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The proprietary extension pack adds a USB 2.0 or USB 3.0 controller and, if VirtualBox acts as an RDP server, it can also use USB devices on the remote RDP client, as if they were connected to the host, although only if the client supports this VirtualBox-specific extension (Oracle provides clients for Solaris, Linux, and Sun Ray thin clients ...
Oracle VirtualBox with Extension Pack (PUEL) and Guest Additions (GPLv2) [28] Yes Yes Yes Yes OpenGL 2.0 and Direct3D 8/9 [31] Yes branched [29] Yes Yes Yes Yes Retired (Until 6.0; [32] Linux only [33]) Oracle VM Server for SPARC (LDoms) Yes USB 2.0 Yes Yes No Yes No Yes Yes No Yes OKL4 Microvisor: Yes Yes VMs only Yes Yes No Static assignment ...
Oracle Linux 7.3; 12.5.9 Pro [68] 10 January 2018 This update of VMware Workstation Pro exposes hardware support for branch target injection mitigation to VMware guests. This hardware is used by some guest operating systems to mitigate CVE-2018-5715 (also called by the name "Spectre"). 14.0.0 Pro [69] 26 September 2017
CVE-2018-2698 Oracle VirtualBox: shared memory interface by the VGA allows read and writes on the host OS [11] CVE-2018-6981 VMware ESXi, Workstation, Fusion: Uninitialized stack memory usage in the vmxnet3 virtual network adapter. [12]
Oracle VirtualBox, part of Sun xVM line of Sun Microsystems supports VHD in versions 2 and later. In 2017 Red Gate Software and Windocks introduced VHD based support for SQL Server database cloning. [ 14 ] [ 15 ]
Oracle Linux 8.0; SLE 15 SP1; FreeBSD 12.0; PhotonOS 3.0; Updated so virtual networks can now be configured with MTU size of up to 9000 bytes. Updated to make network settings save after upgrades and adds the ability to import and export network configurations; New shortcut to quickly adjust VMware display layout
Under agreement with Connectix, Innotek GmbH (makers of VirtualBox, now part of Oracle) ported version 5.0 to run on an OS/2 host. [6] This version also included guest extensions (VM additions) for OS/2 guests, which could run on Windows, OS/2 or Mac OS X hosts using Virtual PC versions 5, 6 or 7.
VirtualBox, first released in January 2007, used some of QEMU's virtual hardware devices, and had a built-in dynamic re-compiler based on QEMU. As with KQEMU, VirtualBox runs nearly all guest code natively on the host via the VMM (Virtual Machine Manager) and uses the re-compiler only as a fallback mechanism – for example, when guest code ...