13038 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13039 Session type prevents operation.
13040 </result>
13041
13042 </desc>
13043 </method>
13044
13045 <method name="onUSBControllerChange">
13046 <desc>
13047 Triggered when settings of the USB controller object of the
13048 associated virtual machine have changed.
13049
13050 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
13051 Session state prevents operation.
13052 </result>
13053 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13054 Session type prevents operation.
13055 </result>
13056
13057 </desc>
13058 </method>
13059
13060 <method name="onSharedFolderChange">
13061 <desc>
13062 Triggered when a permanent (global or machine) shared folder has been
13063 created or removed.
13064 <note>
13065 We don't pass shared folder parameters in this notification because
13066 the order in which parallel notifications are delivered is not defined,
13067 therefore it could happen that these parameters were outdated by the
13068 time of processing this notification.
13069 </note>
13070
13071 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
13072 Session state prevents operation.
13073 </result>
13074 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13075 Session type prevents operation.
13076 </result>
13077
13078 </desc>
13079 <param name="global" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
13080 </method>
13081
13082 <method name="onUSBDeviceAttach">
13083 <desc>
13084 Triggered when a request to capture a USB device (as a result
13085 of matched USB filters or direct call to
13086 <link to="IConsole::attachUSBDevice"/>) has completed.
13087 A @c null @a error object means success, otherwise it
13088 describes a failure.
13089
13090 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
13091 Session state prevents operation.
13092 </result>
13093 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13094 Session type prevents operation.
13095 </result>
13096
13097 </desc>
13098 <param name="device" type="IUSBDevice" dir="in"/>
13099 <param name="error" type="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" dir="in"/>
13100 <param name="maskedInterfaces" type="unsigned long" dir="in"/>
13101 </method>
13102
13103 <method name="onUSBDeviceDetach">
13104 <desc>
13105 Triggered when a request to release the USB device (as a result
13106 of machine termination or direct call to
13107 <link to="IConsole::detachUSBDevice"/>) has completed.
13108 A @c null @a error object means success, otherwise it
13109 describes a failure.
13110
13111 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
13112 Session state prevents operation.
13113 </result>
13114 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13115 Session type prevents operation.
13116 </result>
13117
13118 </desc>
13119 <param name="id" type="uuid" mod="string" dir="in"/>
13120 <param name="error" type="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo" dir="in"/>
13121 </method>
13122
13123 <method name="onShowWindow">
13124 <desc>
13125 Called by <link to="IMachine::canShowConsoleWindow"/> and by
13126 <link to="IMachine::showConsoleWindow"/> in order to notify
13127 console callbacks
13128 <link to="IConsoleCallback::onCanShowWindow"/>
13129 and <link to="IConsoleCallback::onShowWindow"/>.
13130
13131 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13132 Session type prevents operation.
13133 </result>
13134
13135 </desc>
13136 <param name="check" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
13137 <param name="canShow" type="boolean" dir="out"/>
13138 <param name="winId" type="unsigned long long" dir="out"/>
13139 </method>
13140
13141 <method name="accessGuestProperty">
13142 <desc>
13143 Called by <link to="IMachine::getGuestProperty"/> and by
13144 <link to="IMachine::setGuestProperty"/> in order to read and
13145 modify guest properties.
13146
13147 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
13148 Machine session is not open.
13149 </result>
13150 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13151 Session type is not direct.
13152 </result>
13153
13154 </desc>
13155 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
13156 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
13157 <param name="flags" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
13158 <param name="isSetter" type="boolean" dir="in"/>
13159 <param name="retValue" type="wstring" dir="out"/>
13160 <param name="retTimestamp" type="unsigned long long" dir="out"/>
13161 <param name="retFlags" type="wstring" dir="out"/>
13162 </method>
13163
13164 <method name="enumerateGuestProperties">
13165 <desc>
13166 Return a list of the guest properties matching a set of patterns along
13167 with their values, time stamps and flags.
13168
13169 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_VM_STATE">
13170 Machine session is not open.
13171 </result>
13172 <result name="VBOX_E_INVALID_OBJECT_STATE">
13173 Session type is not direct.
13174 </result>
13175
13176 </desc>
13177 <param name="patterns" type="wstring" dir="in">
13178 <desc>
13179 The patterns to match the properties against as a comma-separated
13180 string. If this is empty, all properties currently set will be
13181 returned.
13182 </desc>
13183 </param>
13184 <param name="key" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
13185 <desc>
13186 The key names of the properties returned.
13187 </desc>
13188 </param>
13189 <param name="value" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
13190 <desc>
13191 The values of the properties returned. The array entries match the
13192 corresponding entries in the @a key array.
13193 </desc>
13194 </param>
13195 <param name="timestamp" type="unsigned long long" dir="out" safearray="yes">
13196 <desc>
13197 The time stamps of the properties returned. The array entries match
13198 the corresponding entries in the @a key array.
13199 </desc>
13200 </param>
13201 <param name="flags" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
13202 <desc>
13203 The flags of the properties returned. The array entries match the
13204 corresponding entries in the @a key array.
13205 </desc>
13206 </param>
13207 </method>
13208
13209 </interface>
13210
13211 <interface
13212 name="ISession" extends="$unknown"
13213 uuid="12F4DCDB-12B2-4EC1-B7CD-DDD9F6C5BF4D"
13214 wsmap="managed"
13215 >
13216 <desc>
13217 The ISession interface represents a serialization primitive for virtual
13218 machines.
13219
13220 With VirtualBox, every time one wishes to manipulate a virtual machine
13221 (e.g. change its settings or start execution), a session object is
13222 required. Such an object must be passed to one of the session methods
13223 that open the given session, which then initiates the machine manipulation.
13224
13225 A session serves several purposes: it identifies to the inter-process VirtualBox
13226 code which process is currently working with the virtual machine, and it ensures
13227 that there are no incompatible requests from several processes for the
13228 same virtual machine. Session objects can therefore be thought of as mutex
13229 semaphores that lock virtual machines to prevent conflicting accesses from
13230 several processes.
13231
13232 How sessions objects are used depends on whether you use the Main API
13233 via COM or via the webservice:
13234
13235 <ul>
13236 <li>When using the COM API directly, an object of the Session class from the
13237 VirtualBox type library needs to be created. In regular COM C++ client code,
13238 this can be done by calling <tt>createLocalObject()</tt>, a standard COM API.
13239 This object will then act as a local session object in further calls to open
13240 a session.
13241 </li>
13242
13243 <li>In the webservice, the session manager (IWebsessionManager) instead creates
13244 one session object automatically when <link to="IWebsessionManager::logon" />
13245 is called. A managed object reference to that session object can be retrieved by
13246 calling <link to="IWebsessionManager::getSessionObject" />. This session object
13247 reference can then be used to open sessions.
13248 </li>
13249 </ul>
13250
13251 Sessions are mainly used in two variations:
13252
13253 <ul>
13254 <li>
13255 To start a virtual machine in a separate process, one would call
13256 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/>, which requires a session
13257 object as its first parameter. This session then identifies the caller
13258 and lets him control the started machine (for example, pause machine
13259 execution or power it down) as well as be notified about machine
13260 execution state changes.
13261 </li>
13262
13263 <li>To alter machine settings, or to start machine execution within the
13264 current process, one needs to open a direct session for the machine first by
13265 calling <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/>. While a direct session
13266 is open within one process, no any other process may open another direct
13267 session for the same machine. This prevents the machine from being changed
13268 by other processes while it is running or while the machine is being configured.
13269 </li>
13270 </ul>
13271
13272 One also can attach to an existing direct session already opened by
13273 another process (for example, in order to send a control request to the
13274 virtual machine such as the pause or the reset request). This is done by
13275 calling <link to="IVirtualBox::openExistingSession"/>.
13276
13277 <note>
13278 Unless you are trying to write a new VirtualBox front-end that
13279 performs direct machine execution (like the VirtualBox or VBoxSDL
13280 front-ends), don't call <link to="IConsole::powerUp"/> in a direct
13281 session opened by <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/> and use this
13282 session only to change virtual machine settings. If you simply want to
13283 start virtual machine execution using one of the existing front-ends
13284 (for example the VirtualBox GUI or headless server), simply use
13285 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession"/>; these front-ends
13286 will power up the machine automatically for you.
13287 </note>
13288 </desc>
13289
13290 <attribute name="state" type="SessionState" readonly="yes">
13291 <desc>Current state of this session.</desc>
13292 </attribute>
13293
13294 <attribute name="type" type="SessionType" readonly="yes">
13295 <desc>
13296 Type of this session. The value of this attribute is valid only
13297 if the session is currently open (i.e. its #state is
13298 SessionType_SessionOpen), otherwise an error will be returned.
13299 </desc>
13300 </attribute>
13301
13302 <attribute name="machine" type="IMachine" readonly="yes">
13303 <desc>Machine object associated with this session.</desc>
13304 </attribute>
13305
13306 <attribute name="console" type="IConsole" readonly="yes">
13307 <desc>Console object associated with this session.</desc>
13308 </attribute>
13309
13310 <method name="close">
13311 <desc>
13312 Closes a session that was previously opened.
13313
13314 It is recommended that every time an "open session" method (such as
13315 <link to="IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession" /> or
13316 <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession" />) has been called to
13317 manipulate a virtual machine, the caller invoke
13318 ISession::close() when it's done doing so. Since sessions are
13319 serialization primitives much like ordinary mutexes, they are
13320 best used the same way: for each "open" call, there should be
13321 a matching "close" call, even when errors occur.
13322
13323 Otherwise, if a direct session for a machine opened with
13324 <link to="IVirtualBox::openSession"/> is not explicitly closed
13325 when the application terminates, the state of the machine will
13326 be set to <link to="MachineState_Aborted" /> on the server.
13327
13328 Generally, it is recommended to close all open sessions explicitly
13329 before terminating the application (regardless of the reason for
13330 the termination).
13331
13332 <note>
13333 Do not expect the session state (<link to="ISession::state" />
13334 to return to "Closed" immediately after you invoke
13335 ISession::close(), particularly if you have started a remote
13336 session to execute the VM in a new process. The session state will
13337 automatically return to "Closed" once the VM is no longer executing,
13338 which can of course take a very long time.
13339 </note>
13340
13341 <result name="E_UNEXPECTED">
13342 Session is not open.
13343 </result>
13344
13345 </desc>
13346 </method>
13347
13348 </interface>
13349
13350 <!--
13351 // IStorageController
13352 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13353 -->
13354
13355 <enum
13356 name="StorageBus"
13357 uuid="eee67ab3-668d-4ef5-91e0-7025fe4a0d7a"
13358 >
13359 <desc>
13360 The bus type of the storage controller (IDE, SATA, SCSI or Floppy);
13361 see <link to="IStorageController::bus" />.
13362 </desc>
13363 <const name="Null" value="0">
13364 <desc>@c null value. Never used by the API.</desc>
13365 </const>
13366 <const name="IDE" value="1"/>
13367 <const name="SATA" value="2"/>
13368 <const name="SCSI" value="3"/>
13369 <const name="Floppy" value="4"/>
13370 <const name="SAS" value="5"/>
13371 </enum>
13372
13373 <enum
13374 name="StorageControllerType"
13375 uuid="8a412b8a-f43e-4456-bd37-b474f0879a58"
13376 >
13377 <desc>
13378 The exact variant of storage controller hardware presented
13379 to the guest; see <link to="IStorageController::controllerType" />.
13380 </desc>
13381
13382 <const name="Null" value="0">
13383 <desc>@c null value. Never used by the API.</desc>
13384 </const>
13385 <const name="LsiLogic" value="1">
13386 <desc>A SCSI controller of the LsiLogic variant.</desc>
13387 </const>
13388 <const name="BusLogic" value="2">
13389 <desc>A SCSI controller of the BusLogic variant.</desc>
13390 </const>
13391 <const name="IntelAhci" value="3">
13392 <desc>An Intel AHCI SATA controller; this is the only variant for SATA.</desc>
13393 </const>
13394 <const name="PIIX3" value="4">
13395 <desc>An IDE controller of the PIIX3 variant.</desc>
13396 </const>
13397 <const name="PIIX4" value="5">
13398 <desc>An IDE controller of the PIIX4 variant.</desc>
13399 </const>
13400 <const name="ICH6" value="6">
13401 <desc>An IDE controller of the ICH6 variant.</desc>
13402 </const>
13403 <const name="I82078" value="7">
13404 <desc>A floppy disk controller; this is the only variant for floppy drives.</desc>
13405 </const>
13406 <const name="LsiLogicSas" value="8">
13407 <desc>A variant of the LsiLogic controller using SAS.</desc>
13408 </const>
13409 </enum>
13410
13411 <interface
13412 name="IStorageController" extends="$unknown"
13413 uuid="ce37b7a9-d895-4ee8-b9f8-9579bfc85813"
13414 wsmap="managed"
13415 >
13416 <desc>
13417 Represents a storage controller that is attached to a virtual machine
13418 (<link to="IMachine" />). Just as drives (hard disks, DVDs, FDs) are
13419 attached to storage controllers in a real computer, virtual drives
13420 (represented by <link to="IMediumAttachment" />) are attached to virtual
13421 storage controllers, represented by this interface.
13422
13423 As opposed to physical hardware, VirtualBox has a very generic concept
13424 of a storage controller, and for purposes of the Main API, all virtual
13425 storage is attached to virtual machines via instances of this interface.
13426 There are four types of such virtual storage controllers: IDE, SCSI, SATA
13427 and Floppy (see <link to="#bus" />). Depending on which of these four is
13428 used, certain sub-types may be available and can be selected in
13429 <link to="#controllerType" />.
13430
13431 Depending on these settings, the guest operating system might see
13432 significantly different virtual hardware.
13433 </desc>
13434
13435 <attribute name="name" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
13436 <desc>
13437 Name of the storage controller, as originally specified with
13438 <link to="IMachine::addStorageController" />. This then uniquely
13439 identifies this controller with other method calls such as
13440 <link to="IMachine::attachDevice" /> and <link to="IMachine::mountMedium" />.
13441 </desc>
13442 </attribute>
13443
13444 <attribute name="maxDevicesPerPortCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
13445 <desc>
13446 Maximum number of devices which can be attached to one port.
13447 </desc>
13448 </attribute>
13449
13450 <attribute name="minPortCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
13451 <desc>
13452 Minimum number of ports that <link to="IStorageController::portCount"/> can be set to.
13453 </desc>
13454 </attribute>
13455
13456 <attribute name="maxPortCount" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
13457 <desc>
13458 Maximum number of ports that <link to="IStorageController::portCount"/> can be set to.
13459 </desc>
13460 </attribute>
13461
13462 <attribute name="instance" type="unsigned long">
13463 <desc>
13464 The instance number of the device in the running VM.
13465 </desc>
13466 </attribute>
13467
13468 <attribute name="portCount" type="unsigned long">
13469 <desc>
13470 The number of currently usable ports on the controller.
13471 The minimum and maximum number of ports for one controller are
13472 stored in <link to="IStorageController::minPortCount"/>
13473 and <link to="IStorageController::maxPortCount"/>.
13474 </desc>
13475 </attribute>
13476
13477 <attribute name="bus" type="StorageBus" readonly="yes">
13478 <desc>
13479 The bus type of the storage controller (IDE, SATA, SCSI or Floppy).
13480 </desc>
13481 </attribute>
13482
13483 <attribute name="controllerType" type="StorageControllerType">
13484 <desc>
13485 The exact variant of storage controller hardware presented
13486 to the guest.
13487 Depending on this value, VirtualBox will provide a different
13488 virtual storage controller hardware to the guest.
13489 For SATA and floppy controllers, only one variant is available,
13490 but for IDE and SCSI, there are several.
13491
13492 For SCSI controllers, the default type is LsiLogic.
13493 </desc>
13494 </attribute>
13495
13496 <method name="getIDEEmulationPort">
13497 <desc>
13498 Gets the corresponding port number which is emulated as an IDE device.
13499 Works only with SATA controllers.
13500
13501 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
13502 The @a devicePosition is not in the range 0 to 3.
13503 </result>
13504 <result name="E_NOTIMPL">
13505 The storage controller type is not SATAIntelAhci.
13506 </result>
13507
13508 </desc>
13509 <param name="devicePosition" type="long" dir="in"/>
13510 <param name="portNumber" type="long" dir="return"/>
13511 </method>
13512
13513 <method name="setIDEEmulationPort">
13514 <desc>
13515 Sets the port number which is emulated as an IDE device.
13516 Works only with SATA controllers.
13517
13518 <result name="E_INVALIDARG">
13519 The @a devicePosition is not in the range 0 to 3 or the
13520 @a portNumber is not in the range 0 to 29.
13521 </result>
13522 <result name="E_NOTIMPL">
13523 The storage controller type is not SATAIntelAhci.
13524 </result>
13525
13526 </desc>
13527 <param name="devicePosition" type="long" dir="in"/>
13528 <param name="portNumber" type="long" dir="in"/>
13529 </method>
13530
13531 </interface>
13532
13533<if target="wsdl">
13534
13535 <!--
13536 // IManagedObjectRef
13537 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13538 -->
13539
13540 <interface
13541 name="IManagedObjectRef" extends="$unknown"
13542 uuid="9474d09d-2313-46de-b568-a42b8718e8ed"
13543 internal="yes"
13544 wsmap="managed"
13545 wscpp="hardcoded"
13546 >
13547 <desc>
13548 Managed object reference.
13549
13550 Only within the webservice, a managed object reference (which is really
13551 an opaque number) allows a webservice client to address an object
13552 that lives in the address space of the webservice server.
13553
13554 Behind each managed object reference, there is a COM object that lives
13555 in the webservice server's address space. The COM object is not freed
13556 until the managed object reference is released, either by an explicit
13557 call to <link to="IManagedObjectRef::release" /> or by logging off from
13558 the webservice (<link to="IWebsessionManager::logoff" />), which releases
13559 all objects created during the webservice session.
13560
13561 Whenever a method call of the VirtualBox API returns a COM object, the
13562 webservice representation of that method will instead return a
13563 managed object reference, which can then be used to invoke methods
13564 on that object.
13565 </desc>
13566
13567 <method name="getInterfaceName">
13568 <desc>
13569 Returns the name of the interface that this managed object represents,
13570 for example, "IMachine", as a string.
13571 </desc>
13572 <param name="return" type="wstring" dir="return"/>
13573 </method>
13574
13575 <method name="release">
13576 <desc>
13577 Releases this managed object reference and frees the resources that
13578 were allocated for it in the webservice server process. After calling
13579 this method, the identifier of the reference can no longer be used.
13580 </desc>
13581 </method>
13582
13583 </interface>
13584
13585 <!--
13586 // IWebsessionManager
13587 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13588 -->
13589
13590 <interface
13591 name="IWebsessionManager" extends="$unknown"
13592 uuid="dea1b4c7-2de3-418a-850d-7868617f7733"
13593 internal="yes"
13594 wsmap="global"
13595 wscpp="hardcoded"
13596 >
13597 <desc>
13598 Websession manager. This provides essential services
13599 to webservice clients.
13600 </desc>
13601 <method name="logon">
13602 <desc>
13603 Logs a new client onto the webservice and returns a managed object reference to
13604 the IVirtualBox instance, which the client can then use as a basis to further
13605 queries, since all calls to the VirtualBox API are based on the IVirtualBox
13606 interface, in one way or the other.
13607 </desc>
13608 <param name="username" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
13609 <param name="password" type="wstring" dir="in"/>
13610 <param name="return" type="IVirtualBox" dir="return"/>
13611 </method>
13612
13613 <method name="getSessionObject">
13614 <desc>
13615 Returns a managed object reference to the internal ISession object that was created
13616 for this web service session when the client logged on.
13617
13618 <see>ISession</see>
13619 </desc>
13620 <param name="refIVirtualBox" type="IVirtualBox" dir="in"/>
13621 <param name="return" type="ISession" dir="return"/>
13622 </method>
13623
13624 <method name="logoff">
13625 <desc>
13626 Logs off the client who has previously logged on with <link to="IWebsessionManager::logoff" />
13627 and destroys all resources associated with the session (most importantly, all
13628 managed objects created in the server while the session was active).
13629 </desc>
13630 <param name="refIVirtualBox" type="IVirtualBox" dir="in"/>
13631 </method>
13632
13633 </interface>
13634
13635</if>
13636
13637 <!--
13638 // IPerformanceCollector & friends
13639 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
13640 -->
13641
13642 <interface
13643 name="IPerformanceMetric" extends="$unknown"
13644 uuid="2a1a60ae-9345-4019-ad53-d34ba41cbfe9" wsmap="managed"
13645 >
13646 <desc>
13647 The IPerformanceMetric interface represents parameters of the given
13648 performance metric.
13649 </desc>
13650
13651 <attribute name="metricName" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
13652 <desc>
13653 Name of the metric.
13654 </desc>
13655 </attribute>
13656
13657 <attribute name="object" type="$unknown" readonly="yes">
13658 <desc>
13659 Object this metric belongs to.
13660 </desc>
13661 </attribute>
13662
13663 <attribute name="description" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
13664 <desc>
13665 Textual description of the metric.
13666 </desc>
13667 </attribute>
13668
13669 <attribute name="period" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
13670 <desc>
13671 Time interval between samples, measured in seconds.
13672 </desc>
13673 </attribute>
13674
13675 <attribute name="count" type="unsigned long" readonly="yes">
13676 <desc>
13677 Number of recent samples retained by the performance collector for this
13678 metric.
13679
13680 When the collected sample count exceeds this number, older samples
13681 are discarded.
13682 </desc>
13683 </attribute>
13684
13685 <attribute name="unit" type="wstring" readonly="yes">
13686 <desc>
13687 Unit of measurement.
13688 </desc>
13689 </attribute>
13690
13691 <attribute name="minimumValue" type="long" readonly="yes">
13692 <desc>
13693 Minimum possible value of this metric.
13694 </desc>
13695 </attribute>
13696
13697 <attribute name="maximumValue" type="long" readonly="yes">
13698 <desc>
13699 Maximum possible value of this metric.
13700 </desc>
13701 </attribute>
13702 </interface>
13703
13704 <interface
13705 name="IPerformanceCollector" extends="$unknown"
13706 uuid="e22e1acb-ac4a-43bb-a31c-17321659b0c6"
13707 wsmap="managed"
13708 >
13709 <desc>
13710 The IPerformanceCollector interface represents a service that collects
13711 and stores performance metrics data.
13712
13713 Performance metrics are associated with objects of interfaces like IHost
13714 and IMachine. Each object has a distinct set of performance metrics. The
13715 set can be obtained with <link to="IPerformanceCollector::getMetrics"/>.
13716
13717 Metric data is collected at the specified intervals and is retained
13718 internally. The interval and the number of retained samples can be set
13719 with <link to="IPerformanceCollector::setupMetrics" />. Both metric data
13720 and collection settings are not persistent, they are discarded as soon as
13721 VBoxSVC process terminates. Moreover, metric settings and data associated
13722 with a particular VM only exist while VM is running. They disappear as
13723 soon as VM shuts down. It is not possible to set up metrics for machines
13724 that are powered off. One needs to start VM first, then set up metric
13725 collection parameters.
13726
13727 Metrics are organized hierarchically, with each level separated by a
13728 slash (/) character. Generally, the scheme for metric names is like this:
13729
13730 <tt>Category/Metric[/SubMetric][:aggregation]</tt>
13731
13732 "Category/Metric" together form the base metric name. A base metric is
13733 the smallest unit for which a sampling interval and the number of
13734 retained samples can be set. Only base metrics can be enabled and
13735 disabled. All sub-metrics are collected when their base metric is
13736 collected. Collected values for any set of sub-metrics can be queried
13737 with <link to="IPerformanceCollector::queryMetricsData" />.
13738
13739 For example "CPU/Load/User:avg" metric name stands for the "CPU"
13740 category, "Load" metric, "User" submetric, "average" aggregate. An
13741 aggregate function is computed over all retained data. Valid aggregate
13742 functions are:
13743
13744 <ul>
13745 <li>avg -- average</li>
13746 <li>min -- minimum</li>
13747 <li>max -- maximum</li>
13748 </ul>
13749
13750 When setting up metric parameters, querying metric data, enabling or
13751 disabling metrics wildcards can be used in metric names to specify a
13752 subset of metrics. For example, to select all CPU-related metrics
13753 use <tt>CPU/*</tt>, all averages can be queried using <tt>*:avg</tt> and
13754 so on. To query metric values without aggregates <tt>*:</tt> can be used.
13755
13756 The valid names for base metrics are:
13757
13758 <ul>
13759 <li>CPU/Load</li>
13760 <li>CPU/MHz</li>
13761 <li>RAM/Usage</li>
13762 </ul>
13763
13764 The general sequence for collecting and retrieving the metrics is:
13765 <ul>
13766 <li>
13767 Obtain an instance of IPerformanceCollector with
13768 <link to="IVirtualBox::performanceCollector" />
13769 </li>
13770 <li>
13771 Allocate and populate an array with references to objects the metrics
13772 will be collected for. Use references to IHost and IMachine objects.
13773 </li>
13774 <li>
13775 Allocate and populate an array with base metric names the data will
13776 be collected for.
13777 </li>
13778 <li>
13779 Call <link to="IPerformanceCollector::setupMetrics" />. From now on
13780 the metric data will be collected and stored.
13781 </li>
13782 <li>
13783 Wait for the data to get collected.
13784 </li>
13785 <li>
13786 Allocate and populate an array with references to objects the metric
13787 values will be queried for. You can re-use the object array used for
13788 setting base metrics.
13789 </li>
13790 <li>
13791 Allocate and populate an array with metric names the data will be
13792 collected for. Note that metric names differ from base metric names.
13793 </li>
13794 <li>
13795 Call <link to="IPerformanceCollector::queryMetricsData" />. The data
13796 that have been collected so far are returned. Note that the values
13797 are still retained internally and data collection continues.
13798 </li>
13799 </ul>
13800
13801 For an example of usage refer to the following files in VirtualBox SDK:
13802 <ul>
13803 <li>
13804 Java: <tt>bindings/webservice/java/jax-ws/samples/metrictest.java</tt>
13805 </li>
13806 <li>
13807 Python: <tt>bindings/xpcom/python/sample/shellcommon.py</tt>
13808 </li>
13809 </ul>
13810 </desc>
13811
13812 <attribute name="metricNames" type="wstring" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
13813 <desc>
13814 Array of unique names of metrics.
13815
13816 This array represents all metrics supported by the performance
13817 collector. Individual objects do not necessarily support all of them.
13818 <link to="IPerformanceCollector::getMetrics"/> can be used to get the
13819 list of supported metrics for a particular object.
13820 </desc>
13821 </attribute>
13822
13823 <method name="getMetrics">
13824 <desc>
13825 Returns parameters of specified metrics for a set of objects.
13826 <note>
13827 @c Null metrics array means all metrics. @c Null object array means
13828 all existing objects.
13829 </note>
13830 </desc>
13831 <param name="metricNames" type="wstring" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13832 <desc>
13833 Metric name filter. Currently, only a comma-separated list of metrics
13834 is supported.
13835 </desc>
13836 </param>
13837 <param name="objects" type="$unknown" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13838 <desc>
13839 Set of objects to return metric parameters for.
13840 </desc>
13841 </param>
13842 <param name="metrics" type="IPerformanceMetric" dir="return" safearray="yes">
13843 <desc>
13844 Array of returned metric parameters.
13845 </desc>
13846 </param>
13847 </method>
13848
13849 <method name="setupMetrics">
13850 <desc>
13851 Sets parameters of specified base metrics for a set of objects. Returns
13852 an array of <link to="IPerformanceMetric" /> describing the metrics
13853 have been affected.
13854 <note>
13855 @c Null or empty metric name array means all metrics. @c Null or
13856 empty object array means all existing objects. If metric name array
13857 contains a single element and object array contains many, the single
13858 metric name array element is applied to each object array element to
13859 form metric/object pairs.
13860 </note>
13861 </desc>
13862 <param name="metricNames" type="wstring" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13863 <desc>
13864 Metric name filter. Comma-separated list of metrics with wildcard
13865 support.
13866 </desc>
13867 </param>
13868 <param name="objects" type="$unknown" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13869 <desc>
13870 Set of objects to setup metric parameters for.
13871 </desc>
13872 </param>
13873 <param name="period" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
13874 <desc>
13875 Time interval in seconds between two consecutive samples of
13876 performance data.
13877 </desc>
13878 </param>
13879 <param name="count" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
13880 <desc>
13881 Number of samples to retain in performance data history. Older
13882 samples get discarded.
13883 </desc>
13884 </param>
13885 <param name="affectedMetrics" type="IPerformanceMetric" dir="return" safearray="yes">
13886 <desc>
13887 Array of metrics that have been modified by the call to this method.
13888 </desc>
13889 </param>
13890 </method>
13891
13892 <method name="enableMetrics">
13893 <desc>
13894 Turns on collecting specified base metrics. Returns an array of
13895 <link to="IPerformanceMetric" /> describing the metrics have been
13896 affected.
13897 <note>
13898 @c Null or empty metric name array means all metrics. @c Null or
13899 empty object array means all existing objects. If metric name array
13900 contains a single element and object array contains many, the single
13901 metric name array element is applied to each object array element to
13902 form metric/object pairs.
13903 </note>
13904 </desc>
13905 <param name="metricNames" type="wstring" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13906 <desc>
13907 Metric name filter. Comma-separated list of metrics with wildcard
13908 support.
13909 </desc>
13910 </param>
13911 <param name="objects" type="$unknown" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13912 <desc>
13913 Set of objects to enable metrics for.
13914 </desc>
13915 </param>
13916 <param name="affectedMetrics" type="IPerformanceMetric" dir="return" safearray="yes">
13917 <desc>
13918 Array of metrics that have been modified by the call to this method.
13919 </desc>
13920 </param>
13921 </method>
13922
13923 <method name="disableMetrics">
13924 <desc>
13925 Turns off collecting specified base metrics. Returns an array of
13926 <link to="IPerformanceMetric" /> describing the metrics have been
13927 affected.
13928 <note>
13929 @c Null or empty metric name array means all metrics. @c Null or
13930 empty object array means all existing objects. If metric name array
13931 contains a single element and object array contains many, the single
13932 metric name array element is applied to each object array element to
13933 form metric/object pairs.
13934 </note>
13935 </desc>
13936 <param name="metricNames" type="wstring" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13937 <desc>
13938 Metric name filter. Comma-separated list of metrics with wildcard
13939 support.
13940 </desc>
13941 </param>
13942 <param name="objects" type="$unknown" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13943 <desc>
13944 Set of objects to disable metrics for.
13945 </desc>
13946 </param>
13947 <param name="affectedMetrics" type="IPerformanceMetric" dir="return" safearray="yes">
13948 <desc>
13949 Array of metrics that have been modified by the call to this method.
13950 </desc>
13951 </param>
13952 </method>
13953
13954 <method name="queryMetricsData">
13955 <desc>
13956 Queries collected metrics data for a set of objects.
13957
13958 The data itself and related metric information are returned in seven
13959 parallel and one flattened array of arrays. Elements of
13960 <tt>returnMetricNames, returnObjects, returnUnits, returnScales,
13961 returnSequenceNumbers, returnDataIndices and returnDataLengths</tt> with
13962 the same index describe one set of values corresponding to a single
13963 metric.
13964
13965 The <tt>returnData</tt> parameter is a flattened array of arrays. Each
13966 start and length of a sub-array is indicated by
13967 <tt>returnDataIndices</tt> and <tt>returnDataLengths</tt>. The first
13968 value for metric <tt>metricNames[i]</tt> is at
13969 <tt>returnData[returnIndices[i]]</tt>.
13970
13971 <note>
13972 @c Null or empty metric name array means all metrics. @c Null or
13973 empty object array means all existing objects. If metric name array
13974 contains a single element and object array contains many, the single
13975 metric name array element is applied to each object array element to
13976 form metric/object pairs.
13977 </note>
13978 <note>
13979 Data collection continues behind the scenes after call to @c
13980 queryMetricsData. The return data can be seen as the snapshot of the
13981 current state at the time of @c queryMetricsData call. The internally
13982 kept metric values are not cleared by the call. This makes possible
13983 querying different subsets of metrics or aggregates with subsequent
13984 calls. If periodic querying is needed it is highly suggested to query
13985 the values with @c interval*count period to avoid confusion. This way
13986 a completely new set of data values will be provided by each query.
13987 </note>
13988 </desc>
13989 <param name="metricNames" type="wstring" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13990 <desc>
13991 Metric name filter. Comma-separated list of metrics with wildcard
13992 support.
13993 </desc>
13994 </param>
13995 <param name="objects" type="$unknown" dir="in" safearray="yes">
13996 <desc>
13997 Set of objects to query metrics for.
13998 </desc>
13999 </param>
14000 <param name="returnMetricNames" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
14001 <desc>
14002 Names of metrics returned in @c returnData.
14003 </desc>
14004 </param>
14005 <param name="returnObjects" type="$unknown" dir="out" safearray="yes">
14006 <desc>
14007 Objects associated with metrics returned in @c returnData.
14008 </desc>
14009 </param>
14010 <param name="returnUnits" type="wstring" dir="out" safearray="yes">
14011 <desc>
14012 Units of measurement for each returned metric.
14013 </desc>
14014 </param>
14015 <param name="returnScales" type="unsigned long" dir="out" safearray="yes">
14016 <desc>
14017 Divisor that should be applied to return values in order to get
14018 floating point values. For example:
14019 <tt>(double)returnData[returnDataIndices[0]+i] / returnScales[0]</tt>
14020 will retrieve the floating point value of i-th sample of the first
14021 metric.
14022 </desc>
14023 </param>
14024 <param name="returnSequenceNumbers" type="unsigned long" dir="out" safearray="yes">
14025 <desc>
14026 Sequence numbers of the first elements of value sequences of
14027 particular metrics returned in @c returnData. For aggregate metrics
14028 it is the sequence number of the sample the aggregate started
14029 calculation from.
14030 </desc>
14031 </param>
14032 <param name="returnDataIndices" type="unsigned long" dir="out" safearray="yes">
14033 <desc>
14034 Indices of the first elements of value sequences of particular
14035 metrics returned in @c returnData.
14036 </desc>
14037 </param>
14038 <param name="returnDataLengths" type="unsigned long" dir="out" safearray="yes">
14039 <desc>
14040 Lengths of value sequences of particular metrics.
14041 </desc>
14042 </param>
14043 <param name="returnData" type="long" dir="return" safearray="yes">
14044 <desc>
14045 Flattened array of all metric data containing sequences of values for
14046 each metric.
14047 </desc>
14048 </param>
14049 </method>
14050
14051 </interface>
14052
14053 <enum
14054 name="NATProtocol"
14055 uuid="e90164be-eb03-11de-94af-fff9b1c1b19f"
14056 >
14057 <desc>Protocol definitions used with NAT port-forwarding rules.</desc>
14058 <const name="UDP" value="0">
14059 <desc>Port-forwarding uses UDP protocol.</desc>
14060 </const>
14061 <const name="TCP" value="1">
14062 <desc>Port-forwarding uses TCP protocol.</desc>
14063 </const>
14064 </enum>
14065
14066 <interface
14067 name="INATEngine" extends="$unknown"
14068 uuid="4b286616-eb03-11de-b0fb-1701eca42246"
14069 wsmap="managed"
14070 >
14071 <desc>Interface for managing a NAT engine which is used with a virtual machine. This
14072 allows for changing NAT behavior such as port-forwarding rules. This interface is
14073 used in the <link to="INetworkAdapter::natDriver" /> attribute.</desc>
14074 <attribute name="network" type="wstring">
14075 <desc>The network attribute of the NAT engine (the same value is used with built-in
14076 DHCP server to fill corresponding fields of DHCP leases).</desc>
14077 </attribute>
14078 <attribute name="hostIP" type="wstring">
14079 <desc>IP of host interface to bind all opened sockets to.
14080 <note>Changing this does not change binding of port forwarding.</note>
14081 </desc>
14082 </attribute>
14083 <attribute name="tftpPrefix" type="wstring">
14084 <desc>TFTP prefix attribute which is used with the built-in DHCP server to fill
14085 the corresponding fields of DHCP leases.</desc>
14086 </attribute>
14087 <attribute name="tftpBootFile" type="wstring">
14088 <desc>TFTP boot file attribute which is used with the built-in DHCP server to fill
14089 the corresponding fields of DHCP leases.</desc>
14090 </attribute>
14091 <attribute name="tftpNextServer" type="wstring">
14092 <desc>TFTP server attribute which is used with the built-in DHCP server to fill
14093 the corresponding fields of DHCP leases.
14094 <note>The preferred form is IPv4 addresses.</note>
14095 </desc>
14096 </attribute>
14097 <attribute name="dnsPassDomain" type="boolean">
14098 <desc>Whether the DHCP server should pass the DNS domain used by the host.</desc>
14099 </attribute>
14100 <attribute name="dnsProxy" type="boolean">
14101 <desc>Whether the DHCP server (and the DNS traffic by NAT) should pass the address
14102 of the DNS proxy and process traffic using DNS servers registerd on the host.</desc>
14103 </attribute>
14104 <attribute name="dnsUseHostResolver" type="boolean">
14105 <desc>Whether the DHCP server (and the DNS traffic by NAT) should pass the address
14106 of the DNS proxy and process traffic using the host resolver mechanism.</desc>
14107 </attribute>
14108 <attribute name="redirects" type="wstring" readonly="yes" safearray="yes">
14109 <desc>Array of NAT port-forwarding rules in string representation, in the following
14110 format: "name,protocol id,host ip,host port,guest ip,guest port".</desc>
14111 </attribute>
14112 <method name="setNetworkSettings">
14113 <desc>Sets network configuration of the NAT engine.</desc>
14114 <param name="mtu" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
14115 <desc>MTU (maximum transmission unit) of the NAT engine in bytes.</desc>
14116 </param>
14117 <param name="sockSnd" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
14118 <desc>Capacity of the socket send buffer in bytes when creating a new socket.</desc>
14119 </param>
14120 <param name="sockRcv" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
14121 <desc>Capacity of the socket receive buffer in bytes when creating a new socket.</desc>
14122 </param>
14123 <param name="TcpWndSnd" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
14124 <desc>Initial size of the NAT engine's sending TCP window in bytes when
14125 establishing a new TCP connection.</desc>
14126 </param>
14127 <param name="TcpWndRcv" type="unsigned long" dir="in">
14128 <desc>Initial size of the NAT engine's receiving TCP window in bytes when
14129 establishing a new TCP connection.</desc>
14130 </param>
14131 </method>
14132 <method name="getNetworkSettings">
14133 <desc>Returns network configuration of NAT engine. See <link to="#setNetworkSettings" />
14134 for parameter descriptions.</desc>
14135 <param name="mtu" type="unsigned long" dir="out" />
14136 <param name="sockSnd" type="unsigned long" dir="out" />
14137 <param name="sockRcv" type="unsigned long" dir="out" />
14138 <param name="TcpWndSnd" type="unsigned long" dir="out" />
14139 <param name="TcpWndRcv" type="unsigned long" dir="out" />
14140 </method>
14141 <method name="addRedirect">
14142 <desc>Adds a new NAT port-forwarding rule.</desc>
14143 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
14144 <desc>The name of the rule. An empty name is acceptable, in which case the NAT engine
14145 auto-generates one using the other parameters.</desc>
14146 </param>
14147 <param name="proto" type="NATProtocol" dir="in">
14148 <desc>Protocol handled with the rule.</desc>
14149 </param>
14150 <param name="hostIp" type="wstring" dir="in">
14151 <desc>IP of the host interface to which the rule should apply. An empty ip address is
14152 acceptable, in which case the NAT engine binds the handling socket to any interface.</desc>
14153 </param>
14154 <param name="hostPort" type="unsigned short" dir="in">
14155 <desc>The port number to listen on.</desc>
14156 </param>
14157 <param name="guestIp" type="wstring" dir="in">
14158 <desc>The IP address of the guest which the NAT engine will forward matching packets
14159 to. An empty IP address is acceptable, in which case the NAT engine will forward
14160 packets to the first DHCP lease (x.x.x.15).</desc>
14161 </param>
14162 <param name="guestPort" type="unsigned short" dir="in">
14163 <desc>The port number to forward.</desc>
14164 </param>
14165 </method>
14166 <method name="removeRedirect">
14167 <desc>Removes a port-forwarding rule that was previously registered.</desc>
14168 <param name="name" type="wstring" dir="in">
14169 <desc>The name of the rule to delete.</desc>
14170 </param>
14171 </method>
14172 </interface>
14173
14174 <module name="VBoxSVC" context="LocalServer">
14175 <class name="VirtualBox" uuid="B1A7A4F2-47B9-4A1E-82B2-07CCD5323C3F"
14176 namespace="virtualbox.org">
14177 <interface name="IVirtualBox" default="yes"/>
14178 </class>
14179 </module>
14180
14181 <module name="VBoxC" context="InprocServer" threadingModel="Free">
14182 <class name="Session" uuid="3C02F46D-C9D2-4F11-A384-53F0CF917214"
14183 namespace="virtualbox.org">
14184 <interface name="ISession" default="yes"/>
14185 </class>
14186 <class name="CallbackWrapper" uuid="49EE8561-5563-4715-B18C-A4B1A490DAFE"
14187 namespace="virtualbox.org">
14188 <interface name="ILocalOwner" default="yes"/>
14189 <interface name="IVirtualBoxCallback"/>
14190 <interface name="IConsoleCallback"/>
14191 </class>
14192 </module>
14193
14194</library>
14195
14196</idl>
14197
14198<!-- vim: set shiftwidth=2 tabstop=2 expandtab: -->
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