Get Involved/development/Developing in a virtual machine: Difference between revisions
Spell VirtualBox |
KDE neon Developer Edition |
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* Windows: https://virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads | * Windows: https://virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads | ||
Once VirtualBox is installed, | Once VirtualBox is installed, start VirtualBox. | ||
== Setting up the guest OS == | == Setting up the guest OS == | ||
Now it's time to install an operating system inside VirtualBox. For the purposes of this tutorial, we will use KDE | Now it's time to install an operating system inside VirtualBox. For the purposes of this tutorial, we will use KDE neon Developer Edition, as it is specifically made for this purpose. Download it from here: https://files.kde.org/neon/images/developer/current/neon-developer-current.iso | ||
The OS inside VirtualBox is called the "guest OS" | The OS inside VirtualBox is called the "guest OS". This is distinct from the "host OS" which is the OS running on your hardware computer. It's time to set it up now. | ||
Click the "New" button in the toolbar and go through the wizard, entering the following recommended settings: | Click the "New" button in the toolbar and go through the wizard, entering the following recommended settings: | ||
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[[File:6-_hard_disk_4.png|450px]] | [[File:6-_hard_disk_4.png|450px]] | ||
Now click the "Start" button in the toolbar. This will prompt you to select an ISO file for the guest OS. Select the | Now click the "Start" button in the toolbar. This will prompt you to select an ISO file for the guest OS. Select the KDE neon Developer Edition ISO that you downloaded earlier: | ||
[[File:7-_Select_the_OS.png|450px]] | [[File:7-_Select_the_OS.png|450px]] |
Revision as of 20:55, 30 September 2022
Using a virtual machine for development can work if you are not able to set up a development environment on your main machine for any reason.
Oracle VM VirtualBox (VirtualBox) is a good option for the VM host virtualization software, as it is reliable, free, and open source.
If your hardware computer runs Linux, Virtual Machine Manager is also a good option for virtualization software. This uses the default Linux QEMU/KVM virtualization, is available in most Linux distributions. And offers the best performance.
Installing VirtualBox
In your computer's firmware/BIOS/UEFI, make sure that all hardware virtualization technologies available for your computer are enabled: Intel VT-x, Intel VT-d, AMD AMD-V, AMD-Vi, other (EPT, RVI, VMCS shadowing, GVT, SR-IOV etc.). If it is available and you can enable it, then enable it.
- Arch/Manjaro:
sudo pacman -S virtualbox
- Fedora: not available in the default Fedora repositories.
- KDE Neon/Kubuntu/Ubuntu/Debian:
sudo apt install virtualbox
- openSUSE Leap & Tumbleweed:
sudo zypper install virtualbox
- macOS:
brew install virtualbox
- Windows: https://virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads
Once VirtualBox is installed, start VirtualBox.
Setting up the guest OS
Now it's time to install an operating system inside VirtualBox. For the purposes of this tutorial, we will use KDE neon Developer Edition, as it is specifically made for this purpose. Download it from here: https://files.kde.org/neon/images/developer/current/neon-developer-current.iso
The OS inside VirtualBox is called the "guest OS". This is distinct from the "host OS" which is the OS running on your hardware computer. It's time to set it up now.
Click the "New" button in the toolbar and go through the wizard, entering the following recommended settings:
Now click the "Start" button in the toolbar. This will prompt you to select an ISO file for the guest OS. Select the KDE neon Developer Edition ISO that you downloaded earlier:
The OS will boot up! How exciting. Launch the installer and install the OS. When asked to create a user account, just pick any name (e.g. "dev").
After the OS has been installed, reboot the guest OS and then install some extra drivers and such from the "Guest Additions CD Image". Download and mount it like so:
Now press F4 to open the Terminal view and install by running the following command:
sudo ./VBoxLinuxAdditions.run
Now restart the guest OS again. Once it starts up, you're ready to do your development in a VM!