![]() Unrelated note: Virtualbox on Windows 10 is horrible, and so is the native Hyper-V, but that’s for another post, maybe.Įdit (20180705): A few years later, and I can honestly say VirtualBox on Windows 10 is stable now, and has been for awhile. It would seem like you would need a separate physical interface, especially for Windows 10 and probably others. Now that you have the VirtualBox virtualization software, you need to create a Linux virtual machine and install Ubuntu on it. Now, click on the folder icon and then click on the 'Add' button. Give some name to your virtual machine such as Ubuntu 22.04 where select Type- Linux and version to Ubuntu. After that click on the New button to create a fresh Virtual machine. This time, you have to select your Ubuntu ISO file that you downloaded earlier. Once you have installed the VirtualBox or if you already have then simply run it. Click on the 'Start' button in the toolbar to launch your VM. I’m not entirely sure how to accomplish this for Virtualbox on Windows. The name of your virtual machine will now appear on the left side of the VirtualBox Manager. Assuming your new subinterface is permanent, the VM will use that subinterface and be within that VLAN. Allocate RAM The memory size depends on your host machine’s memory size. Enter a name for your virtual machine (e.g., Ubuntu), select Linux as the type, and select Ubuntu (64-bit) as the version. Then in Virtualbox, you set the network interface to ‘bridged mode’, then select the subinterface. To create a new virtual machine for installing Ubuntu on VirtualBox, open VirtualBox and click New. Create Virtual Machine Click New button to open a dialog. This will open VirtualBox at the end of the installation. ![]() Continue with the installation of VirtualBox with thedefaults. Here is the link: When download is finished, run the executable file. To create a subinterface in Ubuntu, follow the instructions here: Go to VirtualBox website to download the binary for your current operating system. In order to get a VLANs working for a Virtualbox VM, you have to create a subinterface that is for a specific VLAN (of course, assuming your NIC supports 802.1q tagging). Now, set the virtual hard disk size for the VM. Now, select Dynamically allocated and click on Next >. Now, select VDI (VirtualBox Disk Image) and click on Next >. Now, select Create a virtual hard disk now and click on Create. ![]() ![]() Virtualbox does VLANs a little differently on Ubuntu than other hypervisors. For Ubuntu Server 20.04 LTS, it should be at least 512 MB. ![]() Wanted to add quick note about VLANs, VirtualBox, and Ubuntu. ![]()
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