Advanced Configuration and Power Interface, an industry specification for BIOS and hardware extensions to configure PC hardware and perform power management. Windows 2000 and higher as well as Linux 2.4 and higher support ACPI. Windows can only enable or disable ACPI support at installation time.
Advanced Host Controller Interface, the interface that supports SATA devices such as hard disks. See the section called “Hard disk controllers: IDE, SATA (AHCI), SCSI, SAS”.
The hardware virtualization features built into modern AMD processors. See the section called “Hardware vs. software virtualization”.
Application Programming Interface.
Advanced Programmable Interrupt Controller, a newer version of the original PC PIC (programmable interrupt controller). Most modern CPUs contain an on-chip APIC ("local APIC"). Many systems also contain an I/O APIC (input output APIC) as a separate chip which provides more than 16 IRQs. Windows 2000 and higher use a different kernel if they detect an I/O APIC during installation. Therefore an I/O APIC must not be removed after installation.
Advanced Technology Attachment, an industry standard for hard disk interfaces (synonymous with IDE). See the section called “Hard disk controllers: IDE, SATA (AHCI), SCSI, SAS”.
Basic Input/Output System, the firmware built into most personal computers which is responsible of initializing the hardware after the computer has been turned on and then booting an operating system. VirtualBox ships with its own virtual BIOS that runs when a virtual machine is started.
Microsoft Component Object Model, a programming infrastructure for modular software. COM allows applications to provide application programming interfaces which can be accessed from various other programming languages and applications. VirtualBox makes use of COM both internally and externally to provide a comprehensive API to 3rd party developers.
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. This allows a networking device in a network to acquire its IP address (and other networking details) automatically, in order to avoid having to configure all devices in a network with fixed IP addresses. VirtualBox has a built-in DHCP server that delivers an IP addresses to a virtual machine when networking is configured to NAT; see Chapter 6, Virtual networking.
Dynamic Kernel Module Support. A framework that simplifies installing and updating external kernel modules on Linux machines; see the section called “The VirtualBox kernel module”.
Extensible Firmware Interface, a firmware built into computers which is designed to replace the aging BIOS. Originally designed by Intel, most modern operating systems can now boot on computers which have EFI instead of a BIOS built into them; see the section called “Alternative firmware (EFI)”.
Enhanced Host Controller Interface, the interface that implements the USB 2.0 standard.
Graphical User Interface. Commonly used as an antonym to a
"command line interface", in the context of VirtualBox, we sometimes
refer to the main graphical
VirtualBox
program as the "GUI", to
differentiate it from the VBoxManage
interface.
See UUID.
Integrated Drive Electronics, an industry standard for hard disk interfaces. See the section called “Hard disk controllers: IDE, SATA (AHCI), SCSI, SAS”.
See APIC.
Internet SCSI; see the section called “iSCSI servers”.
Media Access Control, a part of an Ethernet network card. A MAC
address is a 6-byte number which identifies a network card. It is
typically written in hexadecimal notation where the bytes are
separated by colons, such as
00:17:3A:5E:CB:08
.
Message Signalled Interrupts, as supported by modern chipsets such as the ICH9; see the section called “"Motherboard" tab”. As opposed to traditional pin-based interrupts, with MSI, a small amount of data can accompany the actual interrupt message. This reduces the amount of hardware pins required, allows for more interrupts and better performance.
Network Address Translation. A technique to share networking interfaces by which an interface modifies the source and/or target IP addresses of network packets according to specific rules. Commonly employed by routers and firewalls to shield an internal network from the Internet, VirtualBox can use NAT to easily share a host's physical networking hardware with its virtual machines. See the section called “Network Address Translation (NAT)”.
Open Virtualization Format, a cross-platform industry standard to exchange virtual appliances between virtualization products; see the section called “Importing and exporting virtual machines”.
Physical Address Extension. This allows accessing more than 4 GB of RAM even in 32-bit environments; see the section called “"Advanced" tab”.
See APIC.
Preboot Execution Environment, an industry standard for booting PC systems from remote network locations. It includes DHCP for IP configuration and TFTP for file transfer. Using UNDI, a hardware independent driver stack for accessing the network card from bootstrap code is available.
Remote Desktop Protocol, a protocol developed by Microsoft as an extension to the ITU T.128 and T.124 video conferencing protocol. With RDP, a PC system can be controlled from a remote location using a network connection over which data is transferred in both directions. Typically graphics updates and audio are sent from the remote machine and keyboard and mouse input events are sent from the client. A VirtualBox extension package by Oracle provides VRDP, an enhanced implementation of the relevant standards which is largely compatible with Microsoft's RDP implementation. See the section called “Remote display (VRDP support)” for details.
Serial Attached SCSI, an industry standard for hard disk interfaces. See the section called “Hard disk controllers: IDE, SATA (AHCI), SCSI, SAS”.
Serial ATA, an industry standard for hard disk interfaces. See the section called “Hard disk controllers: IDE, SATA (AHCI), SCSI, SAS”.
Small Computer System Interface. An industry standard for data transfer between devices, especially for storage. See the section called “Hard disk controllers: IDE, SATA (AHCI), SCSI, SAS”.
Symmetrical Multiprocessing, meaning that the resources of a computer are shared between several processors. These can either be several processor chips or, as is more common with modern hardware, multiple CPU cores in one processor.
A widely used file format for archiving. Originally, this stood
for "Tape ARchive" and was already supported by very early Unix
versions for backing up data on tape. The file format is still widely
used today, for example, with OVF archives (with an
.ova
file extension); see the section called “Importing and exporting virtual machines”.
A Universally Unique Identifier -- often also called GUID (Globally Unique Identifier) -- is a string of numbers and letters which can be computed dynamically and is guaranteed to be unique. Generally, it is used as a global handle to identify entities. VirtualBox makes use of UUIDs to identify VMs, Virtual Disk Images (VDI files) and other entities.
Virtual Machine -- a virtual computer that VirtualBox allows you to run on top of your actual hardware. See the section called “Some terminology” for details.
Virtual Machine Manager -- the component of VirtualBox that controls VM execution. See the section called “VirtualBox executables and components” for a list of VirtualBox components.
VirtualBox Remote Desktop Extension. This interface is built into VirtualBox to allow VirtualBox extension packages to supply remote access to virtual machines. A VirtualBox extension package by Oracle provides VRDP support; see the section called “Remote display (VRDP support)” for details.
See RDP.
The hardware virtualization features built into modern Intel processors. See the section called “Hardware vs. software virtualization”.
The eXtensible Markup Language, a metastandard for all kinds of textual information. XML only specifies how data in the document is organized generally and does not prescribe how to semantically organize content.
Mozilla Cross Platform Component Object Model, a programming infrastructure developed by the Mozilla browser project which is similar to Microsoft COM and allows applications to provide a modular programming interface. VirtualBox makes use of XPCOM on Linux both internally and externally to provide a comprehensive API to third-party developers.