

At the end of the setup process, the operating system is installed without requiring any further user interaction. This allows the user to configure the system to be installed in VirtualBox's interface prior to starting the machine. In order to avoid having to install the guest system manually, some operating systems support unattended installation.

Once mounted, you can run the guest additions installer inside the guest. iso file will be located at /usr/lib/virtualbox/additions/VBoxGuestAdditions.iso, and may have to be mounted manually inside the virtual machine. This package will act as a disc image that can be used to install the guest additions onto guest systems other than Arch Linux. It is also recommended to install the virtualbox-guest-iso package on the host running VirtualBox. To use the USB ports of your host machine in your virtual machines, add users that will be authorized to use this feature to the vboxusers user group. Note: If the VirtualBox kernel modules were loaded in the kernel while you updated the modules, you need to reload them manually to use the new updated version. scripts/sign-file sha1 certs/signing_key.pem certs/signing_key.x509 $module done # for module in `ls /lib/modules/$(uname -r)/kernel/misc/` do. Navigate to your kernel tree folder and execute the following command: When using a custom kernel with CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_FORCE option enabled, you must sign your modules with a key generated during kernel compilation. When either VirtualBox or the kernel is updated, the kernel modules will be automatically recompiled thanks to the DKMS pacman hook. To compile the VirtualBox modules provided by virtualbox-host-dkms, it will also be necessary to install the appropriate headers package(s) for your installed kernel(s) (e.g.
