Mac OS X gets first open-source virtualisation tool
May 12th, 2008 by Matthew BroersmaSun has released a major update to its open-source desktop virtualisation tool xVM VirtualBox, adding support for Apple's Mac OS X and Solaris host operating systems, in addition to other improvements.
Software makers such as Parallels have been making Mac OS X virtualisation software for some time, but Sun is the first to release an open-source virtualisation product for the platform.
Virtualisation technology allows several operating systems to run at the same time on a single physical host. VirtualBox runs as an application on a host operating system, on top of which various guest OSs can execute.
The software was originally developed by Germany-based Innotek, which was acquired by Sun in February. It competes with a range of virtualisation competitors, including market leader VMware.
The free, open-source version is available for download, and Sun also sells a version under a proprietary licence with additional features such as USB support and a Remote Display Protocol (RDP) server.
The proprietary version is also available as a free download, but only for personal use; business users must purchase licences.
Besides support for Solaris and Mac OS X as hosts, VirtualBox 1.6 integrates the windowing mechanism for Linux and Solaris guests, adds a programming interface for Web services and a controller for Sata hard disks, among other features, Sun said.
Solaris is supported as a guest OS, but Mac OS X is not yet supported as a guest, Sun said. Other guests supported include Windows and a number of versions of Linux and Unix, while supported hosts include Linux, Windows and experimental support for OS/2 Warp.







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creativepaintballer
August 28th, 2008 at 4:06am
has anyone used this? I'm having trouble staying connect to my network while VB is open and running i have to restart the iMac to get my server connection back. works fine with out the VB turned on server connection only last an hour with VB turned on. Thanks