Οχάκ@lemmy.ml to Linux@lemmy.mlEnglish · 2 months agoVirtualBox 7.1 Released with Qt 6 GUI, Wayland Support for Clipboard Sharing - 9to5Linux9to5linux.comexternal-linkmessage-square56fedilinkarrow-up1121arrow-down15
arrow-up1116arrow-down1external-linkVirtualBox 7.1 Released with Qt 6 GUI, Wayland Support for Clipboard Sharing - 9to5Linux9to5linux.comΟχάκ@lemmy.ml to Linux@lemmy.mlEnglish · 2 months agomessage-square56fedilink
minus-squarewildbus8979@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkarrow-up9·2 months agoVirt-Manager provides a complete UI, with a four step wizard to creating a VM, how is vbox any easier?
minus-squarebravemonkey@lemmy.calinkfedilinkarrow-up4·edit-22 months agoVbox will create a bridge with my wifi card (I’m a laptop user with no option for a wired nic in the host). I’ve never been able to get kvm to do that and haven’t found any working instructions online that a simpleton like me can follow
minus-squareWildly_Utilize@infosec.publinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·edit-22 months agoif you leave the NAT virtual NIC and add a 2nd one, type MACVTAP, make device name your real NIC (ent01 for me). Now you can access guest on your host and on other LAN devices without needing a bridge (Spent yesterday figuring this out)
minus-squarewildbus8979@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkarrow-up1arrow-down1·2 months agoCreate the bridge with Network Manager advanced config, voilà!
Virt-Manager provides a complete UI, with a four step wizard to creating a VM, how is vbox any easier?
Vbox will create a bridge with my wifi card (I’m a laptop user with no option for a wired nic in the host).
I’ve never been able to get kvm to do that and haven’t found any working instructions online that a simpleton like me can follow
if you leave the NAT virtual NIC and add a 2nd one, type MACVTAP, make device name your real NIC (ent01 for me).
Now you can access guest on your host and on other LAN devices without needing a bridge
(Spent yesterday figuring this out)
Create the bridge with Network Manager advanced config, voilà!