

You will get a dialog box for creating various virtual hard disk types, and there are several hard disk types listed here. By default, VirtualBox® will automatically fill the "Create a virtual hard disk now" radio button. Now we need to set up the hard disk size. There's no screenshot for this one, just change the value based on your available memory. Keep in mind that VirtualBox® is only going to use this memory while the virtual machine is running. If you've got memory to spare, allocate 2 to 4 GB (2048 MB or 4096 MB) - or more. That will not be optimum for any modern OS, including Rocky Linux. By default, VirtualBox® will automatically fill this to 1024 MB. Next, we need to allocate some RAM for this machine.

The machine used to build this documentation was running Linux but, you can use any of the supported operating systems. This document is an attempt to give a step-by-step set of instructions for getting Rocky Linux up and running in VirtualBox®. The problems people usually report often involve video. It has been tested multiple times going back to the release candidate, and works just fine. Once in a while, someone posts that they are having trouble getting Rocky Linux to run in VirtualBox®. VirtualBox® is a powerful virtualization product for both enterprise and home use. Virtualbox virtualization Rocky on VirtualBox ¶ Introduction ¶ Verifying DISA STIG Compliance with OpenSCAP - Part 2 Host-based Intrustion Detection System (HIDS)īash - Conditional structures if and case Building and Installing Custom Linux KernelsĪutomatic Template Creation - Packer - Ansible - VMware vSphere
