I tried going into Settings->Storage and add an additional IDE controller pointed to the Ubunto ISO image. Tried every combination of attributes. When I boot, as soon as I select boot from CD it fails, unable to read drive.
![]() I tried going into Settings->Storage and add an additional IDE controller pointed to the Ubunto ISO image. Tried every combination of attributes. When I boot, as soon as I select boot from CD it fails, unable to read drive. -- Drew |
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![]() Step by step: Open the Oracle VM VirtualBox Manager Highlight your problematic machine Select settings from the top Click on Storage There should be at the bottom that has a "+" on it and roll-over text says: "Adds a new controller to the End of the Storage Tree", Click on it. Add "IDE Controller" Select that new IDE Controller ensure it is "PIIX4" (Host I/O cache ... don't care works either way) On that Controller there is now a couple of buttons with a "+" on them, roll-over on one says "Add Hard Disk" the other says "Add CD/DVD Device." Select "Add CD/DVD Device." Next a dialog comes up and states: "You are about to add a new CD/DVD drive to the Controller IDE. Would you like to choose a Virtual CD/DVD disk to put in the drive or leave it empty for now?" There are three buttons: "Cancel" "Choose Disk" "Leave Empty" I prefer "Leave Empty" Then Save an boot the "VM" immediately hit F12 to select boot device in the "VirtualBox temporary boot device selection" screen. At this point in the Menu bar, there is a "Devices" selection. Choose "Devices" then choose "CD/DVD Devices" then choose "Choose a virtual CD/DVD disk file" then go chase down your ISO. Save the setting. Click in the console of the VM, you should have a few choices there. typically the CD/DVD are "c" Boot from there. Please let me know you progress or issues. Thanks. -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |
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![]() On to the next step. -- Drew |
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![]() When off Select your from the Manager. Click Settings. Click System. Click on the CD-ROM and move it to the top of the boot order. -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |
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![]() Isn't the point of boot order that if the first in the list is not bootable it will fall to the next? When the virtual hard drive was failing, why wouldn't it fall to the CD? -- Drew |
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![]() For the BIOS, "failed to boot" means "media not there". The hard disk is there. As far as the BIOS is concerned, it's booting. Wade. Just Add Story http://justaddstory.wordpress.com/ |
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![]() -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |
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![]() -- Drew |
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![]() -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |
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![]() Followed the rescue instructions and it looked like it failed. Restarted and it came up, but the display was horked. Restarted again and it's copacetic. Seamless mode still doesn't work, but fulscreen is good enough. -- Drew |
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![]() reinstall the VBOX additions... again and let it compile the modules again. I've had zero problem with VBOX and seamless mode. -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |
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![]() The people I see reporting this same issue say it's with Unity and or distros based on Gnome 3. -- Drew |
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![]() I'll have to hold me nose and pretend it is an election year. I'd D/L it and run unity... and see. -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |
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![]() While I was looking through the other reports of this to see if there was any activity, someone mentioned a neat trick I didn't know was possible. In seamless mode you can drag a Windows program icon onto the Ubuntu launcher - assuming your launcher is working. -- Drew |
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![]() I have seamless working and also the auto-resize guest working in non-seamless mode. Sorry. I don't know how to help, other than install the guest additions and restart completely (shutdown and start) Cheers. -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |
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![]() -- Drew |
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![]() The partition is marked as bootable. That is the Flag the BIOS looks for. But since you (yes you! laddie!) screwed it up... it no worky, but the BIOS/whatever has completed its job properly. -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |