![]() ![]() Preview of settings on Host OS that caused me issue with maximum resolution on Guest OS If none of the answers helps you fixing the issue (like it was situation with me), then verify on your Host OS that in "Screen resolution" window ( Control Panel > Appearance and Personalization > Display) whether the displays are aligned and not like in picture from the following link: Hit Ctrl+ Alt+ Backspace to restart your Virtual Box instance, log in and enjoy your new screen resolution options! Once you have completed the previous step, you are done. If you just hit save here you would have overwritten the backup file you created which is not what we want. You must now do a "save as" but be careful here as this time we need to call the file nf again. (you will only need to do this for the ones under bit depth 24 and 16) ![]() Do this by either inserting it before the other listed resolutions in the exact same manner or typing it over one of the others. The idea here is to have your favorite screen resolution included in this list. The ones you will be concerned about will be listed under bit depth 24 or bit depth 16 (as these depths are the ones that give you a large array of colors.) You now need to hunt through the text until you see the display resolutions listed. First make a backup of this file by going to File then Save as and change the filename to nf The text editor loads and you should see a lot of text in the window. It will ask you for a password which is the same as the one you log in with(see sudo). Type sudo gedit /etc/X11/nf (case sensitive) Open the terminal window ( Applications > Accessories then Terminal) If the resolution you want is not one of the newly listed ones displayed then follow these steps: You should now have more options than the three low resolution options you had at the beginning of the day! Log onto the Ubuntu desktop and go to System > Preferences then Screen Resolution. You now need to reboot the virtual machine or press Ctrl+ Alt+ Backspace. n (yes, that is a full stop before the slash!)Īfter you hit enter and it has done its stuff, the files are now accessible from Ubuntu. Next type dir (You should see n among the files displayed)įinally type sudo sh. Type cd /media/cdrom0 (then hit enter, there is a space after cd!) The terminal window is where you will run the file from, but first we must navigate to the correct directory. You must run the file with some admin permissions so do that this way.Ĭlick inside the Ubuntu screen again then go to Applications > Accessories then Terminal. You will see a window pop up inside Ubuntu showing you that there are some new files mounted in a virtual CDROM drive. Go to top of virtual window, click on devices then select Install Guest Additions My host OS is Windows 7 64-bit, and I'm running VirtualBox 4.1.18.Hit your host key(right Ctrl by default)so you can get your mouse pointer outside the virtual machine. I tried increasing it to 256MB, but with no effect: the guest is still six pixels too narrow. When I created the VM, its display memory was already defaulted to 128 MB. This answer suggested giving the VM 128MB of video memory, and claimed no problems getting 1366x768 afterward. ![]() I'm using version 4.1.18 and seeing the same problem they claim to have fixed, so either they broke it again, they were wrong about ever having fixed it, or my problem is something else entirely. This user had the same problem, but the accepted answer is "install the Guest Additions", which I've already done that got me to 1360, but not to 1366.Īccording to the VirtualBox ticket tracker, there used to be a bug where the guest's screen width would be rounded down to the nearest multiple of 8, but they claim to have fixed the bug in version 3.2.12. So there's a three-pixel black bar at the left and right sides of the display. When VirtualBox is "fullscreen", the guest is only 1360x768 - six pixels too narrow. The problem is, VirtualBox refuses to run the guest at 1366x768. Windows 8 disables some of its features if the resolution is less than 1366x768, so I need to run the guest OS fullscreen. I'm trying to run Windows 8 in VirtualBox. ![]()
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