VirtualBox Concepts: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
* [[VirtualBox#Subjects|VirtualBox]] | * [[VirtualBox#Subjects|VirtualBox]] | ||
= | =Networking= | ||
{{Internal|VirtualBox Networking Concepts|VirtualBox Networking Concepts}} | |||
=Current State= | =Current State= | ||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
* the complete state of all virtual disks attached to the VM. Going back to a past snapshot means that all changes that have been made since the snapshot has been taken will be discarded. | * the complete state of all virtual disks attached to the VM. Going back to a past snapshot means that all changes that have been made since the snapshot has been taken will be discarded. | ||
* if the snapshot was taken when the machine is running, the memory state is preserved as well. | * if the snapshot was taken when the machine is running, the memory state is preserved as well. | ||
The procedure to restore a VM from a snapshot is available here: {{Internal|VirtualBox_Operations#Restoring_a_VM_from_a_Snapshot|Restoring a VM from a Snapshot}} |
Latest revision as of 00:32, 26 May 2017
Internal
Networking
Current State
The "current state" represents the "now" point in the life time of the virtual machine. The current state can be preserved by taking a snapshot.
Clone
Full Clone
A clone that copies all depending disk images into the new VM folder. A full clone can fully operate without the source VM.
Linked Clone
A linked clone refers to parent disk images.
Cloning "Everything"
If "Everything" is chosen when cloning, the current state of the VM and all snapshots are cloned.
Snapshot
A snapshot contains the current state of the virtual machine, which consists of:
- the complete copy of the VM settings, including the hardware configuration.
- the complete state of all virtual disks attached to the VM. Going back to a past snapshot means that all changes that have been made since the snapshot has been taken will be discarded.
- if the snapshot was taken when the machine is running, the memory state is preserved as well.
The procedure to restore a VM from a snapshot is available here: