It’s 2023 and it’s been pretty much a decade since I’ve stopped understanding why people use VirtualBox on Linux.
I use a virtualbox vm for work. Linux desktop runs a windows VM with Windows 10 and all my work stuff on it. I love it, its been very reliable. Its mostly simple though, it doesn’t need to be super speedy, just needs to house my orgs mandatory vpn and av so I can connect to my work stuff.
Pretty sure something built into the kernel, used by all major cloud providers is gonna be more reliable than some dodgy DKMS driver…
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@MrShelbySan @wildbus8979 You pretty much always want to be using KVM. QEmu, VMM, VirtualBox, Gnome Boxes, and some other apps all support it. The rest is just down to what app/tools you prefer.
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I assume all the “real Linux pros” are using qemu, which is a real pita if you want to do anything beyond creating a basic VM.
Well, I guess I’ll eat my words. This is much better than the last time I messed around with it.
It’s been around since 2009 ;)
GNOME Boxes is actually simpler than Virtualbox, in my opinion, with all the options you’ll need. It even lets you install a variety of ISOs straight from the interface, without needing to go out to the web. Of course, if you’re installing Windows, you need to supply your own ISO file.
Virt-Manager can be unintuitive but it’s plenty capable.
And USB hotplug?
Same as it always has been, KVM/Qemu/Libvirt…
Same as it always has been… KVM/Qemu/libvirt.
Does it even support wayland yet?
I recently ported my windoze 10 vm to kvm/virt-manager from virtualbox and don’t intend to go back. I used to use virtualbox because it was easy to deal with, but that advantage has all but disappeared.