4 remote virtual machines (vrdp support), Remote virtual machines (vrdp support), Remote virtual machines – Sun Microsystems VIRTUALBOX VERSION 3.1.0_BETA2 User Manual

Page 99: Vrdp support), Mote virtual machines (vrdp support)

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7 Alternative front-ends; remote virtual machines

To start a virtual machine with VBoxSDL instead of the VirtualBox GUI, enter the

following on a command line:

VBoxSDL --startvm <vm>

where <vm> is, as usual with VirtualBox command line parameters, the name or

UUID of an existing virtual machine.

7.4 Remote virtual machines (VRDP support)

VirtualBox, the graphical user interface, has a built-in server for the VirtualBox Remote
Desktop Protocol (VRDP). This allows you to see the output of a virtual machine’s
window remotely on any other computer and control the virtual machine from there,
as if the virtual machine was running locally.

VRDP is a backwards-compatible extension to Microsoft’s Remote Desktop Protocol

(RDP). Typically graphics updates and audio are sent from the remote machine to the
client, while keyboard and mouse events are sent back. As a result, you can use any
standard RDP client to control the remote VM.

With VirtualBox, the graphical user interface, the VRDP server is disabled by

default, but can easily be enabled on a per-VM basis either in the “Display” settings
(see chapter

3.5

,

Display settings

, page

51

) or with VBoxManage:

VBoxManage modifyvm <vmname> --vrdp on

If you use VBoxHeadless (described further below), VRDP support will be auto-

matically enabled since VBoxHeadless has no other means of output.

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