![]() The way you find out whether your host hardware supports hardware VM assist is with one of these commands, depending on whether you have an Intel or an AMD processor: If not, it's five times slower than bare metal, erasing every possible benefit. Linux installation is faster on a VM guest than on bare metal, if and only if, the host hardware has hardware VM assist. The biggest DIY benefit of virtual machines is speed. Use Only Hardware With Hardware VM Assist This document discusses only software available in the GPLv2 core. Some VirtualBox tasks require either the extra stuff covered under the VirtualBox Personal and Evaluation License, or the VirtualBox software under the Commercial License. If you want to do things like testing networking, USB or sound, you'll need to either get much more proficiency than this document provides, or, after you see that it's basically working as a host, run the distro on bare metal. Instead, this document tries to give you one reliable alternative for each activity necessary for Linux distribution DIY. This document doesn't tell you how to optimally use VirtualBox. In the hands of the most knowledgeable, VirtualBox can perform miracles. VirtualBox is a powerful, flexible, and quite complicated system. But you're just using it to test and tweak Linux distributions. To get Virtualbox' full suite, or to use it in a profit-making business, you'd probably need to buy a proprietary Virtualbox license. ![]()
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