![]() ![]() After I followed this guide (with slight adjustments for the Debian system as the guide is for Red Hat-based systems using the yum/DNF package management system) both guest systems were able to run seamless mode no-problem. I thought everything was done on the host, I did not realize these systems required me to follow a guide like this on the guest OS too. The issue was essentially the result of my misunderstanding of how to properly install VirtualBox guest modules. ![]() Keep in mind my programming and technical knowledge is limited, so please keep the technical discourse in your answer to a minimum. I have enabled 3D acceleration and bidirectional clipboard (although the clipboard does not appear to be working for either machine) with 64 MB display memory, 4096 MB RAM, 64 GB HDD (for Debian, that is Fedora is using 128 GB) and any other helpful detail I will be happy to provide. ![]() I have installed the Oracle VM VirtualBox Extension Pack (version 5.0.0r101573), if you are wondering. If you are wondering why I am mentioning this Fedora glitch, it is in case it helps you in solving my problem with my Debian machine, this question is just about the Debian machine (although if your answer is applicable to the Fedora machine too a brief mention of this fact would be appreciated). ![]() I have attempted to change the screen resolution from within the guest machine itself, but I notice for both Debian and Fedora 1024x768 is the largest display they are allowing. Fedora 22 has the same issue as Debian: it runs 1024x768 screen resolution, when it is supposed to be occupying the whole screen. I have six other Virtual machines installed on my PC, for each of the following OSs (each 64-bit):Īll but the Fedora 22 machine runs seamless mode just fine (i.e., full screen occupies all 1366x768 pixels of my screen and not just 1024x768 of it). Neither "Seamless Mode" nor "Auto-resize Guest Display" options are allowed under the, "View" drop-down menu. I would like to adjust the screen resolution for my Debian 8.1 Virtual Machine (running in VirtualBox 5 on 64-bit Windows 10) from 1024x768 to 1366x768 (which for me would be full screen). ![]()
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