Resolution doesn't change when resizing Virtualbox window
I've installed Ubuntu 64bit on Virtualbox 4.2.16. Guest Additions were installed in Ubuntu as well.
However the display resolution of Ubuntu does not seem to change as the Virtualbox window is resized or if we were to go into Full Screen mode. Any ideas?
virtualbox display-resolution
add a comment |
I've installed Ubuntu 64bit on Virtualbox 4.2.16. Guest Additions were installed in Ubuntu as well.
However the display resolution of Ubuntu does not seem to change as the Virtualbox window is resized or if we were to go into Full Screen mode. Any ideas?
virtualbox display-resolution
add a comment |
I've installed Ubuntu 64bit on Virtualbox 4.2.16. Guest Additions were installed in Ubuntu as well.
However the display resolution of Ubuntu does not seem to change as the Virtualbox window is resized or if we were to go into Full Screen mode. Any ideas?
virtualbox display-resolution
I've installed Ubuntu 64bit on Virtualbox 4.2.16. Guest Additions were installed in Ubuntu as well.
However the display resolution of Ubuntu does not seem to change as the Virtualbox window is resized or if we were to go into Full Screen mode. Any ideas?
virtualbox display-resolution
virtualbox display-resolution
edited Jun 26 '14 at 2:43
Braiam
51.9k20136221
51.9k20136221
asked Apr 22 '14 at 16:31
NyxynyxNyxynyx
2221412
2221412
add a comment |
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8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
Install the latest version of virtualbox say 4.3.10 or above from here and also it's corresponding guest additions, extensions Or you can also install the latest virtualbox version from the multiverse repository via apt-get. I also faced the same problem in older virtualbox version running Ubuntu 14.04 as guest OS.
To install guest additions, follow this answer.
add a comment |
just type: sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-additions-iso
THIS did the trick.
– Yar
May 26 '16 at 13:15
This did the trick for me! Worked out of the box with ubuntu, but not with lubuntu. I previously ran the GuestAdditions CD image under the devices menu but that did not work. I also tried to install virtualbox-guest-dkms and dkms and none worked.
– Julian Cienfuegos
Feb 28 '17 at 16:14
add a comment |
If that happens once you have the guest additions installed, it may help reconfiguring DKMS
dpkg-reconfigure virtualbox-guest-dkms
It happens to me every time Kernel is upgraded and the above provides the solution.
3
Don't forget to install thedkms
package too. It's not a dependency, but if you have it installed, kernel upgrade hooks will rebuild the Virtualbox kernel modules automatically.
– gertvdijk
Dec 4 '14 at 13:56
add a comment |
For those who already have the guest extensions and additions , you should go check for additional drivers and install the proprietary video driver for virtualbox , then reset your machine
add a comment |
I had this problem as well running a newly installed version of VirtualBox (VirtualBox 6.0). I tried installing the aforementioned packages but had no luck. My solution was simpler than I had anticipated. While the machine is powered off, go to:
Settings (of the VM) > Display > Graphics Controller > and select "VBoxVGA"
VirtualBox had set this option to "VMSVGA" by default for me. Fortunately, I noticed this subtle difference when comparing the settings between some of my virtual machines. I hope this works for you as well!
add a comment |
I have installed and removed Guest Additions multible times (either from 'Devices' menu or from terminal) with no luck. I have noticed that while doing this, i was getting some terminal messages regarding DKMS.
So... i tried to install DKMS separetely and boom! Full screen with high resolution again! So to summarise:
- Install Guest Additions (Devices->Insert Guest Additions CD image...)
- Open a terminal and type this
sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-dkms
- Restart
Hope it helps.
add a comment |
In addition to ensuring that guest additions is actually installed in the guest machine you should also check the 'Auto-Resize Guest Display' option in the 'View' menu in Virtuablbox (on the host machine).
add a comment |
I tried all of the suggested solutions:
- In the guest machine (Kubuntu 18.04), I installed 'virtualbox-guest-additions-iso' (thanks to Moshe Beeri)
- Installed 'virtualbox-guest-dkms' (thanks to Dr. Windows for the hint)
- While the guest machine is turned off, I checked if 'Maximum Guest Screen Size' is set to 'Automatic' (saw this suggestion in another post)
- Then I changed the 'Graphics Controller' to 'VBoxVGA'. (thanks to uceieluez)
Only after the 4th step the resolution of the guest machine has been fixed. Now it automatically resize to fit the virtual machine window.
I am not sure if the fix was because of changing the graphics controller or all of the above. Anyway, thank you all.
add a comment |
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8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
8 Answers
8
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Install the latest version of virtualbox say 4.3.10 or above from here and also it's corresponding guest additions, extensions Or you can also install the latest virtualbox version from the multiverse repository via apt-get. I also faced the same problem in older virtualbox version running Ubuntu 14.04 as guest OS.
To install guest additions, follow this answer.
add a comment |
Install the latest version of virtualbox say 4.3.10 or above from here and also it's corresponding guest additions, extensions Or you can also install the latest virtualbox version from the multiverse repository via apt-get. I also faced the same problem in older virtualbox version running Ubuntu 14.04 as guest OS.
To install guest additions, follow this answer.
add a comment |
Install the latest version of virtualbox say 4.3.10 or above from here and also it's corresponding guest additions, extensions Or you can also install the latest virtualbox version from the multiverse repository via apt-get. I also faced the same problem in older virtualbox version running Ubuntu 14.04 as guest OS.
To install guest additions, follow this answer.
Install the latest version of virtualbox say 4.3.10 or above from here and also it's corresponding guest additions, extensions Or you can also install the latest virtualbox version from the multiverse repository via apt-get. I also faced the same problem in older virtualbox version running Ubuntu 14.04 as guest OS.
To install guest additions, follow this answer.
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24
Community♦
1
1
answered Apr 22 '14 at 16:49
Avinash RajAvinash Raj
51.9k41168218
51.9k41168218
add a comment |
add a comment |
just type: sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-additions-iso
THIS did the trick.
– Yar
May 26 '16 at 13:15
This did the trick for me! Worked out of the box with ubuntu, but not with lubuntu. I previously ran the GuestAdditions CD image under the devices menu but that did not work. I also tried to install virtualbox-guest-dkms and dkms and none worked.
– Julian Cienfuegos
Feb 28 '17 at 16:14
add a comment |
just type: sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-additions-iso
THIS did the trick.
– Yar
May 26 '16 at 13:15
This did the trick for me! Worked out of the box with ubuntu, but not with lubuntu. I previously ran the GuestAdditions CD image under the devices menu but that did not work. I also tried to install virtualbox-guest-dkms and dkms and none worked.
– Julian Cienfuegos
Feb 28 '17 at 16:14
add a comment |
just type: sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-additions-iso
just type: sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-additions-iso
answered Jun 8 '14 at 7:02
Moshe BeeriMoshe Beeri
345136
345136
THIS did the trick.
– Yar
May 26 '16 at 13:15
This did the trick for me! Worked out of the box with ubuntu, but not with lubuntu. I previously ran the GuestAdditions CD image under the devices menu but that did not work. I also tried to install virtualbox-guest-dkms and dkms and none worked.
– Julian Cienfuegos
Feb 28 '17 at 16:14
add a comment |
THIS did the trick.
– Yar
May 26 '16 at 13:15
This did the trick for me! Worked out of the box with ubuntu, but not with lubuntu. I previously ran the GuestAdditions CD image under the devices menu but that did not work. I also tried to install virtualbox-guest-dkms and dkms and none worked.
– Julian Cienfuegos
Feb 28 '17 at 16:14
THIS did the trick.
– Yar
May 26 '16 at 13:15
THIS did the trick.
– Yar
May 26 '16 at 13:15
This did the trick for me! Worked out of the box with ubuntu, but not with lubuntu. I previously ran the GuestAdditions CD image under the devices menu but that did not work. I also tried to install virtualbox-guest-dkms and dkms and none worked.
– Julian Cienfuegos
Feb 28 '17 at 16:14
This did the trick for me! Worked out of the box with ubuntu, but not with lubuntu. I previously ran the GuestAdditions CD image under the devices menu but that did not work. I also tried to install virtualbox-guest-dkms and dkms and none worked.
– Julian Cienfuegos
Feb 28 '17 at 16:14
add a comment |
If that happens once you have the guest additions installed, it may help reconfiguring DKMS
dpkg-reconfigure virtualbox-guest-dkms
It happens to me every time Kernel is upgraded and the above provides the solution.
3
Don't forget to install thedkms
package too. It's not a dependency, but if you have it installed, kernel upgrade hooks will rebuild the Virtualbox kernel modules automatically.
– gertvdijk
Dec 4 '14 at 13:56
add a comment |
If that happens once you have the guest additions installed, it may help reconfiguring DKMS
dpkg-reconfigure virtualbox-guest-dkms
It happens to me every time Kernel is upgraded and the above provides the solution.
3
Don't forget to install thedkms
package too. It's not a dependency, but if you have it installed, kernel upgrade hooks will rebuild the Virtualbox kernel modules automatically.
– gertvdijk
Dec 4 '14 at 13:56
add a comment |
If that happens once you have the guest additions installed, it may help reconfiguring DKMS
dpkg-reconfigure virtualbox-guest-dkms
It happens to me every time Kernel is upgraded and the above provides the solution.
If that happens once you have the guest additions installed, it may help reconfiguring DKMS
dpkg-reconfigure virtualbox-guest-dkms
It happens to me every time Kernel is upgraded and the above provides the solution.
answered Dec 4 '14 at 13:54
Dr. WindowsDr. Windows
9112
9112
3
Don't forget to install thedkms
package too. It's not a dependency, but if you have it installed, kernel upgrade hooks will rebuild the Virtualbox kernel modules automatically.
– gertvdijk
Dec 4 '14 at 13:56
add a comment |
3
Don't forget to install thedkms
package too. It's not a dependency, but if you have it installed, kernel upgrade hooks will rebuild the Virtualbox kernel modules automatically.
– gertvdijk
Dec 4 '14 at 13:56
3
3
Don't forget to install the
dkms
package too. It's not a dependency, but if you have it installed, kernel upgrade hooks will rebuild the Virtualbox kernel modules automatically.– gertvdijk
Dec 4 '14 at 13:56
Don't forget to install the
dkms
package too. It's not a dependency, but if you have it installed, kernel upgrade hooks will rebuild the Virtualbox kernel modules automatically.– gertvdijk
Dec 4 '14 at 13:56
add a comment |
For those who already have the guest extensions and additions , you should go check for additional drivers and install the proprietary video driver for virtualbox , then reset your machine
add a comment |
For those who already have the guest extensions and additions , you should go check for additional drivers and install the proprietary video driver for virtualbox , then reset your machine
add a comment |
For those who already have the guest extensions and additions , you should go check for additional drivers and install the proprietary video driver for virtualbox , then reset your machine
For those who already have the guest extensions and additions , you should go check for additional drivers and install the proprietary video driver for virtualbox , then reset your machine
answered Jun 10 '14 at 23:43
kommradHomerkommradHomer
1515
1515
add a comment |
add a comment |
I had this problem as well running a newly installed version of VirtualBox (VirtualBox 6.0). I tried installing the aforementioned packages but had no luck. My solution was simpler than I had anticipated. While the machine is powered off, go to:
Settings (of the VM) > Display > Graphics Controller > and select "VBoxVGA"
VirtualBox had set this option to "VMSVGA" by default for me. Fortunately, I noticed this subtle difference when comparing the settings between some of my virtual machines. I hope this works for you as well!
add a comment |
I had this problem as well running a newly installed version of VirtualBox (VirtualBox 6.0). I tried installing the aforementioned packages but had no luck. My solution was simpler than I had anticipated. While the machine is powered off, go to:
Settings (of the VM) > Display > Graphics Controller > and select "VBoxVGA"
VirtualBox had set this option to "VMSVGA" by default for me. Fortunately, I noticed this subtle difference when comparing the settings between some of my virtual machines. I hope this works for you as well!
add a comment |
I had this problem as well running a newly installed version of VirtualBox (VirtualBox 6.0). I tried installing the aforementioned packages but had no luck. My solution was simpler than I had anticipated. While the machine is powered off, go to:
Settings (of the VM) > Display > Graphics Controller > and select "VBoxVGA"
VirtualBox had set this option to "VMSVGA" by default for me. Fortunately, I noticed this subtle difference when comparing the settings between some of my virtual machines. I hope this works for you as well!
I had this problem as well running a newly installed version of VirtualBox (VirtualBox 6.0). I tried installing the aforementioned packages but had no luck. My solution was simpler than I had anticipated. While the machine is powered off, go to:
Settings (of the VM) > Display > Graphics Controller > and select "VBoxVGA"
VirtualBox had set this option to "VMSVGA" by default for me. Fortunately, I noticed this subtle difference when comparing the settings between some of my virtual machines. I hope this works for you as well!
answered Dec 23 '18 at 16:45
uceieluezuceieluez
411
411
add a comment |
add a comment |
I have installed and removed Guest Additions multible times (either from 'Devices' menu or from terminal) with no luck. I have noticed that while doing this, i was getting some terminal messages regarding DKMS.
So... i tried to install DKMS separetely and boom! Full screen with high resolution again! So to summarise:
- Install Guest Additions (Devices->Insert Guest Additions CD image...)
- Open a terminal and type this
sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-dkms
- Restart
Hope it helps.
add a comment |
I have installed and removed Guest Additions multible times (either from 'Devices' menu or from terminal) with no luck. I have noticed that while doing this, i was getting some terminal messages regarding DKMS.
So... i tried to install DKMS separetely and boom! Full screen with high resolution again! So to summarise:
- Install Guest Additions (Devices->Insert Guest Additions CD image...)
- Open a terminal and type this
sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-dkms
- Restart
Hope it helps.
add a comment |
I have installed and removed Guest Additions multible times (either from 'Devices' menu or from terminal) with no luck. I have noticed that while doing this, i was getting some terminal messages regarding DKMS.
So... i tried to install DKMS separetely and boom! Full screen with high resolution again! So to summarise:
- Install Guest Additions (Devices->Insert Guest Additions CD image...)
- Open a terminal and type this
sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-dkms
- Restart
Hope it helps.
I have installed and removed Guest Additions multible times (either from 'Devices' menu or from terminal) with no luck. I have noticed that while doing this, i was getting some terminal messages regarding DKMS.
So... i tried to install DKMS separetely and boom! Full screen with high resolution again! So to summarise:
- Install Guest Additions (Devices->Insert Guest Additions CD image...)
- Open a terminal and type this
sudo apt-get install virtualbox-guest-dkms
- Restart
Hope it helps.
answered Sep 28 '16 at 9:52
MarioMario
11314
11314
add a comment |
add a comment |
In addition to ensuring that guest additions is actually installed in the guest machine you should also check the 'Auto-Resize Guest Display' option in the 'View' menu in Virtuablbox (on the host machine).
add a comment |
In addition to ensuring that guest additions is actually installed in the guest machine you should also check the 'Auto-Resize Guest Display' option in the 'View' menu in Virtuablbox (on the host machine).
add a comment |
In addition to ensuring that guest additions is actually installed in the guest machine you should also check the 'Auto-Resize Guest Display' option in the 'View' menu in Virtuablbox (on the host machine).
In addition to ensuring that guest additions is actually installed in the guest machine you should also check the 'Auto-Resize Guest Display' option in the 'View' menu in Virtuablbox (on the host machine).
answered Jun 22 '17 at 7:30
miposmipos
11
11
add a comment |
add a comment |
I tried all of the suggested solutions:
- In the guest machine (Kubuntu 18.04), I installed 'virtualbox-guest-additions-iso' (thanks to Moshe Beeri)
- Installed 'virtualbox-guest-dkms' (thanks to Dr. Windows for the hint)
- While the guest machine is turned off, I checked if 'Maximum Guest Screen Size' is set to 'Automatic' (saw this suggestion in another post)
- Then I changed the 'Graphics Controller' to 'VBoxVGA'. (thanks to uceieluez)
Only after the 4th step the resolution of the guest machine has been fixed. Now it automatically resize to fit the virtual machine window.
I am not sure if the fix was because of changing the graphics controller or all of the above. Anyway, thank you all.
add a comment |
I tried all of the suggested solutions:
- In the guest machine (Kubuntu 18.04), I installed 'virtualbox-guest-additions-iso' (thanks to Moshe Beeri)
- Installed 'virtualbox-guest-dkms' (thanks to Dr. Windows for the hint)
- While the guest machine is turned off, I checked if 'Maximum Guest Screen Size' is set to 'Automatic' (saw this suggestion in another post)
- Then I changed the 'Graphics Controller' to 'VBoxVGA'. (thanks to uceieluez)
Only after the 4th step the resolution of the guest machine has been fixed. Now it automatically resize to fit the virtual machine window.
I am not sure if the fix was because of changing the graphics controller or all of the above. Anyway, thank you all.
add a comment |
I tried all of the suggested solutions:
- In the guest machine (Kubuntu 18.04), I installed 'virtualbox-guest-additions-iso' (thanks to Moshe Beeri)
- Installed 'virtualbox-guest-dkms' (thanks to Dr. Windows for the hint)
- While the guest machine is turned off, I checked if 'Maximum Guest Screen Size' is set to 'Automatic' (saw this suggestion in another post)
- Then I changed the 'Graphics Controller' to 'VBoxVGA'. (thanks to uceieluez)
Only after the 4th step the resolution of the guest machine has been fixed. Now it automatically resize to fit the virtual machine window.
I am not sure if the fix was because of changing the graphics controller or all of the above. Anyway, thank you all.
I tried all of the suggested solutions:
- In the guest machine (Kubuntu 18.04), I installed 'virtualbox-guest-additions-iso' (thanks to Moshe Beeri)
- Installed 'virtualbox-guest-dkms' (thanks to Dr. Windows for the hint)
- While the guest machine is turned off, I checked if 'Maximum Guest Screen Size' is set to 'Automatic' (saw this suggestion in another post)
- Then I changed the 'Graphics Controller' to 'VBoxVGA'. (thanks to uceieluez)
Only after the 4th step the resolution of the guest machine has been fixed. Now it automatically resize to fit the virtual machine window.
I am not sure if the fix was because of changing the graphics controller or all of the above. Anyway, thank you all.
answered 19 mins ago
mohammad.yousefmohammad.yousef
12
12
add a comment |
add a comment |
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