summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/doc/manual/en_US/SDKRef.xml
blob: 307d13f6e160e812f4b212648a6a4404f7c718bb (plain)
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!--
    Copyright (C) 2006-2023 Oracle and/or its affiliates.

    This file is part of VirtualBox base platform packages, as
    available from https://www.virtualbox.org.

    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
    modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
    as published by the Free Software Foundation, in version 3 of the
    License.

    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
    WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU
    General Public License for more details.

    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
    along with this program; if not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses>.

    SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0-only
-->
<!DOCTYPE book PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
  "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd"[
<!ENTITY % all.entities SYSTEM "all-entities.ent">
%all.entities;
]>

<book>
  <bookinfo>
    <title>&VBOX_PRODUCT;</title>

    <subtitle>Programming Guide and Reference</subtitle>

    <edition>Version &VBOX_VERSION_STRING;</edition>

    <corpauthor>&VBOX_VENDOR;</corpauthor>

    <address>http://www.virtualbox.org</address>

    <copyright>
      <year>2004-&VBOX_C_YEAR;</year>

      <holder>&VBOX_VENDOR;</holder>
    </copyright>
  </bookinfo>

  <chapter>
    <title>Introduction</title>

    <para>VirtualBox comes with comprehensive support for third-party
    developers. This Software Development Kit (SDK) contains all the
    documentation and interface files that are needed to write code that
    interacts with VirtualBox.</para>

    <sect1>
      <title>Modularity: the building blocks of VirtualBox</title>

      <para>VirtualBox is cleanly separated into several layers, which can be
      visualized like in the picture below:</para>

      <mediaobject>
        <imageobject>
          <imagedata align="center" fileref="images/vbox-components.png"
                     width="12cm"/>
        </imageobject>
      </mediaobject>

      <para>The orange area represents code that runs in kernel mode, the blue
      area represents userspace code.</para>

      <para>At the bottom of the stack resides the hypervisor -- the core of
      the virtualization engine, controlling execution of the virtual machines
      and making sure they do not conflict with each other or whatever the
      host computer is doing otherwise.</para>

      <para>On top of the hypervisor, additional internal modules provide
      extra functionality. For example, the RDP server, which can deliver the
      graphical output of a VM remotely to an RDP client, is a separate module
      that is only loosely tacked into the virtual graphics device. Live
      Migration and Resource Monitor are additional modules currently in the
      process of being added to VirtualBox.</para>

      <para>What is primarily of interest for purposes of the SDK is the API
      layer block that sits on top of all the previously mentioned blocks.
      This API, which we call the <emphasis role="bold">"Main API"</emphasis>,
      exposes the entire feature set of the virtualization engine below. It is
      completely documented in this SDK Reference -- see <xref
      linkend="sdkref_classes"/> and <xref linkend="sdkref_enums"/> -- and
      available to anyone who wishes to control VirtualBox programmatically.
      We chose the name "Main API" to differentiate it from other programming
      interfaces of VirtualBox that may be publicly accessible.</para>

      <para>With the Main API, you can create, configure, start, stop and
      delete virtual machines, retrieve performance statistics about running
      VMs, configure the VirtualBox installation in general, and more. In
      fact, internally, the front-end programs
      <computeroutput>VirtualBox</computeroutput> and
      <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> use nothing but this API as
      well -- there are no hidden backdoors into the virtualization engine for
      our own front-ends. This ensures the entire Main API is both
      well-documented and well-tested. (The same applies to
      <computeroutput>VBoxHeadless</computeroutput>, which is not shown in the
      image.)</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1 id="webservice-or-com">
      <title>Two guises of the same "Main API": the web service or
      COM/XPCOM</title>

      <para>There are several ways in which the Main API can be called by
      other code:<orderedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualBox comes with a <emphasis role="bold">web
            service</emphasis> that maps nearly the entire Main API. The web
            service ships in a stand-alone executable
            (<computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput>) that, when running,
            acts as an HTTP server, accepts SOAP connections and processes
            them.</para>

            <para>Since the entire web service API is publicly described in a
            web service description file (in WSDL format), you can write
            client programs that call the web service in any language with a
            toolkit that understands WSDL. These days, that includes most
            programming languages that are available: Java, C++, .NET, PHP,
            Python, Perl and probably many more.</para>

            <para>All of this is explained in detail in subsequent chapters of
            this book.</para>

            <para>There are two ways in which you can write client code that
            uses the web service:<orderedlist>
                <listitem>
                  <para>For Java as well as Python, the SDK contains
                  easy-to-use classes that allow you to use the web service in
                  an object-oriented, straightforward manner. We shall refer
                  to this as the <emphasis role="bold">"object-oriented web
                  service (OOWS)"</emphasis>.</para>

                  <para>The OO bindings for Java are described in <xref
                  linkend="javaapi"/>, those for Python in <xref
                  linkend="glue-python-ws"/>.</para>
                </listitem>

                <listitem>
                  <para>Alternatively, you can use the web service directly,
                  without the object-oriented client layer. We shall refer to
                  this as the <emphasis role="bold">"raw web
                  service"</emphasis>.</para>

                  <para>You will then have neither native object orientation
                  nor full type safety, since web services are neither
                  object-oriented nor stateful. However, in this way, you can
                  write client code even in languages for which we do not ship
                  object-oriented client code; all you need is a programming
                  language with a toolkit that can parse WSDL and generate
                  client wrapper code from it.</para>

                  <para>We describe this further in <xref
                  linkend="raw-webservice"/>, with samples for Java and
                  Perl.</para>
                </listitem>
              </orderedlist></para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>Internally, for portability and easier maintenance, the Main
            API is implemented using the <emphasis role="bold">Component
            Object Model (COM), </emphasis> an interprocess mechanism for
            software components originally introduced by Microsoft for
            Microsoft Windows. On a Windows host, VirtualBox will use
            Microsoft COM; on other hosts where COM is not present, it ships
            with XPCOM, a free software implementation of COM originally
            created by the Mozilla project for their browsers.</para>

            <para>So, if you are familiar with COM and the C++ programming
            language (or with any other programming language that can handle
            COM/XPCOM objects, such as Java, Visual Basic or C#), then you can
            use the COM/XPCOM API directly. VirtualBox comes with all
            necessary files and documentation to build fully functional COM
            applications. For an introduction, please see <xref
            linkend="api_com"/> below.</para>

            <para>The VirtualBox front-ends (the graphical user interfaces as
            well as the command line), which are all written in C++, use
            COM/XPCOM to call the Main API. Technically, the web service is
            another front-end to this COM API, mapping almost all of it to
            SOAP clients.</para>
          </listitem>
        </orderedlist></para>

      <para>If you wonder which way to choose, here are a few
      comparisons:<table>
          <title>Comparison web service vs. COM/XPCOM</title>

          <tgroup cols="2">
            <tbody>
              <row>
                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Web service</emphasis></entry>

                <entry><emphasis role="bold">COM/XPCOM</emphasis></entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Pro:</emphasis> Easy to use with
                Java and Python with the object-oriented web service;
                extensive support even with other languages (C++, .NET, PHP,
                Perl and others)</entry>

                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Con:</emphasis> Usable from
                languages where COM bridge available (most languages on
                Windows platform, Python and C++ on other hosts)</entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Pro:</emphasis> Client can be on
                remote machine</entry>

                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Con: </emphasis>Client must be on
                the same host where virtual machine is executed</entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Con: </emphasis>Significant
                overhead due to XML marshalling over the wire for each method
                call</entry>

                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Pro: </emphasis>Relatively low
                invocation overhead</entry>
              </row>
            </tbody>
          </tgroup>
        </table></para>

      <para>In the following chapters, we will describe the different ways in
      which to program VirtualBox, starting with the method that is easiest to
      use and then increase complexity as we go along.</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1 id="api_soap_intro">
      <title>About web services in general</title>

      <para>Web services are a particular type of programming interface.
      Whereas, with "normal" programming, a program calls an application
      programming interface (API) defined by another program or the operating
      system and both sides of the interface have to agree on the calling
      convention and, in most cases, use the same programming language, web
      services use Internet standards such as HTTP and XML to
      communicate.<footnote>
          <para>In some ways, web services promise to deliver the same thing
          as CORBA and DCOM did years ago. However, while these previous
          technologies relied on specific binary protocols and thus proved to
          be difficult to use between diverging platforms, web services
          circumvent these incompatibilities by using text-only standards like
          HTTP and XML. On the downside (and, one could say, typical of things
          related to XML), a lot of standards are involved before a web
          service can be implemented. Many of the standards invented around
          XML are used one way or another. As a result, web services are slow
          and verbose, and the details can be incredibly messy. The relevant
          standards here are called SOAP and WSDL, where SOAP describes the
          format of the messages that are exchanged (an XML document wrapped
          in an HTTP header), and WSDL is an XML format that describes a
          complete API provided by a web service. WSDL in turn uses XML Schema
          to describe types, which is not exactly terse either. However, as
          you will see from the samples provided in this chapter, the
          VirtualBox web service shields you from these details and is easy to
          use.</para>
        </footnote></para>

      <para>In order to successfully use a web service, a number of things are
      required -- primarily, a web service accepting connections; service
      descriptions; and then a client that connects to that web service. The
      connections are governed by the SOAP standard, which describes how
      messages are to be exchanged between a service and its clients; the
      service descriptions are governed by WSDL.</para>

      <para>In the case of VirtualBox, this translates into the following
      three components:<orderedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>The VirtualBox web service (the "server"): this is the
            <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> executable shipped
            with VirtualBox. Once you start this executable (which acts as a
            HTTP server on a specific TCP/IP port), clients can connect to the
            web service and thus control a VirtualBox installation.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualBox also comes with WSDL files that describe the
            services provided by the web service. You can find these files in
            the <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/webservice/</computeroutput>
            directory. These files are understood by the web service toolkits
            that are shipped with most programming languages and enable you to
            easily access a web service even if you don't use our
            object-oriented client layers. VirtualBox is shipped with
            pregenerated web service glue code for several languages (Python,
            Perl, Java).</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>A client that connects to the web service in order to
            control the VirtualBox installation.</para>

            <para>Unless you play with some of the samples shipped with
            VirtualBox, this needs to be written by you.</para>
          </listitem>
        </orderedlist></para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1 id="runvboxwebsrv">
      <title>Running the web service</title>

      <para>The web service ships in an stand-alone executable,
      <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput>, that, when running, acts as
      a HTTP server, accepts SOAP connections and processes them -- remotely
      or from the same machine.<note>
          <para>The web service executable is not contained with the
          VirtualBox SDK, but instead ships with the standard VirtualBox
          binary package for your specific platform. Since the SDK contains
          only platform-independent text files and documentation, the binaries
          are instead shipped with the platform-specific packages. For this
          reason the information how to run it as a service is included in the
          VirtualBox documentation.</para>
        </note></para>

      <para>The <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> program, which
      implements the web service, is a text-mode (console) program which,
      after being started, simply runs until it is interrupted with Ctrl-C or
      a kill command.</para>

      <para>Once the web service is started, it acts as a front-end to the
      VirtualBox installation of the user account that it is running under. In
      other words, if the web service is run under the user account of
      <computeroutput>user1</computeroutput>, it will see and manipulate the
      virtual machines and other data represented by the VirtualBox data of
      that user (for example, on a Linux machine, under
      <computeroutput>/home/user1/.config/VirtualBox</computeroutput>; see the
      VirtualBox User Manual for details on where this data is stored).</para>

      <sect2 id="vboxwebsrv-ref">
        <title>Command line options of vboxwebsrv</title>

        <para>The web service supports the following command line
        options:</para>

        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--help</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-h</computeroutput>): print a brief summary of
            command line options.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--background</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-b</computeroutput>): run the web service as a
            background daemon. This option is not supported on Windows
            hosts.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--host</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-H</computeroutput>): This specifies the host to
            bind to and defaults to "localhost".</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--port</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-p</computeroutput>): This specifies which port to
            bind to on the host and defaults to 18083.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--ssl</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-s</computeroutput>): This enables SSL
            support.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--keyfile</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-K</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
            containing the server private key and the certificate. This is a
            mandatory parameter if SSL is enabled.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--passwordfile</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-a</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
            containing the password for the server private key. If unspecified
            or an empty string is specified this is interpreted as an empty
            password (i.e. the private key is not protected by a password). If
            the file name <computeroutput>-</computeroutput> is specified then
            then the password is read from the standard input stream, otherwise
            from the specified file. The user is responsible for appropriate
            access rights to protect the confidential password.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--cacert</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-c</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
            containing the CA certificate appropriate for the server
            certificate.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--capath</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-C</computeroutput>): This specifies the directory
            containing several CA certificates appropriate for the server
            certificate.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--dhfile</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-D</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
            containing the DH key. Alternatively it can contain the number of
            bits of the DH key to generate. If left empty, RSA is used.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--randfile</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-r</computeroutput>): This specifies the file name
            containing the seed for the random number generator. If left empty,
            an operating system specific source of the seed.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--timeout</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-t</computeroutput>): This specifies the session
            timeout, in seconds, and defaults to 300 (five minutes). A web
            service client that has logged on but makes no calls to the web
            service will automatically be disconnected after the number of
            seconds specified here, as if it had called the
            <computeroutput>IWebSessionManager::logoff()</computeroutput>
            method provided by the web service itself.</para>

            <para>It is normally vital that each web service client call this
            method, as the web service can accumulate large amounts of memory
            when running, especially if a web service client does not properly
            release managed object references. As a result, this timeout value
            should not be set too high, especially on machines with a high
            load on the web service, or the web service may eventually deny
            service.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--check-interval</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-i</computeroutput>): This specifies the interval
            in which the web service checks for timed-out clients, in seconds,
            and defaults to 5. This normally does not need to be
            changed.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--threads</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-T</computeroutput>): This specifies the maximum
            number or worker threads, and defaults to 100. This normally does
            not need to be changed.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--keepalive</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-k</computeroutput>): This specifies the maximum
            number of requests which can be sent in one web service connection,
            and defaults to 100. This normally does not need to be
            changed.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--authentication</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-A</computeroutput>): This specifies the desired
            web service authentication method. If the parameter is not
            specified or the empty string is specified it does not change the
            authentication method, otherwise it is set to the specified value.
            Using this parameter is a good measure against accidental
            misconfiguration, as the web service ensures periodically that it
            isn't changed.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--verbose</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-v</computeroutput>): Normally, the web service
            outputs only brief messages to the console each time a request is
            served. With this option, the web service prints much more detailed
            data about every request and the COM methods that those requests
            are mapped to internally, which can be useful for debugging client
            programs.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--pidfile</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-P</computeroutput>): Name of the PID file which is
            created when the daemon was started.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--logfile</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-F</computeroutput>)
            <computeroutput>&lt;file&gt;</computeroutput>: If this is
            specified, the web service not only prints its output to the
            console, but also writes it to the specified file. The file is
            created if it does not exist; if it does exist, new output is
            appended to it. This is useful if you run the web service
            unattended and need to debug problems after they have
            occurred.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--logrotate</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-R</computeroutput>): Number of old log files to
            keep, defaults to 10. Log rotation is disabled if set to 0.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--logsize</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-S</computeroutput>): Maximum size of log file in
            bytes, defaults to 100MB. Log rotation is triggered if the file
            grows beyond this limit.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>--loginterval</computeroutput> (or
            <computeroutput>-I</computeroutput>): Maximum time interval to be
            put in a log file before rotation is triggered, in seconds, and
            defaults to one day.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2 id="websrv_authenticate">
        <title>Authenticating at web service logon</title>

        <para>As opposed to the COM/XPCOM variant of the Main API, a client
        that wants to use the web service must first log on by calling the
        <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon">IWebsessionManager::logon()</link>
        API that is specific to the
        web service. Logon is necessary for the web service to be stateful;
        internally, it maintains a session for each client that connects to
        it.</para>

        <para>The <computeroutput>IWebsessionManager::logon()</computeroutput>
        API takes a user name and a password as arguments, which the web
        service then passes to a customizable authentication plugin that
        performs the actual authentication.</para>

        <para>For testing purposes, it is recommended that you first disable
        authentication with this command:
        <screen>VBoxManage setproperty websrvauthlibrary null</screen></para>

        <para><warning>
            <para>This will cause all logons to succeed, regardless of user
            name or password. This should of course not be used in a
            production environment.</para>
          </warning>Generally, the mechanism by which clients are
        authenticated is configurable by way of the
        <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> command:</para>

        <para><screen>VBoxManage setproperty websrvauthlibrary default|null|&lt;library&gt;</screen></para>

        <para>This way you can specify any shared object/dynamic link module
        that conforms with the specifications for VirtualBox external
        authentication modules as laid out in section <emphasis
        role="bold">VRDE authentication</emphasis> of the VirtualBox User
        Manual; the web service uses the same kind of modules as the
        VirtualBox VRDE server. For technical details on VirtualBox external
        authentication modules see <xref linkend="vbox-auth"/></para>

        <para>By default, after installation, the web service uses the
        VBoxAuth module that ships with VirtualBox. This module uses PAM on
        Linux hosts to authenticate users. Any valid username/password
        combination is accepted, it does not have to be the username and
        password of the user running the web service daemon. Unless
        <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> runs as root, PAM
        authentication can fail, because sometimes the file
        <computeroutput>/etc/shadow</computeroutput>, which is used by PAM, is
        not readable. On most Linux distribution PAM uses a suid root helper
        internally, so make sure you test this before deploying it. One can
        override this behavior by setting the environment variable
        <computeroutput>VBOX_PAM_ALLOW_INACTIVE</computeroutput> which will
        suppress failures when unable to read the shadow password file. Please
        use this variable carefully, and only if you fully understand what
        you're doing.</para>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

  <chapter>
    <title>Environment-specific notes</title>

    <para>The Main API described in <xref linkend="sdkref_classes"/> and
    <xref linkend="sdkref_enums"/> is mostly identical in all the supported
    programming environments which have been briefly mentioned in the
    introduction of this book. As a result, the Main API's general concepts
    described in <xref linkend="concepts"/> are the same whether you use the
    object-oriented web service (OOWS) for JAX-WS or a raw web service
    connection via, say, Perl, or whether you use C++ COM bindings.</para>

    <para>Some things are different depending on your environment, however.
    These differences are explained in this chapter.</para>

    <sect1 id="glue">
      <title>Using the object-oriented web service (OOWS)</title>

      <para>As explained in <xref linkend="webservice-or-com"/>, VirtualBox
      ships with client-side libraries for Java, Python and PHP that allow you
      to use the VirtualBox web service in an intuitive, object-oriented way.
      These libraries shield you from the client-side complications of managed
      object references and other implementation details that come with the
      VirtualBox web service. (If you are interested in these complications,
      have a look at <xref linkend="raw-webservice"/>).</para>

      <para>We recommend that you start your experiments with the VirtualBox
      web service by using our object-oriented client libraries for JAX-WS, a
      web service toolkit for Java, which enables you to write code to
      interact with VirtualBox in the simplest manner possible.</para>

      <para>As "interfaces", "attributes" and "methods" are COM concepts,
      please read the documentation in <xref linkend="sdkref_classes"/> and
      <xref linkend="sdkref_enums"/> with the following notes in mind.</para>

      <para>The OOWS bindings attempt to map the Main API as closely as
      possible to the Java, Python and PHP languages. In other words, objects
      are objects, interfaces become classes, and you can call methods on
      objects as you would on local objects.</para>

      <para>The main difference remains with attributes: to read an attribute,
      call a "getXXX" method, with "XXX" being the attribute name with a
      capitalized first letter. So when the Main API Reference says that
      <computeroutput>IMachine</computeroutput> has a "name" attribute (see
      <link linkend="IMachine__name">IMachine::name</link>), call
      <computeroutput>getName()</computeroutput> on an IMachine object to
      obtain a machine's name. Unless the attribute is marked as read-only in
      the documentation, there will also be a corresponding "set"
      method.</para>

      <sect2 id="glue-jax-ws">
        <title>The object-oriented web service for JAX-WS</title>

        <para>JAX-WS is a powerful toolkit by Sun Microsystems to build both
        server and client code with Java. It is part of Java 6 (JDK 1.6), but
        can also be obtained separately for Java 5 (JDK 1.5). The VirtualBox
        SDK comes with precompiled OOWS bindings working with both Java 5 and
        6.</para>

        <para>The following sections explain how to get the JAX-WS sample code
        running and explain a few common practices when using the JAX-WS
        object-oriented web service.</para>

        <sect3>
          <title>Preparations</title>

          <para>Since JAX-WS is already integrated into Java 6, no additional
          preparations are needed for Java 6.</para>

          <para>If you are using Java 5 (JDK 1.5.x), you will first need to
          download and install an external JAX-WS implementation, as Java 5
          does not support JAX-WS out of the box; for example, you can
          download one from here: <ulink
          url="https://jax-ws.dev.java.net/2.1.4/JAXWS2.1.4-20080502.jar">https://jax-ws.dev.java.net/2.1.4/JAXWS2.1.4-20080502.jar</ulink>.
          Then perform the installation (<computeroutput>java -jar
          JAXWS2.1.4-20080502.jar</computeroutput>).</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3>
          <title>Getting started: running the sample code</title>

          <para>To run the OOWS for JAX-WS samples that we ship with the SDK,
          perform the following steps: <orderedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>Open a terminal and change to the directory where the
                JAX-WS samples reside.<footnote>
                    <para>In
                    <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/glue/java/</computeroutput>.</para>
                  </footnote> Examine the header of
                <computeroutput>Makefile</computeroutput> to see if the
                supplied variables (Java compiler, Java executable) and a few
                other details match your system settings.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>To start the VirtualBox web service, open a second
                terminal and change to the directory where the VirtualBox
                executables are located. Then type:
                <screen>./vboxwebsrv -v</screen></para>

                <para>The web service now waits for connections and will run
                until you press Ctrl+C in this second terminal. The -v
                argument causes it to log all connections to the terminal.
                (See <xref linkend="runvboxwebsrv"/> for details on how
                to run the web service.)</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>Back in the first terminal and still in the samples
                directory, to start a simple client example just type:
                <screen>make run16</screen></para>

                <para>if you're on a Java 6 system; on a Java 5 system, run
                <computeroutput>make run15</computeroutput> instead.</para>

                <para>This should work on all Unix-like systems such as Linux
                and Solaris. For Windows systems, use commands similar to what
                is used in the Makefile.</para>

                <para>This will compile the
                <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> code on the
                first call and then execute the resulting
                <computeroutput>clienttest</computeroutput> class to show the
                locally installed VMs (see below).</para>
              </listitem>
            </orderedlist></para>

          <para>The <computeroutput>clienttest</computeroutput> sample
          imitates a few typical command line tasks that
          <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput>, VirtualBox's regular
          command-line front-end, would provide (see the VirtualBox User
          Manual for details). In particular, you can run:<itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>java clienttest show
                vms</computeroutput>: show the virtual machines that are
                registered locally.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>java clienttest list
                hostinfo</computeroutput>: show various information about the
                host this VirtualBox installation runs on.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>java clienttest startvm
                &lt;vmname|uuid&gt;</computeroutput>: start the given virtual
                machine.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>

          <para>The <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> sample
          code illustrates common basic practices how to use the VirtualBox
          OOWS for JAX-WS, which we will explain in more detail in the
          following chapters.</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3>
          <title>Logging on to the web service</title>

          <para>Before a web service client can do anything useful, two
          objects need to be created, as can be seen in the
          <computeroutput>clienttest</computeroutput> constructor:<orderedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>An instance of
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager">IWebsessionManager</link>,
                which is an interface provided by the web service to manage
                "web sessions" -- that is, stateful connections to the web
                service with persistent objects upon which methods can be
                invoked.</para>

                <para>In the OOWS for JAX-WS, the IWebsessionManager class
                must be constructed explicitly, and a URL must be provided in
                the constructor that specifies where the web service (the
                server) awaits connections. The code in
                <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> connects to
                "http://localhost:18083/", which is the default.</para>

                <para>The port number, by default 18083, must match the port
                number given to the
                <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> command line; see
                <xref linkend="vboxwebsrv-ref"/>.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>After that, the code calls
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon">IWebsessionManager::logon()</link>,
                which is the first call that actually communicates with the
                server. This authenticates the client with the web service and
                returns an instance of
                <link linkend="IVirtualBox">IVirtualBox</link>,
                the most fundamental interface of the VirtualBox web service,
                from which all other functionality can be derived.</para>

                <para>If logon doesn't work, please take another look at <xref
                linkend="websrv_authenticate"/>.</para>
              </listitem>
            </orderedlist></para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3>
          <title>Object management</title>

          <para>The current OOWS for JAX-WS has certain memory management
          related limitations. When you no longer need an object, call its
          <link linkend="IManagedObjectRef__release">IManagedObjectRef::release()</link>
          method explicitly, which
          frees appropriate managed reference, as is required by the raw
          web service; see <xref linkend="managed-object-references"/> for
          details. This limitation may be reconsidered in a future version of
          the VirtualBox SDK.</para>
        </sect3>
      </sect2>

      <sect2 id="glue-python-ws">
        <title>The object-oriented web service for Python</title>

        <para>VirtualBox comes with two flavors of a Python API: one for web
        service, discussed here, and one for the COM/XPCOM API discussed in
        <xref linkend="pycom"/>. The client code is mostly similar, except
        for the initialization part, so it is up to the application developer
        to choose the appropriate technology. Moreover, a common Python glue
        layer exists, abstracting out concrete platform access details, see
        <xref linkend="glue-python"/>.</para>

        <para>The minimum supported Python version is 2.6.</para>

        <para>As indicated in <xref linkend="webservice-or-com"/>, the
        COM/XPCOM API gives better performance without the SOAP overhead, and
        does not require a web server to be running. On the other hand, the
        COM/XPCOM Python API requires a suitable Python bridge for your Python
        installation (VirtualBox ships the most important ones for each
        platform<footnote>
            <para>On On Mac OS X only the Python versions bundled with the OS
            are officially supported. This means 2.6 and 2.7 for 10.9 and later.</para>
          </footnote>). On Windows, you can use the Main API from Python if the
          Win32 extensions package for Python<footnote>
            <para>See <ulink
            url="http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=78018">http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=78018</ulink>.</para>
          </footnote> is installed. Versions of Python Win32 extensions earlier
          than 2.16 are known to have bugs, leading to issues with VirtualBox
          Python bindings, so please make sure to use latest available Python
          and Win32 extensions.</para>

        <para>The VirtualBox OOWS for Python relies on the Python ZSI SOAP
        implementation (see <ulink
        url="http://pywebsvcs.sourceforge.net/zsi.html">http://pywebsvcs.sourceforge.net/zsi.html</ulink>),
        which you will need to install locally before trying the examples.
        Most Linux distributions come with package for ZSI, such as
        <computeroutput>python-zsi</computeroutput> in Ubuntu.</para>

        <para>To get started, open a terminal and change to the
        <computeroutput>bindings/glue/python/sample</computeroutput>
        directory, which contains an example of a simple interactive shell
        able to control a VirtualBox instance. The shell is written using the
        API layer, thereby hiding different implementation details, so it is
        actually an example of code share among XPCOM, MSCOM and web services.
        If you are interested in how to interact with the web services layer
        directly, have a look at
        <computeroutput>install/vboxapi/__init__.py</computeroutput> which
        contains the glue layer for all target platforms (i.e. XPCOM, MSCOM
        and web services).</para>

        <para>To start the shell, perform the following commands:
        <screen>/opt/VirtualBox/vboxwebsrv -t 0
            # start web service with object autocollection disabled
export VBOX_PROGRAM_PATH=/opt/VirtualBox
            # your VirtualBox installation directory
export VBOX_SDK_PATH=/home/youruser/vbox-sdk
            # where you've extracted the SDK
./vboxshell.py -w        </screen>
        See <xref linkend="vboxshell"/> for more
        details on the shell's functionality. For you, as a VirtualBox
        application developer, the vboxshell sample could be interesting as an
        example of how to write code targeting both local and remote cases
        (COM/XPCOM and SOAP). The common part of the shell is the same -- the
        only difference is how it interacts with the invocation layer. You can
        use the <computeroutput>connect</computeroutput> shell command to
        connect to remote VirtualBox servers; in this case you can skip
        starting the local web server.</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>The object-oriented web service for PHP</title>

        <para>VirtualBox also comes with object-oriented web service (OOWS)
        wrappers for PHP5. These wrappers rely on the PHP SOAP
        Extension<footnote>
            <para>See
            <ulink url="https://www.php.net/soap">https://www.php.net/soap</ulink>.</para>
          </footnote>, which can be installed by configuring PHP with
        <computeroutput>--enable-soap</computeroutput>.</para>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1 id="raw-webservice">
      <title>Using the raw web service with any language</title>

      <para>The following examples show you how to use the raw web service,
      without the object-oriented client-side code that was described in the
      previous chapter.</para>

      <para>Generally, when reading the documentation in <xref
      linkend="sdkref_classes"/> and <xref linkend="sdkref_enums"/>, due to
      the limitations of SOAP and WSDL lined out in <xref
      linkend="rawws-conventions"/>, please have the following notes in
      mind:</para>

      <para><orderedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Any COM method call becomes a <emphasis role="bold">plain
            function call</emphasis> in the raw web service, with the object
            as an additional first parameter (before the "real" parameters
            listed in the documentation). So when the documentation says that
            the <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> interface
            supports the <computeroutput>createMachine()</computeroutput>
            method (see
            <link linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine">IVirtualBox::createMachine()</link>),
            the web service operation is
            <computeroutput>IVirtualBox_createMachine(...)</computeroutput>,
            and a managed object reference to an
            <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> object must be passed
            as the first argument.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>For <emphasis role="bold">attributes</emphasis> in
            interfaces, there will be at least one "get" function; there will
            also be a "set" function, unless the attribute is "readonly". The
            attribute name will be appended to the "get" or "set" prefix, with
            a capitalized first letter. So, the "version" readonly attribute
            of the <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> interface can
            be retrieved by calling
            <computeroutput>IVirtualBox_getVersion(vbox)</computeroutput>,
            with <computeroutput>vbox</computeroutput> being the VirtualBox
            object.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>Whenever the API documentation says that a method (or an
            attribute getter) returns an <emphasis
            role="bold">object</emphasis>, it will returned a managed object
            reference in the web service instead. As said above, managed
            object references should be released if the web service client
            does not log off again immediately!</para>
          </listitem>
        </orderedlist></para>

      <para></para>

      <sect2 id="webservice-java-sample">
        <title>Raw web service example for Java with Axis</title>

        <para>Axis is an older web service toolkit created by the Apache
        foundation. If your distribution does not have it installed, you can
        get a binary from <ulink
        url="http://www.apache.org">http://www.apache.org</ulink>. The
        following examples assume that you have Axis 1.4 installed.</para>

        <para>The VirtualBox SDK ships with an example for Axis that, again,
        is called <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> and that
        imitates a few of the commands of
        <computeroutput>VBoxManage</computeroutput> over the wire.</para>

        <para>Then perform the following steps:<orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Create a working directory somewhere. Under your
              VirtualBox installation directory, find the
              <computeroutput>sdk/webservice/samples/java/axis/</computeroutput>
              directory and copy the file
              <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput> to your working
              directory.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>Open a terminal in your working directory. Execute the
              following command:
              <screen>java org.apache.axis.wsdl.WSDL2Java /path/to/vboxwebService.wsdl</screen></para>

              <para>The <computeroutput>vboxwebService.wsdl</computeroutput>
              file should be located in the
              <computeroutput>sdk/webservice/</computeroutput>
              directory.</para>

              <para>If this fails, your Apache Axis may not be located on your
              system classpath, and you may have to adjust the CLASSPATH
              environment variable. Something like this:
              <screen>export CLASSPATH="/path-to-axis-1_4/lib/*":$CLASSPATH</screen></para>

              <para>Use the directory where the Axis JAR files are located.
              Mind the quotes so that your shell passes the "*" character to
              the java executable without expanding. Alternatively, add a
              corresponding <computeroutput>-classpath</computeroutput>
              argument to the "java" call above.</para>

              <para>If the command executes successfully, you should see an
              "org" directory with subdirectories containing Java source files
              in your working directory. These classes represent the
              interfaces that the VirtualBox web service offers, as described
              by the WSDL file.</para>

              <para>This is the bit that makes using web services so
              attractive to client developers: if a language's toolkit
              understands WSDL, it can generate large amounts of support code
              automatically. Clients can then easily use this support code and
              can be done with just a few lines of code.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>Next, compile the
              <computeroutput>clienttest.java</computeroutput>
              source:<screen>javac clienttest.java </screen></para>

              <para>This should yield a "clienttest.class" file.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>To start the VirtualBox web service, open a second
              terminal and change to the directory where the VirtualBox
              executables are located. Then type:
              <screen>./vboxwebsrv -v</screen></para>

              <para>The web service now waits for connections and will run
              until you press Ctrl+C in this second terminal. The -v argument
              causes it to log all connections to the terminal. (See <xref
              linkend="runvboxwebsrv"/> for details on how to run the
              web service.)</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>Back in the original terminal where you compiled the Java
              source, run the resulting binary, which will then connect to the
              web service:<screen>java clienttest</screen></para>

              <para>The client sample will connect to the web service (on
              localhost, but the code could be changed to connect remotely if
              the web service was running on a different machine) and make a
              number of method calls. It will output the version number of
              your VirtualBox installation and a list of all virtual machines
              that are currently registered (with a bit of seemingly random
              data, which will be explained later).</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist></para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2 id="raw-webservice-perl">
        <title>Raw web service example for Perl</title>

        <para>We also ship a small sample for Perl. It uses the SOAP::Lite
        perl module to communicate with the VirtualBox web service.</para>

        <para>The
        <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/webservice/perl/lib/</computeroutput>
        directory contains a pre-generated Perl module that allows for
        communicating with the web service from Perl. You can generate such a
        module yourself using the "stubmaker" tool that comes with SOAP::Lite,
        but since that tool is slow as well as sometimes unreliable, we are
        shipping a working module with the SDK for your convenience.</para>

        <para>Perform the following steps:<orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>If SOAP::Lite is not yet installed on your system, you
              will need to install the package first. On Debian-based systems,
              the package is called
              <computeroutput>libsoap-lite-perl</computeroutput>; on Gentoo,
              it's <computeroutput>dev-perl/SOAP-Lite</computeroutput>.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>Open a terminal in the
              <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/webservice/perl/samples/</computeroutput>
              directory.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>To start the VirtualBox web service, open a second
              terminal and change to the directory where the VirtualBox
              executables are located. Then type:
              <screen>./vboxwebsrv -v</screen></para>

              <para>The web service now waits for connections and will run
              until you press Ctrl+C in this second terminal. The -v argument
              causes it to log all connections to the terminal. (See <xref
              linkend="runvboxwebsrv"/> for details on how to run the
              web service.)</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>In the first terminal with the Perl sample, run the
              clienttest.pl script:
              <screen>perl -I ../lib clienttest.pl</screen></para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist></para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Programming considerations for the raw web service</title>

        <para>If you use the raw web service, you need to keep a number of
        things in mind, or you will sooner or later run into issues that are
        not immediately obvious. By contrast, the object-oriented client-side
        libraries described in <xref linkend="glue"/> take care of these
        things automatically and thus greatly simplify using the web
        service.</para>

        <sect3 id="rawws-conventions">
          <title>Fundamental conventions</title>

          <para>If you are familiar with other web services, you may find the
          VirtualBox web service to behave a bit differently to accommodate
          for the fact that VirtualBox web service more or less maps the
          VirtualBox Main COM API. The following main differences had to be
          taken care of:<itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>Web services, as expressed by WSDL, are not
                object-oriented. Even worse, they are normally stateless (or,
                in web services terminology, "loosely coupled"). Web service
                operations are entirely procedural, and one cannot normally
                make assumptions about the state of a web service between
                function calls.</para>

                <para>In particular, this normally means that you cannot work
                on objects in one method call that were created by another
                call.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>By contrast, the VirtualBox Main API, being expressed in
                COM, is object-oriented and works entirely on objects, which
                are grouped into public interfaces, which in turn have
                attributes and methods associated with them.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist> For the VirtualBox web service, this results in
          three fundamental conventions:<orderedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>All <emphasis role="bold">function names</emphasis> in
                the VirtualBox web service consist of an interface name and a
                method name, joined together by an underscore. This is because
                there are only functions ("operations") in WSDL, but no
                classes, interfaces, or methods.</para>

                <para>In addition, all calls to the VirtualBox web service
                (except for logon, see below) take a <emphasis
                role="bold">managed object reference</emphasis> as the first
                argument, representing the object upon which the underlying
                method is invoked. (Managed object references are explained in
                detail below; see <xref
                linkend="managed-object-references"/>.)</para>

                <para>So, when one would normally code, in the pseudo-code of
                an object-oriented language, to invoke a method upon an
                object:<screen>IMachine machine;
result = machine.getName();</screen></para>

                <para>In the VirtualBox web service, this looks something like
                this (again, pseudo-code):<screen>IMachineRef machine;
result = IMachine_getName(machine);</screen></para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>To make the web service stateful, and objects persistent
                between method calls, the VirtualBox web service introduces a
                <emphasis role="bold">session manager</emphasis> (by way of the
                 <link linkend="IWebsessionManager">IWebsessionManager</link>
                interface), which manages object references. Any client wishing
                to interact with the web service must first log on to the
                session manager and in turn receives a managed object reference
                to an object that supports the
                <link linkend="IVirtualBox">IVirtualBox</link>
                interface (the basic interface in the Main API).</para>
              </listitem>
            </orderedlist></para>

          <para>In other words, as opposed to other web services, <emphasis
          role="bold">the VirtualBox web service is both object-oriented and
          stateful.</emphasis></para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3>
          <title>Example: A typical web service client session</title>

          <para>A typical short web service session to retrieve the version
          number of the VirtualBox web service (to be precise, the underlying
          Main API version number) looks like this:<orderedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>A client logs on to the web service by calling
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon">IWebsessionManager::logon()</link>
                with a valid user name and password. See
                <xref linkend="websrv_authenticate"/>
                for details about how authentication works.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>On the server side,
                <computeroutput>vboxwebsrv</computeroutput> creates a session,
                which persists until the client calls
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logoff">IWebsessionManager::logoff()</link>
                or the session times out after a configurable period of
                inactivity (see <xref linkend="vboxwebsrv-ref"/>).</para>

                <para>For the new session, the web service creates an instance
                of <link linkend="IVirtualBox">IVirtualBox</link>.
                This interface is the most central one in the Main API and
                allows access to all other interfaces, either through
                attributes or method calls. For example, IVirtualBox contains
                a list of all virtual machines that are currently registered
                (as they would be listed on the left side of the VirtualBox
                main program).</para>

                <para>The web service then creates a managed object reference
                for this instance of IVirtualBox and returns it to the calling
                client, which receives it as the return value of the logon
                call. Something like this:</para>

                <screen>string oVirtualBox;
oVirtualBox = webservice.IWebsessionManager_logon("user", "pass");</screen>

                <para>(The managed object reference "oVirtualBox" is just a
                string consisting of digits and dashes. However, it is a
                string with a meaning and will be checked by the web service.
                For details, see below. As hinted above,
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon">IWebsessionManager::logon()</link>
                is the <emphasis>only</emphasis> operation provided by the web
                service which does not take a managed object reference as the
                first argument!)</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>The VirtualBox Main API documentation says that the
                <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput> interface has a
                <link linkend="IVirtualBox__version">version</link>
                attribute, which is a string. For each attribute, there is a
                "get" and a "set" method in COM, which maps to according
                operations in the web service. So, to retrieve the "version"
                attribute of this <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput>
                object, the web service client does this:
                <screen>string version;
version = webservice.IVirtualBox_getVersion(oVirtualBox);

print version;</screen></para>

                <para>And it will print
                "&VBOX_VERSION_MAJOR;.&VBOX_VERSION_MINOR;.&VBOX_VERSION_BUILD;".</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>The web service client calls
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logoff">IWebsessionManager::logoff()</link>
                with the VirtualBox managed object reference. This will clean
                up all allocated resources.</para>
              </listitem>
            </orderedlist></para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="managed-object-references">
          <title>Managed object references</title>

          <para>To a web service client, a managed object reference looks like
          a string: two 64-bit hex numbers separated by a dash. This string,
          however, represents a COM object that "lives" in the web service
          process. The two 64-bit numbers encoded in the managed object
          reference represent a session ID (which is the same for all objects
          in the same web service session, i.e. for all objects after one
          logon) and a unique object ID within that session.</para>

          <para>Managed object references are created in two
          situations:<orderedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>When a client logs on, by calling
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon">IWebsessionManager::logon()</link>.</para>

                <para>Upon logon, the websession manager creates one instance
                of <link linkend="IVirtualBox">IVirtualBox</link>,
                which can be used for directly performing calls to its
                methods, or used as a parameter for calling some methods of
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager">IWebsessionManager</link>.
                Creating Main API session objects is performed using
                <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__getSessionObject">IWebsessionManager::getSessionObject()</link>.</para>

                <para>(Technically, there is always only one
                <link linkend="IVirtualBox">IVirtualBox</link> object, which
                is shared between all websessions and clients, as it is a COM
                singleton. However, each session receives its own managed
                object reference to it.)</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>Whenever a web service clients invokes an operation
                whose COM implementation creates COM objects.</para>

                <para>For example,
                <link linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine">IVirtualBox::createMachine()</link>
                creates a new instance of
                <link linkend="IMachine">IMachine</link>;
                the COM object returned by the COM method call is then wrapped
                into a managed object reference by the web server, and this
                reference is returned to the web service client.</para>
              </listitem>
            </orderedlist></para>

          <para>Internally, in the web service process, each managed object
          reference is simply a small data structure, containing a COM pointer
          to the "real" COM object, the web session ID and the object ID. This
          structure is allocated on creation and stored efficiently in hashes,
          so that the web service can look up the COM object quickly whenever
          a web service client wishes to make a method call. The random
          session ID also ensures that one web service client cannot intercept
          the objects of another.</para>

          <para>Managed object references are not destroyed automatically and
          must be released by explicitly calling
          <link linkend="IManagedObjectRef__release">IManagedObjectRef::release()</link>.
          This is important, as
          otherwise hundreds or thousands of managed object references (and
          corresponding COM objects, which can consume much more memory!) can
          pile up in the web service process and eventually cause it to deny
          service.</para>

          <para>To reiterate: The underlying COM object, which the reference
          points to, is only freed if the managed object reference is
          released. It is therefore vital that web service clients properly
          clean up after the managed object references that are returned to
          them.</para>

          <para>When a web service client calls
          <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logoff">IWebsessionManager::logoff()</link>,
          all managed object references created during the session are
          automatically freed. For short-lived sessions that do not create a
          lot of objects, logging off may therefore be sufficient, although it
          is certainly not "best practice".</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3>
          <title>Some more detail about web service operation</title>

          <sect4 id="soap">
            <title>SOAP messages</title>

            <para>Whenever a client makes a call to a web service, this
            involves a complicated procedure internally. These calls are
            remote procedure calls. Each such procedure call typically
            consists of two "message" being passed, where each message is a
            plain-text HTTP request with a standard HTTP header and a special
            XML document following. This XML document encodes the name of the
            procedure to call and the argument names and values passed to
            it.</para>

            <para>To give you an idea of what such a message looks like,
            assuming that a web service provides a procedure called
            "SayHello", which takes a string "name" as an argument and returns
            "Hello" with a space and that name appended, the request message
            could look like this:</para>

            <para><screen>&lt;?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?&gt;
&lt;SOAP-ENV:Envelope
 xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/"
 xmlns:SOAP-ENC="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/"
 xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
 xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"
 xmlns:test="http://test/"&gt;
&lt;SOAP-ENV:Body&gt;
   &lt;test:SayHello&gt;
    &lt;name&gt;Peter&lt;/name&gt;
   &lt;/test:SayHello&gt;
 &lt;/SOAP-ENV:Body&gt;
&lt;/SOAP-ENV:Envelope&gt;</screen>A similar message -- the "response" message
            -- would be sent back from the web service to the client,
            containing the return value "Hello Peter".</para>

            <para>Most programming languages provide automatic support to
            generate such messages whenever code in that programming language
            makes such a request. In other words, these programming languages
            allow for writing something like this (in pseudo-C++ code):</para>

            <para><screen>webServiceClass service("localhost", 18083); // server and port
string result = service.SayHello("Peter");  // invoke remote procedure</screen>
            and would, for these two pseudo-lines, automatically perform these
            steps:</para>

            <para><orderedlist>
                <listitem>
                  <para>prepare a connection to a web service running on port
                  18083 of "localhost";</para>
                </listitem>

                <listitem>
                  <para>for the <computeroutput>SayHello()</computeroutput>
                  function of the web service, generate a SOAP message like in
                  the above example by encoding all arguments of the remote
                  procedure call (which could involve all kinds of type
                  conversions and complex marshalling for arrays and
                  structures);</para>
                </listitem>

                <listitem>
                  <para>connect to the web service via HTTP and send that
                  message;</para>
                </listitem>

                <listitem>
                  <para>wait for the web service to send a response
                  message;</para>
                </listitem>

                <listitem>
                  <para>decode that response message and put the return value
                  of the remote procedure into the "result" variable.</para>
                </listitem>
              </orderedlist></para>
          </sect4>

          <sect4 id="wsdl">
            <title>Service descriptions in WSDL</title>

            <para>In the above explanations about SOAP, it was left open how
            the programming language learns about how to translate function
            calls in its own syntax into proper SOAP messages. In other words,
            the programming language needs to know what operations the web
            service supports and what types of arguments are required for the
            operation's data in order to be able to properly serialize and
            deserialize the data to and from the web service. For example, if
            a web service operation expects a number in "double" floating
            point format for a particular parameter, the programming language
            cannot send to it a string instead.</para>

            <para>For this, the Web Service Definition Language (WSDL) was
            invented, another XML substandard that describes exactly what
            operations the web service supports and, for each operation, which
            parameters and types are needed with each request and response
            message. WSDL descriptions can be incredibly verbose, and one of
            the few good things that can be said about this standard is that
            it is indeed supported by most programming languages.</para>

            <para>So, if it is said that a programming language "supports" web
            services, this typically means that a programming language has
            support for parsing WSDL files and somehow integrating the remote
            procedure calls into the native language syntax -- for example,
            like in the Java sample shown in <xref
            linkend="webservice-java-sample"/>.</para>

            <para>For details about how programming languages support web
            services, please refer to the documentation that comes with the
            individual languages. Here are a few pointers:</para>

            <orderedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>For <emphasis role="bold">C++, </emphasis> among many
                others, the gSOAP toolkit is a good option. Parts of gSOAP are
                also used in VirtualBox to implement the VirtualBox web
                service.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>For <emphasis role="bold">Java, </emphasis> there are
                several implementations already described in this document
                (see <xref linkend="glue-jax-ws"/> and <xref
                linkend="webservice-java-sample"/>).</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><emphasis role="bold">Perl</emphasis> supports WSDL via
                the SOAP::Lite package. This in turn comes with a tool called
                <computeroutput>stubmaker.pl</computeroutput> that allows you
                to turn any WSDL file into a Perl package that you can import.
                (You can also import any WSDL file "live" by having it parsed
                every time the script runs, but that can take a while.) You
                can then code (again, assuming the above example):
                <screen>my $result = servicename-&gt;sayHello("Peter");</screen>
                </para>

                <para>A sample that uses SOAP::Lite was described in <xref
                linkend="raw-webservice-perl"/>.</para>
              </listitem>
            </orderedlist>
          </sect4>
        </sect3>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1 id="api_com">
      <title>Using COM/XPCOM directly</title>

      <para>If you do not require <emphasis>remote</emphasis> procedure calls
      such as those offered by the VirtualBox web service, and if you know
      Python or C++ as well as COM, you might find it preferable to program
      VirtualBox's Main API directly via COM.</para>

      <para>COM stands for "Component Object Model" and is a standard
      originally introduced by Microsoft in the 1990s for Microsoft Windows.
      It allows for organizing software in an object-oriented way and across
      processes; code in one process may access objects that live in another
      process.</para>

      <para>COM has several advantages: it is language-neutral, meaning that
      even though all of VirtualBox is internally written in C++, programs
      written in other languages could communicate with it. COM also cleanly
      separates interface from implementation, so that external programs need
      not know anything about the messy and complicated details of VirtualBox
      internals.</para>

      <para>On a Windows host, all parts of VirtualBox will use the COM
      functionality that is native to Windows. On other hosts (including
      Linux), VirtualBox comes with a built-in implementation of XPCOM, as
      originally created by the Mozilla project, which we have enhanced to
      support interprocess communication on a level comparable to Microsoft
      COM. Internally, VirtualBox has an abstraction layer that allows the
      same VirtualBox code to work both with native COM as well as our XPCOM
      implementation.</para>

      <sect2 id="pycom">
        <title>Python COM API</title>

        <para>On Windows, Python scripts can use COM and VirtualBox interfaces
        to control almost all aspects of virtual machine execution. As an
        example, use the following commands to instantiate the VirtualBox
        object and start a VM: <screen>
       vbox = win32com.client.Dispatch("VirtualBox.VirtualBox")
       session = win32com.client.Dispatch("VirtualBox.Session")
       mach = vbox.findMachine("uuid or name  of machine to start")
       progress = mach.launchVMProcess(session, "gui", "")
       progress.waitForCompletion(-1)
      </screen> Also, see
        <computeroutput>/bindings/glue/python/samples/vboxshell.py</computeroutput>
        for more advanced usage scenarious. However, unless you have specific
        requirements, we strongly recommend to use the generic glue layer
        described in the next section to access MS COM objects.</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2 id="glue-python">
        <title>Common Python bindings layer</title>

        <para>As different wrappers ultimately provide access to the same
        underlying API, and to simplify porting and development of Python
        application using the VirtualBox Main API, we developed a common glue
        layer that abstracts out most platform-specific details from the
        application and allows the developer to focus on application logic.
        The VirtualBox installer automatically sets up this glue layer for the
        system default Python installation.</para>

        <para>See <xref linkend="glue-python-setup"/> for details on how to
        set up the glue layer if you want to use a different Python installation,
        or if the VirtualBox installer failed to detect and set it up accordingly.</para>

        <para>The minimum supported Python version is 2.6.</para>

        <para>In this layer, the class
        <computeroutput>VirtualBoxManager</computeroutput> hides most
        platform-specific details. It can be used to access both the local
        (COM) and the web service based API. The following code can be used by
        an application to use the glue layer.</para>

        <screen># This code assumes vboxapi.py from VirtualBox distribution
# being in PYTHONPATH, or installed system-wide
from vboxapi import VirtualBoxManager

# This code initializes VirtualBox manager with default style
# and parameters
virtualBoxManager = VirtualBoxManager(None, None)

# Alternatively, one can be more verbose, and initialize
# glue with web service backend, and provide authentication
# information
virtualBoxManager = VirtualBoxManager("WEBSERVICE",
                                      {'url':'http://myhost.com::18083/',
                                      'user':'me',
                                      'password':'secret'})        </screen>

        <para>We supply the <computeroutput>VirtualBoxManager</computeroutput>
        constructor with 2 arguments: style and parameters. Style defines
        which bindings style to use (could be "MSCOM", "XPCOM" or
        "WEBSERVICE"), and if set to <computeroutput>None</computeroutput>
        defaults to usable platform bindings (MS COM on Windows, XPCOM on
        other platforms). The second argument defines parameters, passed to
        the platform-specific module, as we do in the second example, where we
        pass username and password to be used to authenticate against the web
        service.</para>

        <para>After obtaining the
        <computeroutput>VirtualBoxManager</computeroutput> instance, one can
        perform operations on the IVirtualBox class. For example, the
        following code will a start virtual machine by name or ID:</para>

        <screen>from vboxapi import VirtualBoxManager
mgr = VirtualBoxManager(None, None)
vbox = mgr.getVirtualBox()
name = "Linux"
mach = vbox.findMachine(name)
session = mgr.getSessionObject(vbox)
progress = mach.launchVMProcess(session, "gui", "")
progress.waitForCompletion(-1)
mgr.closeMachineSession(session)
        </screen>
        <para>
          Following code will print all registered machines and their log
          folders
        </para>
        <screen>from vboxapi import VirtualBoxManager
mgr = VirtualBoxManager(None, None)
vbox = mgr.getVirtualBox()

for m in mgr.getArray(vbox, 'machines'):
    print "Machine '%s' logs in '%s'" %(m.name, m.logFolder)
        </screen>

        <para>Code above demonstrates cross-platform access to array properties
        (certain limitations prevent one from using
        <computeroutput>vbox.machines</computeroutput> to access a list of
        available virtual machines in case of XPCOM), and a mechanism of
        uniform session creation and closing
        (<computeroutput>mgr.getSessionObject()</computeroutput>).</para>

        <sect3 id="glue-python-setup">
          <title>Manual or subsequent setup</title>

          <para>In case you want to use the glue layer with a different Python
            installation or the installer failed to set it up, use these steps
            in a shell to install the necessary files:</para>

        <screen>    # cd VBOX_INSTALL_PATH/sdk/installer
    # PYTHON vboxapisetup.py install</screen>

           <note> <para>On Windows hosts, a Python distribution along with the
             win32api bindings package need to be installed as a prerequisite. </para></note>
        </sect3>

      </sect2>

      <sect2 id="cppcom">
        <title>C++ COM API</title>

        <para>C++ is the language that VirtualBox itself is written in, so C++
        is the most direct way to use the Main API -- but it is not
        necessarily the easiest, as using COM and XPCOM has its own set of
        complications.</para>

        <para>VirtualBox ships with sample programs that demonstrate how to
        use the Main API to implement a number of tasks on your host platform.
        These samples can be found in the
        <computeroutput>/bindings/xpcom/samples</computeroutput> directory for
        Linux, Mac OS X and Solaris and
        <computeroutput>/bindings/mscom/samples</computeroutput> for Windows.
        The two samples are actually different, because the one for Windows
        uses native COM, whereas the other uses our XPCOM implementation, as
        described above.</para>

        <para>Since COM and XPCOM are conceptually very similar but vary in
        the implementation details, we have created a "glue" layer that
        shields COM client code from these differences. All VirtualBox uses is
        this glue layer, so the same code written once works on both Windows
        hosts (with native COM) as well as on other hosts (with our XPCOM
        implementation). It is recommended to always use this glue code
        instead of using the COM and XPCOM APIs directly, as it is very easy
        to make your code completely independent from the platform it is
        running on.<!--    A third sample,
        <computeroutput>tstVBoxAPIGlue.cpp</computeroutput>, illustrates how to
        use the glue layer.
--></para>

        <para>In order to encapsulate platform differences between Microsoft
        COM and XPCOM, the following items should be kept in mind when using
        the glue layer:</para>

        <para><orderedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para><emphasis role="bold">Attribute getters and
              setters.</emphasis> COM has the notion of "attributes" in
              interfaces, which roughly compare to C++ member variables in
              classes. The difference is that for each attribute declared in
              an interface, COM automatically provides a "get" method to
              return the attribute's value. Unless the attribute has been
              marked as "readonly", a "set" attribute is also provided.</para>

              <para>To illustrate, the IVirtualBox interface has a "version"
              attribute, which is read-only and of the "wstring" type (the
              standard string type in COM). As a result, you can call the
              "get" method for this attribute to retrieve the version number
              of VirtualBox.</para>

              <para>Unfortunately, the implementation differs between COM and
              XPCOM. Microsoft COM names the "get" method like this:
              <computeroutput>get_Attribute()</computeroutput>, whereas XPCOM
              uses this syntax:
              <computeroutput>GetAttribute()</computeroutput> (and accordingly
              for "set" methods). To hide these differences, the VirtualBox
              glue code provides the
              <computeroutput>COMGETTER(attrib)</computeroutput> and
              <computeroutput>COMSETTER(attrib)</computeroutput> macros. So,
              <computeroutput>COMGETTER(version)()</computeroutput> (note, two
              pairs of brackets) expands to
              <computeroutput>get_Version()</computeroutput> on Windows and
              <computeroutput>GetVersion()</computeroutput> on other
              platforms.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para><emphasis role="bold">Unicode conversions.</emphasis>
              While the rest of the modern world has pretty much settled on
              encoding strings in UTF-8, COM, unfortunately, uses UCS-16
              encoding. This requires a lot of conversions, in particular
              between the VirtualBox Main API and the Qt GUI, which, like the
              rest of Qt, likes to use UTF-8.</para>

              <para>To facilitate these conversions, VirtualBox provides the
              <computeroutput>com::Bstr</computeroutput> and
              <computeroutput>com::Utf8Str</computeroutput> classes, which
              support all kinds of conversions back and forth.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para><emphasis role="bold">COM autopointers.</emphasis>
              Possibly the greatest pain of using COM -- reference counting --
              is alleviated by the
              <computeroutput>ComPtr&lt;&gt;</computeroutput> template
              provided by the <computeroutput>ptr.h</computeroutput> file in
              the glue layer.</para>
            </listitem>
          </orderedlist></para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2 id="event-queue">
        <title>Event queue processing</title>

        <para>Both VirtualBox client programs and frontends should
        periodically perform processing of the main event queue, and do that
        on the application's main thread. In case of a typical GUI Windows/Mac
        OS application this happens automatically in the GUI's dispatch loop.
        However, for CLI only application, the appropriate actions have to be
        taken. For C++ applications, the VirtualBox SDK provided glue method
        <screen>
            int EventQueue::processEventQueue(uint32_t cMsTimeout)
         </screen> can be used for both blocking and non-blocking operations.
        For the Python bindings, a common layer provides the method <screen>
          VirtualBoxManager.waitForEvents(ms)
         </screen> with similar semantics.</para>

        <para>Things get somewhat more complicated for situations where an
        application using VirtualBox cannot directly control the main event
        loop and the main event queue is separated from the event queue of the
        programming librarly (for example in case of Qt on Unix platforms). In
        such a case, the application developer is advised to use a
        platform/toolkit specific event injection mechanism to force event
        queue checks either based on periodical timer events delivered to the
        main thread, or by using custom platform messages to notify the main
        thread when events are available. See the VBoxSDL and Qt (VirtualBox)
        frontends as examples.</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2 id="vbcom">
        <title>Visual Basic and Visual Basic Script (VBS) on Windows
        hosts</title>

        <para>On Windows hosts, one can control some of the VirtualBox Main
        API functionality from VBS scripts, and pretty much everything from
        Visual Basic programs.<footnote>
            <para>The difference results from the way VBS treats COM
            safearrays, which are used to keep lists in the Main API. VBS
            expects every array element to be a
            <computeroutput>VARIANT</computeroutput>, which is too strict a
            limitation for any high performance API. We may lift this
            restriction for interface APIs in a future version, or
            alternatively provide conversion APIs.</para>
          </footnote></para>

        <para>VBS is scripting language available in any recent Windows
        environment. As an example, the following VBS code will print
        VirtualBox version: <screen>
         set vb = CreateObject("VirtualBox.VirtualBox")
         Wscript.Echo "VirtualBox version " &amp; vb.version
       </screen> See
        <computeroutput>bindings/mscom/vbs/sample/vboxinfo.vbs</computeroutput>
        for the complete sample.</para>

        <para>Visual Basic is a popular high level language capable of
        accessing COM objects. The following VB code will iterate over all
        available virtual machines:<screen>
         Dim vb As VirtualBox.IVirtualBox

         vb = CreateObject("VirtualBox.VirtualBox")
         machines = ""
         For Each m In vb.Machines
            m = m &amp; " " &amp; m.Name
         Next
       </screen> See
        <computeroutput>bindings/mscom/vb/sample/vboxinfo.vb</computeroutput>
        for the complete sample.</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2 id="cbinding">
        <title>C binding to VirtualBox API</title>

        <para>The VirtualBox API originally is designed as object oriented,
        using XPCOM or COM as the middleware, which translates natively to C++.
        This means that in order to use it from C there needs to be some
        helper code to bridge the language differences and reduce the
        differences between platforms.</para>

        <sect3 id="capi_glue">
          <title>Cross-platform C binding to VirtualBox API</title>

            <para>Starting with version 4.3, VirtualBox offers a C binding
            which allows using the same C client sources for all platforms,
            covering Windows, Linux, Mac OS X and Solaris. It is the
            preferred way to write API clients, even though the old style
            is still available.</para>

        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="c-gettingstarted">
          <title>Getting started</title>

          <para>The following sections describe how to use the VirtualBox API
          in a C program. The necessary files are included in the SDK, in the
          directories <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/c/include</computeroutput>
          and <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/c/glue</computeroutput>.</para>

          <para>As part of the SDK, a sample program
          <computeroutput>tstCAPIGlue.c</computeroutput> is provided in the
          directory <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/c/samples</computeroutput>
          which demonstrates
          using the C binding to initialize the API, get handles for
          VirtualBox and Session objects, make calls to list and start virtual
          machines, monitor events, and uninitialize resources when done. The
          sample program is trying to illustrate all relevant concepts, so it
          is a great source of detail information. Among many other generally
          useful code sequences it contains a function which shows how to
          retrieve error details in C code if they are available from the API
          call.</para>

          <para>The sample program <computeroutput>tstCAPIGlue</computeroutput>
          can be built using the provided
          <computeroutput>Makefile</computeroutput> and can be run without
          arguments.</para>

          <para>It uses the VBoxCAPIGlue library (source code is in directory
          <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/c/glue</computeroutput>, to be used in
          your API client code) to open the C binding layer during runtime,
          which is preferred to other means as it isolates the code which
          locates the necessary dynamic library, using a known working way
          which works on all platforms. If you encounter problems with this
          glue code in <computeroutput>VBoxCAPIGlue.c</computeroutput>, let the
          VirtualBox developers know, rather than inventing incompatible
          solutions.</para>

          <para>The following sections document the important concepts needed
          to correctly use the C binding, as it is vital for developing API
          client code which manages memory correctly, updates the reference
          counters correctly, avoiding crashes and memory leaks. Often API
          clients need to handle events, so the C API specifics are also
          described below.</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="c-initialization">
          <title>VirtualBox C API initialization</title>

          <para>Just like in C++, the API and the underlying middleware needs
          to be initialized before it can be used. The
          <computeroutput>VBoxCAPI_v4_3.h</computeroutput> header provides the
          interface to the C binding, but you can alternatively and more
          conveniently also include
          <computeroutput>VBoxCAPIGlue.h</computeroutput>,
          as this avoids the VirtualBox version dependent header file name and
          makes sure the global variable <code>g_pVBoxFuncs</code> contains a
          pointer to the structure which contains the helper function pointers.
          Here's how to initialize the C API:<screen>#include "VBoxCAPIGlue.h"
...
IVirtualBoxClient *vboxclient   = NULL;
IVirtualBox *vbox               = NULL;
ISession *session               = NULL;
HRESULT rc;
ULONG revision;

/*
 * VBoxCGlueInit() loads the necessary dynamic library, handles errors
 * (producing an error message hinting what went wrong) and gives you
 * the pointer to the function table (g_pVBoxFuncs).
 *
 * Once you get the function table, then how and which functions
 * to use is explained below.
 *
 * g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientInitialize does all the necessary startup
 * action and provides us with pointers to an IVirtualBoxClient instance.
 * It should be matched by a call to g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientUninitialize()
 * when done.
 */

if (VBoxCGlueInit())
{
    fprintf(stderr, "s: FATAL: VBoxCGlueInit failed: %s\n",
            argv[0], g_szVBoxErrMsg);
    return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientInitialize(NULL, &amp;vboxclient);
if (!vboxclient)
{
    fprintf(stderr, "%s: FATAL: could not get VirtualBoxClient reference\n",
            argv[0]);
    return EXIT_FAILURE;
}</screen></para>

          <para>If <computeroutput>vboxclient</computeroutput> is still
          <computeroutput>NULL</computeroutput> this means the initializationi
          failed and the VirtualBox C API cannot be used.</para>

          <para>It is possible to write C applications using multiple threads
          which all use the VirtualBox API, as long as you're initializing
          the C API in each thread which your application creates. This is done
          with <code>g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnClientThreadInitialize()</code> and
          likewise before the thread is terminated the API must be
          uninitialized with
          <code>g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnClientThreadUninitialize()</code>. You don't
          have to use these functions in worker threads created by COM/XPCOM
          (which you might observe if your code uses active event handling),
          everything is initialized correctly already. On Windows the C
          bindings create a marshaller which supports a wide range of COM
          threading models, from STA to MTA, so you don't have to worry about
          these details unless you plan to use active event handlers. See
          the sample code how to get this to work reliably (in other words
          think twice if passive event handling isn't the better solution after
          you looked at the sample code).</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="c-invocation">
          <title>C API attribute and method invocation</title>

          <para>Method invocation is straightforward. It looks pretty much
          like the C++ way, by using a macro which internally accesses the
          vtable, and additionally needs to be passed a pointer to the objecti
          as the first argument to serve as the
          <computeroutput>this</computeroutput> pointer.</para>

          <para>Using the C binding, all method invocations return a numeric
          result code of type <code>HRESULT</code> (with a few exceptions
          which normally are not relevant).</para>

          <para>If an interface is specified as returning an object, a pointer
          to a pointer to the appropriate object must be passed as the last
          argument. The method will then store an object pointer in that
          location.</para>

          <para>Likewise, attributes (properties) can be queried or set using
          method invocations, using specially named methods. For each
          attribute there exists a getter method, the name of which is composed
          of <computeroutput>get_</computeroutput> followed by the capitalized
          attribute name. Unless the attribute is read-only, an analogous
          <computeroutput>set_</computeroutput> method exists. Let's apply
          these rules to get the <computeroutput>IVirtualBox</computeroutput>
          reference, an <computeroutput>ISession</computeroutput> instance
          reference and read the
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__revision">IVirtualBox::revision</link>
          attribute:
          <screen>rc = IVirtualBoxClient_get_VirtualBox(vboxclient, &amp;vbox);
if (FAILED(rc) || !vbox)
{
    PrintErrorInfo(argv[0], "FATAL: could not get VirtualBox reference", rc);
    return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
rc = IVirtualBoxClient_get_Session(vboxclient, &amp;session);
if (FAILED(rc) || !session)
{
    PrintErrorInfo(argv[0], "FATAL: could not get Session reference", rc);
    return EXIT_FAILURE;
}

rc = IVirtualBox_get_Revision(vbox, &amp;revision);
if (SUCCEEDED(rc))
{
    printf("Revision: %u\n", revision);
}</screen></para>

          <para>The convenience macros for calling a method are named by
          prepending the method name with the interface name (using
          <code>_</code>as the separator).</para>

          <para>So far only attribute getters were illustrated, but generic
          method calls are straightforward, too:
          <screen>IMachine *machine = NULL;
BSTR vmname = ...;
...
/*
 * Calling IMachine::findMachine(...)
 */
rc = IVirtualBox_FindMachine(vbox, vmname, &amp;machine);</screen></para>

          <para>As a more complicated example of a method invocation, let's
          call
          <link linkend="IMachine__launchVMProcess">IMachine::launchVMProcess</link>
          which returns an IProgress object. Note again that the method name is
          capitalized:
          <screen>IProgress *progress;
...
rc = IMachine_LaunchVMProcess(
    machine,       /* this  */
    session,       /* arg 1 */
    sessionType,   /* arg 2 */
    env,           /* arg 3 */
    &amp;progress      /* Out   */
);</screen></para>

          <para>All objects with their methods and attributes are documented
          in <xref linkend="sdkref_classes"/>.</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="c-string-handling">
          <title>String handling</title>

          <para>When dealing with strings you have to be aware of a string's
          encoding and ownership.</para>

          <para>Internally, the API uses UTF-16 encoded strings. A set of
          conversion functions is provided to convert other encodings to and
          from UTF-16. The type of a UTF-16 character is
          <computeroutput>BSTR</computeroutput> (or its constant counterpart
          <computeroutput>CBSTR</computeroutput>), which is an array type,
          represented by a pointer to the start of the zero-terminated string.
          There are functions for converting between UTF-8 and UTF-16 strings
          available through <code>g_pVBoxFuncs</code>:
          <screen>int (*pfnUtf16ToUtf8)(CBSTR pwszString, char **ppszString);
int (*pfnUtf8ToUtf16)(const char *pszString, BSTR *ppwszString);</screen></para>

          <para>The ownership of a string determines who is responsible for
          releasing resources associated with the string. Whenever the API
          creates a string (essentially for output parameters), ownership is
          transferred to the caller. To avoid resource leaks, the caller
          should release resources once the string is no longer needed.
          There are plenty of examples in the sample code.</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="c-safearray">
          <title>Array handling</title>

          <para>Arrays are handled somewhat similarly to strings, with the
          additional information of the number of elements in the array. The
          exact details of string passing depends on the platform middleware
          (COM/XPCOM), and therefore the C binding offers helper functions to
          gloss over these differences.</para>

          <para>Passing arrays as input parameters to API methods is usually
          done by the following sequence, calling a hypothetical
          <code>IArrayDemo_PassArray</code> API method:
          <screen>static const ULONG aElements[] = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
ULONG cElements = sizeof(aElements) / sizeof(aElements[0]);
SAFEARRAY *psa = NULL;
psa = g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayCreateVector(VT_I4, 0, cElements);
g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayCopyInParamHelper(psa, aElements, sizeof(aElements));
IArrayDemo_PassArray(pThis, ComSafeArrayAsInParam(psa));
g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayDestroy(psa);</screen></para>

          <para>Likewise, getting arrays results from output parameters is done
          using helper functions which manage memory allocations as part of
          their other functionality:
          <screen>SAFEARRAY *psa = g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayOutParamAlloc();
ULONG *pData;
ULONG cElements;
IArrayDemo_ReturnArray(pThis, ComSafeArrayAsOutTypeParam(psa, ULONG));
g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayCopyOutParamHelper((void **)&amp;pData, &amp;cElements, VT_I4, psa);
g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayDestroy(psa);</screen></para>

          <para>This covers the necessary functionality for all array element
          types except interface references. These need special helpers to
          manage the reference counting correctly. The following code snippet
          gets the list of VMs, and passes the first IMachine reference to
          another API function (assuming that there is at least one element
          in the array, to simplify the example):
          <screen>SAFEARRAY psa = g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayOutParamAlloc();
IMachine **machines = NULL;
ULONG machineCnt = 0;
ULONG i;
IVirtualBox_get_Machines(virtualBox, ComSafeArrayAsOutIfaceParam(machinesSA, IMachine *));
g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayCopyOutIfaceParamHelper((IUnknown ***)&amp;machines, &amp;machineCnt, machinesSA);
g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayDestroy(machinesSA);
/* Now "machines" contains the IMachine references, and machineCnt the
 * number of elements in the array. */
...
SAFEARRAY *psa = g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayCreateVector(VT_IUNKNOWN, 0, 1);
g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayCopyInParamHelper(psa, (void *)&amp;machines[0], sizeof(machines[0]));
IVirtualBox_GetMachineStates(ComSafeArrayAsInParam(psa), ...);
...
g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnSafeArrayDestroy(psa);
for (i = 0; i &lt; machineCnt; ++i)
{
    IMachine *machine = machines[i];
    IMachine_Release(machine);
}
free(machines);</screen></para>

          <para>Handling output parameters needs more special effort than
          input parameters, thus only for the former there are special helpers,
          and the latter is handled through the generic array support.</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="c-eventhandling">
          <title>Event handling</title>

          <para>The VirtualBox API offers two types of event handling, active
          and passive, and consequently there is support for both with the
          C API binding. Active event handling (based on asynchronous
          callback invocation for event delivery) is more difficult, as it
          requires the construction of valid C++ objects in C, which is
          inherently platform and compiler dependent. Passive event handling
          is much simpler, it relies on an event loop, fetching events and
          triggering the necessary handlers explicitly in the API client code.
          Both approaches depend on an event loop to make sure that events
          get delivered in a timely manner, with differences what exactly needs
          to be done.</para>

          <para>The C API sample contains code for both event handling styles,
          and one has to modify the appropriate <code>#define</code> to select
          which style is actually used by the compiled program. It allows a
          good comparison between the two variants, and the code sequences are
          probably worth reusing without much change in other API clients
          with only minor adaptions.</para>

          <para>Active event handling needs to ensure that the following helper
          function is called frequently enough in the primary thread:
          <screen>g_pVBoxFuncs->pfnProcessEventQueue(cTimeoutMS);</screen></para>

          <para>The actual event handler implementation is quite tedious, as
          it has to implement a complete API interface. Especially on Windows
          it is a lot of work to implement the complicated
          <code>IDispatch</code> interface, requiring to load COM type
          information and using it in the <code>IDispatch</code> method
          implementation. Overall this is quite tedious compared to passive
          event handling.</para>

          <para>Passive event handling uses a similar event loop structure,
          which requires calling the following function in a loop, and
          processing the returned event appropriately:
          <screen>rc = IEventSource_GetEvent(pEventSource, pListener, cTimeoutMS, &amp;pEvent);</screen></para>

          <para>After processing the event it needs to be marked as processed
          with the following method call:
          <screen>rc = IEventSource_EventProcessed(pEventSource, pListener, pEvent);</screen></para>

          <para>This is vital for vetoable events, as they would be stuck
          otherwise, waiting whether the veto comes or not. It does not do any
          harm for other event types, and in the end is cheaper than checking
          if the event at hand is vetoable or not.</para>

          <para>The general event handling concepts are described in the API
          specification (see <xref linkend="events"/>), including how to
          aggregate multiple event sources for processing in one event loop.
          As mentioned, the sample illustrates the practical aspects of how to
          use both types of event handling, active and passive, from a C
          application. Additional hints are in the comments documenting
          the helper methods in
          <computeroutput>VBoxCAPI_v4_3.h</computeroutput>. The code complexity
          of active event handling (and its inherenly platform/compiler
          specific aspects) should be motivation to use passive event handling
          whereever possible.</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="c-uninitialization">
          <title>C API uninitialization</title>

          <para>Uninitialization is performed by
          <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientUninitialize().</computeroutput>
          If your program can exit from more than one place, it is a good idea
          to install this function as an exit handler with Standard C's
          <computeroutput>atexit()</computeroutput> just after calling
          <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientInitialize()</computeroutput>
          , e.g. <screen>#include &lt;stdlib.h&gt;
#include &lt;stdio.h&gt;

...

/*
 * Make sure g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientUninitialize() is called at exit, no
 * matter if we return from the initial call to main or call exit()
 * somewhere else. Note that atexit registered functions are not
 * called upon abnormal termination, i.e. when calling abort() or
 * signal().
 */

if (atexit(g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientUninitialize()) != 0) {
    fprintf(stderr, "failed to register g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientUninitialize()\n");
    exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}</screen></para>

          <para>Another idea would be to write your own <computeroutput>void
          myexit(int status)</computeroutput> function, calling
          <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientUninitialize()</computeroutput>
          followed by the real <computeroutput>exit()</computeroutput>, and
          use it instead of <computeroutput>exit()</computeroutput> throughout
          your program and at the end of
          <computeroutput>main.</computeroutput></para>

          <para>If you expect the program to be terminated by a signal (e.g.
          user types CTRL-C sending SIGINT) you might want to install a signal
          handler setting a flag noting that a signal was sent and then
          calling
          <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientUninitialize()</computeroutput>
          later on, <emphasis>not</emphasis> from the handler itself.</para>

          <para>That said, if a client program forgets to call
          <computeroutput>g_pVBoxFuncs-&gt;pfnClientUninitialize()</computeroutput>
          before it terminates, there is a mechanism in place which will
          eventually release references held by the client. On Windows it can
          take quite a while, in the order of 6-7 minutes.</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="c-linking">
          <title>Compiling and linking</title>

          <para>A program using the C binding has to open the library during
          runtime using the help of glue code provided and as shown in the
          example <computeroutput>tstCAPIGlue.c</computeroutput>.
          Compilation and linking can be achieved with a makefile fragment
          similar to:<screen># Where is the SDK directory?
PATH_SDK      = ../../..
CAPI_INC      = -I$(PATH_SDK)/bindings/c/include
ifdef ProgramFiles
PLATFORM_INC  = -I$(PATH_SDK)/bindings/mscom/include
PLATFORM_LIB  = $(PATH_SDK)/bindings/mscom/lib
else
PLATFORM_INC  = -I$(PATH_SDK)/bindings/xpcom/include
PLATFORM_LIB  = $(PATH_SDK)/bindings/xpcom/lib
endif
GLUE_DIR      = $(PATH_SDK)/bindings/c/glue
GLUE_INC      = -I$(GLUE_DIR)

# Compile Glue Library
VBoxCAPIGlue.o: $(GLUE_DIR)/VBoxCAPIGlue.c
    $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(CAPI_INC) $(PLATFORM_INC) $(GLUE_INC) -o $@ -c $&lt;

# Compile interface ID list
VirtualBox_i.o: $(PLATFORM_LIB)/VirtualBox_i.c
    $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(CAPI_INC) $(PLATFORM_INC) $(GLUE_INC) -o $@ -c $&lt;

# Compile program code
program.o: program.c
    $(CC) $(CFLAGS) $(CAPI_INC) $(PLATFORM_INC) $(GLUE_INC) -o $@ -c $&lt;

# Link program.
program: program.o VBoxCAPICGlue.o VirtualBox_i.o
    $(CC) -o $@ $^ -ldl -lpthread</screen></para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="capi_conversion">
          <title>Conversion of code using legacy C binding</title>

          <para>This section aims to make the task of converting code using
          the legacy C binding to the new style a breeze, by pointing out some
          key steps.</para>

          <para>One necessary change is adjusting your Makefile to reflect the
          different include paths. See above. There are now 3 relevant include
          directories, and most of it is pointing to the C binding directory.
          The XPCOM include directory is still relevant for platforms where
          the XPCOM middleware is used, but most of the include files live
          elsewhere now, so it's good to have it last. Additionally the
          <computeroutput>VirtualBox_i.c</computeroutput> file needs to be
          compiled and linked to the program, it contains the IIDs relevant
          for the VirtualBox API, making sure they are not replicated endlessly
          if the code refers to them frequently.</para>

          <para>The C API client code should include
          <computeroutput>VBoxCAPIGlue.h</computeroutput> instead of
          <computeroutput>VBoxXPCOMCGlue.h</computeroutput> or
          <computeroutput>VBoxCAPI_v4_3.h</computeroutput>, as this makes sure
          the correct macros and internal translations are selected.</para>

          <para>All API method calls (anything mentioning <code>vtbl</code>)
          should be rewritten using the convenience macros for calling methods,
          as these hide the internal details, are generally easier to use and
          shorter to type. You should remove as many as possible
          <code>(nsISupports **)</code> or similar typecasts, as the new style
          should use the correct type in most places, increasing the type
          safety in case of an error in the source code.</para>

          <para>To gloss over the platform differences, API client code should
          no longer rely on XPCOM specific interface names such as
          <code>nsISupports</code>, <code>nsIException</code> and
          <code>nsIEventQueue</code>, and replace them by the platform
          independent interface names <code>IUnknown</code> and
          <code>IErrorInfo</code> for the first two respectively. Event queue
          handling should be replaced by using the platform independent way
          described in <xref linkend="c-eventhandling"/>.</para>

          <para>Finally adjust the string and array handling to use the new
          helpers, as these make sure the code works without changes with
          both COM and XPCOM, which are significantly different in this area.
          The code should be double checked if it uses the correct way to
          manage memory, and is freeing it only after the last use.</para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3 id="xpcom_cbinding">
          <title>Legacy C binding to VirtualBox API for XPCOM</title>

          <note>
            <para>This section applies to Linux, Mac OS X and Solaris
            hosts only and describes deprecated use of the API from C.</para>
          </note>

          <para>Starting with version 2.2, VirtualBox offers a C binding for
          its API which works only on platforms using XPCOM. Refer to the
          old SDK documentation (included in the SDK packages for version 4.3.6
          or earlier), it still applies unchanged. The fundamental concepts are
          similar (but the syntactical details are quite different) to the
          newer cross-platform C binding which should be used for all new code,
          as the support for the old C binding will go away in a major release
          after version 4.3.</para>
        </sect3>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

  <chapter id="concepts">
    <title>Basic VirtualBox concepts; some examples</title>

    <para>The following explains some basic VirtualBox concepts such as the
    VirtualBox object, sessions and how virtual machines are manipulated and
    launched using the Main API. The coding examples use a pseudo-code style
    closely related to the object-oriented web service (OOWS) for JAX-WS.
    Depending on which environment you are using, you will need to adjust the
    examples.</para>

    <sect1>
      <title>Obtaining basic machine information. Reading attributes</title>

      <para>Any program using the Main API will first need access to the
      global VirtualBox object (see
      <link linkend="IVirtualBox">IVirtualBox</link>), from which all other
      functionality of the API is derived. With the OOWS for JAX-WS, this is
      returned from the
      <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__logon">IWebsessionManager::logon()</link>
      call.</para>

      <para>To enumerate virtual machines, one would look at the "machines"
      array attribute in the VirtualBox object (see
      <link linkend="IVirtualBox__machines">IVirtualBox::machines</link>).
      This array contains all virtual machines currently registered with the
      host, each of them being an instance of
      <link linkend="IMachine">IMachine</link>.
      From each such instance, one can query additional information, such as
      the UUID, the name, memory, operating system and more by looking at the
      attributes; see the attributes list in
      <link linkend="IMachine">IMachine</link> documentation.</para>

      <para>As mentioned in the preceding chapters, depending on your
      programming environment, attributes are mapped to corresponding "get"
      and (if the attribute is not read-only) "set" methods. So when the
      documentation says that IMachine has a
      "<link linkend="IMachine__name">name</link>" attribute, this means you
      need to code something
      like the following to get the machine's name:
      <screen>IMachine machine = ...;
String name = machine.getName();</screen>
      Boolean attribute getters can sometimes be called
      <computeroutput>isAttribute()</computeroutput> due to JAX-WS naming
      conventions.</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Changing machine settings: Sessions</title>

      <para>As said in the previous section, to read a machine's attribute,
      one invokes the corresponding "get" method. One would think that to
      change settings of a machine, it would suffice to call the corresponding
      "set" method -- for example, to set a VM's memory to 1024 MB, one would
      call <computeroutput>setMemorySize(1024)</computeroutput>. Try that, and
      you will get an error: "The machine is not mutable."</para>

      <para>So unfortunately, things are not that easy. VirtualBox is a
      complicated environment in which multiple processes compete for possibly
      the same resources, especially machine settings. As a result, machines
      must be "locked" before they can either be modified or started. This is
      to prevent multiple processes from making conflicting changes to a
      machine: it should, for example, not be allowed to change the memory
      size of a virtual machine while it is running. (You can't add more
      memory to a real computer while it is running either, at least not to an
      ordinary PC.) Also, two processes must not change settings at the same
      time, or start a machine at the same time.</para>

      <para>These requirements are implemented in the Main API by way of
      "sessions", in particular, the <link linkend="ISession">ISession</link>
      interface. Each process which talks to
      VirtualBox needs its own instance of ISession. In the web service, you
      can request the creation of such an object by calling
      <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__getSessionObject">IWebsessionManager::getSessionObject()</link>.
      More complex management tasks might need multiple instances of ISession,
      and each call returns a new one.</para>

      <para>This session object must then be used like a mutex semaphore in
      common programming environments. Before you can change machine settings,
      you must write-lock the machine by calling
      <link linkend="IMachine__lockMachine">IMachine::lockMachine()</link>
      with your process's session object.</para>

      <para>After the machine has been locked, the
      <link linkend="ISession__machine">ISession::machine</link> attribute
      contains a copy of the original IMachine object upon which the session
      was opened, but this copy is "mutable": you can invoke "set" methods on
      it.</para>

      <para>When done making the changes to the machine, you must call
      <link linkend="IMachine__saveSettings">IMachine::saveSettings()</link>,
      which will copy the changes you have made from your "mutable" machine
      back to the real machine and write them out to the machine settings XML
      file. This will make your changes permanent.</para>

      <para>Finally, it is important to always unlock the machine again, by
      calling
      <link linkend="ISession__unlockMachine">ISession::unlockMachine()</link>.
      Otherwise, when the calling process end, the machine will receive the
      "aborted" state, which can lead to loss of data.</para>

      <para>So, as an example, the sequence to change a machine's memory to
      1024 MB is something like this:<screen>IWebsessionManager mgr ...;
IVirtualBox vbox = mgr.logon(user, pass);
...
IMachine machine = ...;  // read-only machine
ISession session = mgr.getSessionObject();
machine.lockMachine(session, LockType.Write); // machine is now locked for writing
IMachine mutable = session.getMachine();      // obtain the mutable machine copy
mutable.setMemorySize(1024);
mutable.saveSettings();                       // write settings to XML
session.unlockMachine();</screen></para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Launching virtual machines</title>

      <para>To launch a virtual machine, you call
      <link linkend="IMachine__launchVMProcess">IMachine::launchVMProcess()</link>.
      In doing so, the caller instructs the VirtualBox engine to start a new
      process with the virtual machine in it, since to the host, each virtual
      machine looks like single process, even if it has hundreds of its own
      processes inside. (This new VM process in turn obtains a write lock on
      the machine, as described above, to prevent conflicting changes from
      other processes; this is why opening another session will fail while the
      VM is running.)</para>

      <para>Starting a machine looks something like this:
      <screen>IWebsessionManager mgr ...;
IVirtualBox vbox = mgr.logon(user, pass);
...
IMachine machine = ...;  // read-only machine
ISession session = mgr.getSessionObject();
IProgress prog = machine.launchVMProcess(session,
                                         "gui",  // session type
                                         "");    // possibly environment setting
prog.waitForCompletion(10000);  // give the process 10 secs
if (prog.getResultCode() != 0)  // check success
    System.out.println("Cannot launch VM!")</screen></para>

      <para>The caller's session object can then be used as a sort of remote
      control to the VM process that was launched. It contains a "console"
      object (see <link linkend="ISession__console">ISession::console</link>)
      with which the VM can be paused,
      stopped, snapshotted or other things.</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1 id="events">
      <title>VirtualBox events</title>

      <para>In VirtualBox, "events" provide a uniform mechanism to register
      for and consume specific events. A VirtualBox client can register an
      "event listener" (represented by the
      <link linkend="IEventListener">IEventListener</link> interface), which
      will then get notified by the server when an event (represented by the
      <link linkend="IEvent">IEvent</link> interface) happens.</para>

      <para>The IEvent interface is an abstract parent interface for all
      events that can occur in VirtualBox. The actual events that the server
      sends out are then of one of the specific subclasses, for example
      <link linkend="IMachineStateChangedEvent">IMachineStateChangedEvent</link>
      or
      <link linkend="IMediumChangedEvent">IMediumChangedEvent</link>.</para>

      <para>As an example, the VirtualBox GUI waits for machine events and can
      thus update its display when the machine state changes or machine
      settings are modified, even if this happens in another client. This is
      how the GUI can automatically refresh its display even if you manipulate
      a machine from another client, for example, from VBoxManage.</para>

      <para>To register an event listener to listen to events, use code like
      this:<screen>EventSource es = console.getEventSource();
IEventListener listener = es.createListener();
VBoxEventType aTypes[] = (VBoxEventType.OnMachineStateChanged);
        // list of event types to listen for
es.registerListener(listener, aTypes, false /* active */);
        // register passive listener
IEvent ev = es.getEvent(listener, 1000);
        // wait up to one second for event to happen
if (ev != null)
{
    // downcast to specific event interface (in this case we have only registered
    // for one type, otherwise IEvent::type would tell us)
    IMachineStateChangedEvent mcse = IMachineStateChangedEvent.queryInterface(ev);
    ... // inspect and do something
    es.eventProcessed(listener, ev);
}
...
es.unregisterListener(listener); </screen></para>

      <para>A graphical user interface would probably best start its own
      thread to wait for events and then process these in a loop.</para>

      <para>The events mechanism was introduced with VirtualBox 3.3 and
      replaces various callback interfaces which were called for each event in
      the interface. The callback mechanism was not compatible with scripting
      languages, local Java bindings and remote web services as they do not
      support callbacks. The new mechanism with events and event listeners
      works with all of these.</para>

      <para>To simplify developement of application using events, concept of
      event aggregator was introduced. Essentially it's mechanism to aggregate
      multiple event sources into single one, and then work with this single
      aggregated event source instead of original sources. As an example, one
      can evaluate demo recorder in VirtualBox Python shell, shipped with SDK
      - it records mouse and keyboard events, represented as separate event
      sources. Code is essentially like this:<screen>
          listener = console.eventSource.createListener()
          agg = console.eventSource.createAggregator([console.keyboard.eventSource, console.mouse.eventSource])
          agg.registerListener(listener, [ctx['global'].constants.VBoxEventType_Any], False)
          registered = True
          end = time.time() + dur
          while  time.time() &lt; end:
              ev = agg.getEvent(listener, 1000)
              processEent(ev)
          agg.unregisterListener(listener)</screen> Without using aggregators
      consumer have to poll on both sources, or start multiple threads to
      block on those sources.</para>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

  <chapter id="vboxshell">
    <title>The VirtualBox shell</title>

    <para>VirtualBox comes with an extensible shell, which allows you to
    control your virtual machines from the command line. It is also a
    nontrivial example of how to use the VirtualBox APIs from Python, for all
    three COM/XPCOM/WS styles of the API.</para>

    <para>You can easily extend this shell with your own commands. Create a
    subdirectory named
    <computeroutput>.config/VirtualBox/shexts</computeroutput> below your home
    directory (respectively <computeroutput>.VirtualBox/shexts</computeroutput>
    on a Windows system and
    <computeroutput>Library/VirtualBox/shexts</computeroutput> on OS X) and put
    a Python file implementing your shell extension commands in this directory.
    This file must contain an array named
    <computeroutput>commands</computeroutput> containing your command
    definitions: <screen>
        commands = {
        'cmd1': ['Command cmd1 help', cmd1],
        'cmd2': ['Command cmd2 help', cmd2]
        }
       </screen> For example, to create a command for creating hard drive
    images, the following code can be used: <screen>
        def createHdd(ctx,args):
          # Show some meaningful error message on wrong input
          if (len(args) &lt; 3):
            print "usage: createHdd sizeM location type"
            return 0

          # Get arguments
          size = int(args[1])
          loc = args[2]
          if len(args) &gt; 3:
            format = args[3]
          else:
            # And provide some meaningful defaults
            format = "vdi"

        # Call VirtualBox API, using context's fields
        hdd = ctx['vb'].createMedium(format, loc, ctx['global'].constants.AccessMode_ReadWrite, \
                                     ctx['global'].constants.DeviceType_HardDisk)
        # Access constants using ctx['global'].constants
        progress = hdd.createBaseStorage(size, (ctx['global'].constants.MediumVariant_Standard, ))
        # use standard progress bar mechanism
        ctx['progressBar'](progress)


        # Report errors
        if not hdd.id:
           print "cannot create disk (file %s exist?)" %(loc)
           return 0

        # Give user some feedback on success too
        print "created HDD with id: %s" %(hdd.id)

        # 0 means continue execution, other values mean exit from the interpreter
        return 0

      commands = {
        'myCreateHDD': ['Create virtual HDD, createHdd size location type', createHdd]
        }
      </screen> Just store the above text in the file
    <computeroutput>createHdd</computeroutput> (or any other meaningful name)
    in <computeroutput>.config/VirtualBox/shexts/</computeroutput>. Start the
    VirtualBox shell, or just issue the
    <computeroutput>reloadExts</computeroutput> command, if the shell is
    already running. Your new command will now be available.</para>
  </chapter>

  <xi:include href="SDKRef_apiref.xml" xpointer="xpointer(/book/*)"
    xmlns:xi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XInclude" />

  <chapter id="cloud">
    <title>Working with the Cloud</title>

    <para>VirtualBox supports and goes towards the Oracle tendencies like "move to the Cloud".</para>

    <sect1>
      <title>OCI features</title>
      <para>VirtualBox supports the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI). See the interfaces:
      <link linkend="ICloudClient">ICloudClient</link>,
      <link linkend="ICloudProvider">ICloudProvider</link>,
      <link linkend="ICloudProfile">ICloudProfile</link>,
      <link linkend="ICloudProviderManager">ICloudProviderManager</link>.
      </para>
      <para>Each cloud interface has own implementation to support OCI features. There are everal functions in the implementation
      which should be explained in details because OCI requires some special data or settings.
      </para>
      <para>
        Also see the enumeration <link linkend="VirtualSystemDescriptionType">VirtualSystemDescriptionType</link> for the possible values.
      </para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Function ICloudClient::exportVM</title>
      <para>
        See the <link linkend="ICloudClient__exportVM">ICloudClient::exportVM</link>.
        The function exports an existing virtual machine into OCI. The final result of this operation is creation a custom image
        from the bootable image of VM. The Id of created image is returned in the parameter "description" (which is
        <link linkend="IVirtualSystemDescription">IVirtualSystemDescription</link>) as an entry with the type
        VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudImageId. The standard steps here are:
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Upload VBox image to OCI Object Storage.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Create OCI custom image from the uploaded object.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
        Parameter "description" must contain all information and settings needed for creation a custom image in OCI.
        At least next entries must be presented there before the call:
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::Name - Name of new instance in OCI.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::HardDiskImage - The local path or id of bootable VM image.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudBucket - A cloud bucket name where the exported image is uploaded.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudImageDisplayName - A name which is assigned to a new custom image in the OCI.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudKeepObject - Whether keep or delete an uploaded object after its usage.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudLaunchInstance - Whether launch or not a new instance.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Function ICloudClient::launchVM</title>
      <para>
        See the <link linkend="ICloudClient__launchVM">ICloudClient::launchVM</link>.
        The function launches a new instance in OCI with a bootable volume previously created from a custom image in OCI or
        as the source may be used an existing bootable volume which shouldn't be attached to any instance.
        For launching instance from a custom image use the parameter VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudImageId.
        For launching instance from a bootable volume use the parameter VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudBootVolumeId.
        Only one of them must be presented otherwise the error will occur.
        The final result of this operation is a running instance. The id of created instance is returned
        in the parameter "description" (which is <link linkend="IVirtualSystemDescription">IVirtualSystemDescription</link>)
        as an entry with the type VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudInstanceId.  Parameter "description" must contain all information
        and settings needed for creation a new instance in OCI. At least next entries must be presented there before the call:
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::Name - Name of new instance in OCI.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudOCISubnet - OCID of existing subnet in OCI which will be used by the instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>
              Use VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudImageId - OCID of custom image used as a bootable image for the instance
              or
              VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudBootVolumeId - OCID of existing and non-attached bootable volume used as a bootable volume for the instance.
            </para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Add VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudBootDiskSize - The size of instance bootable volume in GB,
              If you use VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudImageId.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudInstanceShape - The shape of instance according to OCI documentation,
            defines the number of CPUs and RAM memory.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudLaunchInstance - Whether launch or not a new instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudDomain - Availability domain in OCI where new instance is created.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudPublicIP - Whether the instance will have a public IP or not.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudPublicSSHKey - Public SSH key which is used to connect to an instance via SSH.
            It may be one or more records with the type VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudPublicSSHKey in the VirtualSystemDescription.
            But at least one should be presented otherwise user won't be able to connect to the instance via SSH.
            </para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Function ICloudClient::getInstanceInfo</title>
      <para>
        See the <link linkend="ICloudClient__getInstanceInfo">ICloudClient::getInstanceInfo</link>.
        The function takes an instance id (parameter "uid"), finds the requested instance in OCI and gets back information
        about the found instance in the parameter "description" (which is <link linkend="IVirtualSystemDescription">IVirtualSystemDescription</link>)
        The entries with next types will be presented in the object:
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::Name - Displayed name of the instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudDomain - Availability domain in OCI.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudImageId - Name of custom image used for creation this instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudInstanceId - The OCID of the instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::OS - Guest OS type of the instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudBootDiskSize - Size of instance bootable image.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudInstanceState - The instance state according to OCI documentation.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudInstanceShape  - The instance shape according to OCI documentation</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::Memory - RAM memory in GB allocated for the instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CPU - Number of virtual CPUs allocated for the instance.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Function ICloudClient::importInstance</title>
      <para>
        See the <link linkend="ICloudClient__importInstance">ICloudClient::importInstance</link>.
        The API function imports an existing instance from the OCI to the local host.
        The standard steps here are:
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Create a custom image from an existing OCI instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Export the custom image to OCI object (the object is created in the OCI Object Storage).</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>Download the OCI object to the local host.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
          As the result of operation user will have a file with the suffix ".oci" on the local host. This file is a TAR archive which
          contains a bootable instance image in QCOW2 format and a JSON file with some metadata related to
          the imported instance. The function takes the parameter "description"
          (which is <link linkend="IVirtualSystemDescription">IVirtualSystemDescription</link>)
          Parameter "description" must contain all information and settings needed for successful operation result.
          At least next entries must be presented there before the call:
        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::Name is used for the several purposes:
              <itemizedlist>
                <listitem>
                  <para>As a custom image name. A custom image is created from an instance.</para>
                </listitem>
                <listitem>
                  <para>As OCI object name. An object is a file in OCI Object Storage. The object is created from the custom image.</para>
                </listitem>
                <listitem>
                  <para>Name of imported instance on the local host. Because the result of import is a file, the file will have this
                  name and extension ".oci".</para>
                </listitem>
             </itemizedlist>
            </para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudInstanceId - The OCID of the existing instance.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para>VirtualSystemDescriptionType::CloudBucket - a cloud bucket name in OCI Object Storage where created an OCI object
            from a custom image.
            </para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </para>
    </sect1>

  </chapter>

  <chapter id="hgcm">
    <title>Host-Guest Communication Manager</title>

    <para>The VirtualBox Host-Guest Communication Manager (HGCM) allows a
    guest application or a guest driver to call a host shared library. The
    following features of VirtualBox are implemented using HGCM: <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Shared Folders</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Shared Clipboard</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Guest configuration interface</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist></para>

    <para>The shared library contains a so called HGCM service. The guest HGCM
    clients establish connections to the service to call it. When calling a
    HGCM service the client supplies a function code and a number of
    parameters for the function.</para>

    <sect1>
      <title>Virtual hardware implementation</title>

      <para>HGCM uses the VMM virtual PCI device to exchange data between the
      guest and the host. The guest always acts as an initiator of requests. A
      request is constructed in the guest physical memory, which must be
      locked by the guest. The physical address is passed to the VMM device
      using a 32-bit <computeroutput>out edx, eax</computeroutput>
      instruction. The physical memory must be allocated below 4GB by 64-bit
      guests.</para>

      <para>The host parses the request header and data and queues the request
      for a host HGCM service. The guest continues execution and usually waits
      on a HGCM event semaphore.</para>

      <para>When the request has been processed by the HGCM service, the VMM
      device sets the completion flag in the request header, sets the HGCM
      event and raises an IRQ for the guest. The IRQ handler signals the HGCM
      event semaphore and all HGCM callers check the completion flag in the
      corresponding request header. If the flag is set, the request is
      considered completed.</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Protocol specification</title>

      <para>The HGCM protocol definitions are contained in the
      <computeroutput>VBox/VBoxGuest.h</computeroutput></para>

      <sect2>
        <title>Request header</title>

        <para>HGCM request structures contains a generic header
        (VMMDevHGCMRequestHeader): <table>
            <title>HGCM Request Generic Header</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>size</entry>

                  <entry>Size of the entire request.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>version</entry>

                  <entry>Version of the header, must be set to
                  <computeroutput>0x10001</computeroutput>.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>type</entry>

                  <entry>Type of the request.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>rc</entry>

                  <entry>HGCM return code, which will be set by the VMM
                  device.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>reserved1</entry>

                  <entry>A reserved field 1.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>reserved2</entry>

                  <entry>A reserved field 2.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>flags</entry>

                  <entry>HGCM flags, set by the VMM device.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>result</entry>

                  <entry>The HGCM result code, set by the VMM device.</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table> <note>
            <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>All fields are 32-bit.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>Fields from <computeroutput>size</computeroutput> to
                <computeroutput>reserved2</computeroutput> are a standard VMM
                device request header, which is used for other interfaces as
                well.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist>
          </note></para>

        <para>The <emphasis role="bold">type</emphasis> field indicates the
        type of the HGCM request: <table>
            <title>Request Types</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name (decimal
                  value)</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMConnect
                  (<computeroutput>60</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>Connect to a HGCM service.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMDisconnect
                  (<computeroutput>61</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>Disconnect from the service.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMCall32
                  (<computeroutput>62</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>Call a HGCM function using the 32-bit
                  interface.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMCall64
                  (<computeroutput>63</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>Call a HGCM function using the 64-bit
                  interface.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevReq_HGCMCancel
                  (<computeroutput>64</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>Cancel a HGCM request currently being processed by a
                  host HGCM service.</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table></para>

        <para>The <emphasis role="bold">flags</emphasis> field may contain:
        <table>
            <title>Flags</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name (hexadecimal
                  value)</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VBOX_HGCM_REQ_DONE
                  (<computeroutput>0x00000001</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>The request has been processed by the host
                  service.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VBOX_HGCM_REQ_CANCELLED
                  (<computeroutput>0x00000002</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>This request was cancelled.</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table></para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Connect</title>

        <para>The connection request must be issued by the guest HGCM client
        before it can call the HGCM service (VMMDevHGCMConnect): <table>
            <title>Connect request</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>header</entry>

                  <entry>The generic HGCM request header with type equal to
                  VMMDevReq_HGCMConnect
                  (<computeroutput>60</computeroutput>).</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>type</entry>

                  <entry>The type of the service location information (32
                  bit).</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>location</entry>

                  <entry>The service location information (128 bytes).</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>clientId</entry>

                  <entry>The client identifier assigned to the connecting
                  client by the HGCM subsystem (32-bit).</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table> The <emphasis role="bold">type</emphasis> field tells the
        HGCM how to look for the requested service: <table>
            <title>Location Information Types</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name (hexadecimal
                  value)</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMLoc_LocalHost
                  (<computeroutput>0x1</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>The requested service is a shared library located on
                  the host and the location information contains the library
                  name.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMLoc_LocalHost_Existing
                  (<computeroutput>0x2</computeroutput>)</entry>

                  <entry>The requested service is a preloaded one and the
                  location information contains the service name.</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table> <note>
            <para>Currently preloaded HGCM services are hard-coded in
            VirtualBox: <itemizedlist>
                <listitem>
                  <para>VBoxSharedFolders</para>
                </listitem>

                <listitem>
                  <para>VBoxSharedClipboard</para>
                </listitem>

                <listitem>
                  <para>VBoxGuestPropSvc</para>
                </listitem>

                <listitem>
                  <para>VBoxSharedOpenGL</para>
                </listitem>
              </itemizedlist></para>
          </note> There is no difference between both types of HGCM services,
        only the location mechanism is different.</para>

        <para>The client identifier is returned by the host and must be used
        in all subsequent requests by the client.</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Disconnect</title>

        <para>This request disconnects the client and makes the client
        identifier invalid (VMMDevHGCMDisconnect): <table>
            <title>Disconnect request</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>header</entry>

                  <entry>The generic HGCM request header with type equal to
                  VMMDevReq_HGCMDisconnect
                  (<computeroutput>61</computeroutput>).</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>clientId</entry>

                  <entry>The client identifier previously returned by the
                  connect request (32-bit).</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table></para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Call32 and Call64</title>

        <para>Calls the HGCM service entry point (VMMDevHGCMCall) using 32-bit
        or 64-bit addresses: <table>
            <title>Call request</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>header</entry>

                  <entry>The generic HGCM request header with type equal to
                  either VMMDevReq_HGCMCall32
                  (<computeroutput>62</computeroutput>) or
                  VMMDevReq_HGCMCall64
                  (<computeroutput>63</computeroutput>).</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>clientId</entry>

                  <entry>The client identifier previously returned by the
                  connect request (32-bit).</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>function</entry>

                  <entry>The function code to be processed by the service (32
                  bit).</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>cParms</entry>

                  <entry>The number of following parameters (32-bit). This
                  value is 0 if the function requires no parameters.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>parms</entry>

                  <entry>An array of parameter description structures
                  (HGCMFunctionParameter32 or
                  HGCMFunctionParameter64).</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table></para>

        <para>The 32-bit parameter description (HGCMFunctionParameter32)
        consists of 32-bit type field and 8 bytes of an opaque value, so 12
        bytes in total. The 64-bit variant (HGCMFunctionParameter64) consists
        of the type and 12 bytes of a value, so 16 bytes in total.</para>

        <para><table>
            <title>Parameter types</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Type</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Format of the
                  value</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_32bit (1)</entry>

                  <entry>A 32-bit value.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_64bit (2)</entry>

                  <entry>A 64-bit value.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_PhysAddr (3)</entry>

                  <entry>A 32-bit size followed by a 32-bit or 64-bit guest
                  physical address.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr (4)</entry>

                  <entry>A 32-bit size followed by a 32-bit or 64-bit guest
                  linear address. The buffer is used both for guest to host
                  and for host to guest data.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_In (5)</entry>

                  <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr but the buffer is
                  used only for host to guest data.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Out (6)</entry>

                  <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr but the buffer is
                  used only for guest to host data.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Locked (7)</entry>

                  <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr but the buffer is
                  already locked by the guest.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Locked_In (1)</entry>

                  <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_In but the buffer
                  is already locked by the guest.</entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Locked_Out (1)</entry>

                  <entry>Same as VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Out but the buffer
                  is already locked by the guest.</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table></para>

        <para>The</para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Cancel</title>

        <para>This request cancels a call request (VMMDevHGCMCancel): <table>
            <title>Cancel request</title>

            <tgroup cols="2">
              <tbody>
                <row>
                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Name</emphasis></entry>

                  <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
                </row>

                <row>
                  <entry>header</entry>

                  <entry>The generic HGCM request header with type equal to
                  VMMDevReq_HGCMCancel
                  (<computeroutput>64</computeroutput>).</entry>
                </row>
              </tbody>
            </tgroup>
          </table></para>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Guest software interface</title>

      <para>The guest HGCM clients can call HGCM services from both drivers
      and applications.</para>

      <sect2>
        <title>The guest driver interface</title>

        <para>The driver interface is implemented in the VirtualBox guest
        additions driver (VBoxGuest), which works with the VMM virtual device.
        Drivers must use the VBox Guest Library (VBGL), which provides an API
        for HGCM clients (<computeroutput>VBox/VBoxGuestLib.h</computeroutput>
        and <computeroutput>VBox/VBoxGuest.h</computeroutput>).</para>

        <para><screen>
DECLR0VBGL(int) VbglR0HGCMConnect(VBGLHGCMHANDLE *pHandle, const char *pszServiceName, HGCMCLIENTID *pidClient);
          </screen> Connects to the service: <screen>
    VBoxGuestHGCMConnectInfo data;

    memset(&amp;data, sizeof(VBoxGuestHGCMConnectInfo));

    data.result   = VINF_SUCCESS;
    data.Loc.type = VMMDevHGCMLoc_LocalHost_Existing;
    strcpy (data.Loc.u.host.achName, "VBoxSharedFolders");

    rc = VbglHGCMConnect (&amp;handle, "VBoxSharedFolders"&amp;data);

    if (RT_SUCCESS (rc))
    {
        rc = data.result;
    }

    if (RT_SUCCESS (rc))
    {
        /* Get the assigned client identifier. */
        ulClientID = data.u32ClientID;
    }
          </screen></para>

        <para><screen>
DECLVBGL(int) VbglHGCMDisconnect (VBGLHGCMHANDLE handle, VBoxGuestHGCMDisconnectInfo *pData);
          </screen> Disconnects from the service. <screen>
    VBoxGuestHGCMDisconnectInfo data;

    RtlZeroMemory (&amp;data, sizeof (VBoxGuestHGCMDisconnectInfo));

    data.result      = VINF_SUCCESS;
    data.u32ClientID = ulClientID;

    rc = VbglHGCMDisconnect (handle, &amp;data);
          </screen></para>

        <para><screen>
DECLVBGL(int) VbglHGCMCall (VBGLHGCMHANDLE handle, VBoxGuestHGCMCallInfo *pData, uint32_t cbData);
          </screen> Calls a function in the service. <screen>
typedef struct _VBoxSFRead
{
    VBoxGuestHGCMCallInfo callInfo;

    /** pointer, in: SHFLROOT
     * Root handle of the mapping which name is queried.
     */
    HGCMFunctionParameter root;

    /** value64, in:
     * SHFLHANDLE of object to read from.
     */
    HGCMFunctionParameter handle;

    /** value64, in:
     * Offset to read from.
     */
    HGCMFunctionParameter offset;

    /** value64, in/out:
     * Bytes to read/How many were read.
     */
    HGCMFunctionParameter cb;

    /** pointer, out:
     * Buffer to place data to.
     */
    HGCMFunctionParameter buffer;

} VBoxSFRead;

/** Number of parameters */
#define SHFL_CPARMS_READ (5)

...

    VBoxSFRead data;

    /* The call information. */
    data.callInfo.result      = VINF_SUCCESS;     /* Will be returned by HGCM. */
    data.callInfo.u32ClientID = ulClientID;       /* Client identifier. */
    data.callInfo.u32Function = SHFL_FN_READ;     /* The function code. */
    data.callInfo.cParms      = SHFL_CPARMS_READ; /* Number of parameters. */

    /* Initialize parameters. */
    data.root.type                      = VMMDevHGCMParmType_32bit;
    data.root.u.value32                 = pMap-&gt;root;

    data.handle.type                    = VMMDevHGCMParmType_64bit;
    data.handle.u.value64               = hFile;

    data.offset.type                    = VMMDevHGCMParmType_64bit;
    data.offset.u.value64               = offset;

    data.cb.type                        = VMMDevHGCMParmType_32bit;
    data.cb.u.value32                   = *pcbBuffer;

    data.buffer.type                    = VMMDevHGCMParmType_LinAddr_Out;
    data.buffer.u.Pointer.size          = *pcbBuffer;
    data.buffer.u.Pointer.u.linearAddr  = (uintptr_t)pBuffer;

    rc = VbglHGCMCall (handle, &amp;data.callInfo, sizeof (data));

    if (RT_SUCCESS (rc))
    {
        rc = data.callInfo.result;
        *pcbBuffer = data.cb.u.value32; /* This is returned by the HGCM service. */
    }
          </screen></para>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Guest application interface</title>

        <para>Applications call the VirtualBox Guest Additions driver to
        utilize the HGCM interface. There are IOCTL's which correspond to the
        <computeroutput>Vbgl*</computeroutput> functions: <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para><computeroutput>VBOXGUEST_IOCTL_HGCM_CONNECT</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para><computeroutput>VBOXGUEST_IOCTL_HGCM_DISCONNECT</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para><computeroutput>VBOXGUEST_IOCTL_HGCM_CALL</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist></para>

        <para>These IOCTL's get the same input buffer as
        <computeroutput>VbglHGCM*</computeroutput> functions and the output
        buffer has the same format as the input buffer. The same address can
        be used as the input and output buffers.</para>

        <para>For example see the guest part of shared clipboard, which runs
        as an application and uses the HGCM interface.</para>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>HGCM Service Implementation</title>

      <para>The HGCM service is a shared library with a specific set of entry
      points. The library must export the
      <computeroutput>VBoxHGCMSvcLoad</computeroutput> entry point: <screen>
extern "C" DECLCALLBACK(DECLEXPORT(int)) VBoxHGCMSvcLoad (VBOXHGCMSVCFNTABLE *ptable)
      </screen></para>

      <para>The service must check the
      <computeroutput>ptable-&gt;cbSize</computeroutput> and
      <computeroutput>ptable-&gt;u32Version</computeroutput> fields of the
      input structure and fill the remaining fields with function pointers of
      entry points and the size of the required client buffer size.</para>

      <para>The HGCM service gets a dedicated thread, which calls service
      entry points synchronously, that is the service will be called again
      only when a previous call has returned. However, the guest calls can be
      processed asynchronously. The service must call a completion callback
      when the operation is actually completed. The callback can be issued
      from another thread as well.</para>

      <para>Service entry points are listed in the
      <computeroutput>VBox/hgcmsvc.h</computeroutput> in the
      <computeroutput>VBOXHGCMSVCFNTABLE</computeroutput> structure. <table>
          <title>Service entry points</title>

          <tgroup cols="2">
            <tbody>
              <row>
                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Entry</emphasis></entry>

                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Description</emphasis></entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry>pfnUnload</entry>

                <entry>The service is being unloaded.</entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry>pfnConnect</entry>

                <entry>A client <computeroutput>u32ClientID</computeroutput>
                is connected to the service. The
                <computeroutput>pvClient</computeroutput> parameter points to
                an allocated memory buffer which can be used by the service to
                store the client information.</entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry>pfnDisconnect</entry>

                <entry>A client is being disconnected.</entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry>pfnCall</entry>

                <entry>A guest client calls a service function. The
                <computeroutput>callHandle</computeroutput> must be used in
                the VBOXHGCMSVCHELPERS::pfnCallComplete callback when the call
                has been processed.</entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry>pfnHostCall</entry>

                <entry>Called by the VirtualBox host components to perform
                functions which should be not accessible by the guest. Usually
                this entry point is used by VirtualBox to configure the
                service.</entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry>pfnSaveState</entry>

                <entry>The VM state is being saved and the service must save
                relevant information using the SSM API
                (<computeroutput>VBox/ssm.h</computeroutput>).</entry>
              </row>

              <row>
                <entry>pfnLoadState</entry>

                <entry>The VM is being restored from the saved state and the
                service must load the saved information and be able to
                continue operations from the saved state.</entry>
              </row>
            </tbody>
          </tgroup>
        </table></para>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

  <chapter id="rdpweb">
    <title>RDP Web Control</title>

    <para>The VirtualBox <emphasis>RDP Web Control</emphasis> (RDPWeb)
    provides remote access to a running VM. RDPWeb is a RDP (Remote Desktop
    Protocol) client based on Flash technology and can be used from a Web
    browser with a Flash plugin.</para>

    <sect1>
      <title>RDPWeb features</title>

      <para>RDPWeb is embedded into a Web page and can connect to VRDP server
      in order to displays the VM screen and pass keyboard and mouse events to
      the VM.</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>RDPWeb reference</title>

      <para>RDPWeb consists of two required components:<itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Flash movie
            <computeroutput>RDPClientUI.swf</computeroutput></para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>JavaScript helpers
            <computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput></para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist></para>

      <para>The VirtualBox SDK contains sample HTML code
      including:<itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>JavaScript library for embedding Flash content
            <computeroutput>SWFObject.js</computeroutput></para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>Sample HTML page
            <computeroutput>webclient3.html</computeroutput></para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist></para>

      <sect2>
        <title>RDPWeb functions</title>

        <para><computeroutput>RDPClientUI.swf</computeroutput> and
        <computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> work with each other.
        JavaScript code is responsible for a proper SWF initialization,
        delivering mouse events to the SWF and processing resize requests from
        the SWF. On the other hand, the SWF contains a few JavaScript callable
        methods, which are used both from
        <computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> and the user HTML
        page.</para>

        <sect3>
          <title>JavaScript functions</title>

          <para><computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> contains helper
          functions. In the following table ElementId refers to an HTML
          element name or attribute, and Element to the HTML element itself.
          HTML code<programlisting>
    &lt;div id="FlashRDP"&gt;
    &lt;/div&gt;
</programlisting> would have ElementId equal to FlashRDP and Element equal to
          the div element.</para>

          <para><itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <programlisting>RDPWebClient.embedSWF(SWFFileName, ElementId)</programlisting>

                <para>Uses SWFObject library to replace the HTML element with
                the Flash movie.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <programlisting>RDPWebClient.isRDPWebControlById(ElementId)</programlisting>

                <para>Returns true if the given id refers to a RDPWeb Flash
                element.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <programlisting>RDPWebClient.isRDPWebControlByElement(Element)</programlisting>

                <para>Returns true if the given element is a RDPWeb Flash
                element.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <programlisting>RDPWebClient.getFlashById(ElementId)</programlisting>

                <para>Returns an element, which is referenced by the given id.
                This function will try to resolve any element, event if it is
                not a Flash movie.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </sect3>

        <sect3>
          <title>Flash methods callable from JavaScript</title>

          <para><computeroutput>RDPWebClienUI.swf</computeroutput> methods can
          be called directly from JavaScript code on a HTML page.</para>

          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>getProperty(Name)</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>setProperty(Name)</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>connect()</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>disconnect()</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>keyboardSendCAD()</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </sect3>

        <sect3>
          <title>Flash JavaScript callbacks</title>

          <para><computeroutput>RDPWebClienUI.swf</computeroutput> calls
          JavaScript functions provided by the HTML page.</para>
        </sect3>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Embedding RDPWeb in an HTML page</title>

        <para>It is necessary to include
        <computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> helper script. If
        SWFObject library is used, the
        <computeroutput>swfobject.js</computeroutput> must be also included
        and RDPWeb flash content can be embedded to a Web page using dynamic
        HTML. The HTML must include a "placeholder", which consists of 2
        <computeroutput>div</computeroutput> elements.</para>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>RDPWeb change log</title>

      <sect2>
        <title>Version 1.2.28</title>

        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>keyboardLayout</computeroutput>,
            <computeroutput>keyboardLayouts</computeroutput>,
            <computeroutput>UUID</computeroutput> properties.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>Support for German keyboard layout on the client.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>Rebranding to Oracle.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Version 1.1.26</title>

        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>webclient.js</computeroutput> is a part of
            the distribution package.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>lastError</computeroutput> property.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><computeroutput>keyboardSendScancodes</computeroutput> and
            <computeroutput>keyboardSendCAD</computeroutput> methods.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </sect2>

      <sect2>
        <title>Version 1.0.24</title>

        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>Initial release.</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </sect2>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

  <chapter id="dnd">
    <title>Drag and Drop</title>

    <para>Since VirtualBox 4.2 it's possible to transfer files from host to the
    Linux guests by dragging files, directories or text from the host into the
    guest's screen. This is called <emphasis>drag and drop
    (DnD)</emphasis>.</para>

    <para>In version 5.0 support for Windows guests has been added, as well as
    the ability to transfer data the other way around, that is, from the guest
    to the host.</para>

    <note><para>Currently only the VirtualBox Manager frontend supports drag and
      drop.</para></note>

    <para>This chapter will show how to use the required interfaces provided
    by VirtualBox for adding drag and drop functionality to third-party
    frontends.</para>

    <sect1>
      <title>Basic concepts</title>

      <para>In order to use the interfaces provided by VirtualBox, some basic
      concepts needs to be understood first: To successfully initiate a
      drag and drop operation at least two sides needs to be involved, a
      <emphasis>source</emphasis> and a <emphasis>target</emphasis>:</para>

      <para>The <emphasis>source</emphasis> is the side which provides the
      data, e.g. is the origin of data. This data can be stored within the
      source directly or can be retrieved on-demand by the source itself. Other
      interfaces don't care where the data from this source actually came
      from.</para>

      <para>The <emphasis>target</emphasis> on the other hand is the side which
      provides the source a visual representation where the user can drop the
      data the source offers. This representation can be a window (or just a
      certain part of it), for example.</para>

      <para>The source and the target have abstract interfaces called
      <link linkend="IDnDSource">IDnDSource</link> and
      <link linkend="IDnDTarget">IDnDTarget</link>. VirtualBox also
      provides implementations of both interfaces, called
      <link linkend="IGuestDnDSource">IGuestDnDSource</link> and
      <link linkend="IGuestDnDTarget">IGuestDnDTarget</link>. Both
      implementations are also used in the VirtualBox Manager frontend.</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Supported formats</title>

      <para>As the target needs to perform specific actions depending on the
      data the source provided, the target first needs to know what type of
      data it actually is going to retrieve. It might be that the source offers
      data the target cannot (or intentionally does not want to)
      support.</para>

      <para>VirtualBox handles those data types by providing so-called
      <emphasis>MIME types</emphasis> -- these MIME types were originally
      defined in
      <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2046">RFC 2046</ulink> and
      are also called <emphasis>Content-types</emphasis>.
      <link linkend="IGuestDnDSource">IGuestDnDSource</link> and
      <link linkend="IGuestDnDTarget">IGuestDnDTarget</link> support
      the following MIME types by default:<itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para><emphasis role="bold">text/uri-list</emphasis> - A list of
            URIs (Uniform Resource Identifier, see
            <ulink url="https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986">RFC 3986</ulink>)
            pointing to the file and/or directory paths already transferred
            from the source to the target.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para><emphasis role="bold">text/plain;charset=utf-8</emphasis> and
            <emphasis role="bold">UTF8_STRING</emphasis> - text in UTF-8
            format.</para>
          </listitem>
          <listitem>
            <para><emphasis role="bold">text/plain, TEXT</emphasis>
            and <emphasis role="bold">STRING</emphasis> - plain ASCII text,
            depending on the source's active ANSI page (if any).</para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </para>

      <para>If, for whatever reason, a certain default format should not be
      supported or a new format should be registered,
      <link linkend="IDnDSource">IDnDSource</link> and
      <link linkend="IDnDTarget">IDnDTarget</link> have methods derived from
      <link linkend="IDnDBase">IDnDBase</link> which provide adding,
      removing and enumerating specific formats.
      <note><para>Registering new or removing default formats on the guest side
      currently is not implemented.</para></note></para>
    </sect1>

  </chapter>

  <chapter id="vbox-auth">
    <title>VirtualBox external authentication modules</title>

    <para>VirtualBox supports arbitrary external modules to perform
    authentication. The module is used when the authentication method is set
    to "external" for a particular VM VRDE access and the library was
    specified with <computeroutput>VBoxManage setproperty
    vrdeauthlibrary</computeroutput>. Web service also use the authentication
    module which was specified with <computeroutput>VBoxManage setproperty
    websrvauthlibrary</computeroutput>.</para>

    <para>This library will be loaded by the VM or web service process on
    demand, i.e. when the first remote desktop connection is made by a client
    or when a client that wants to use the web service logs on.</para>

    <para>External authentication is the most flexible as the external handler
    can both choose to grant access to everyone (like the "null"
    authentication method would) and delegate the request to the guest
    authentication component. When delegating the request to the guest
    component, the handler will still be called afterwards with the option to
    override the result.</para>

    <para>An authentication library is required to implement exactly one entry
    point:</para>

    <screen>#include "VBoxAuth.h"

/**
 * Authentication library entry point.
 *
 * Parameters:
 *
 *   szCaller         The name of the component which calls the library (UTF8).
 *   pUuid            Pointer to the UUID of the accessed virtual machine. Can be NULL.
 *   guestJudgement   Result of the guest authentication.
 *   szUser           User name passed in by the client (UTF8).
 *   szPassword       Password passed in by the client (UTF8).
 *   szDomain         Domain passed in by the client (UTF8).
 *   fLogon           Boolean flag. Indicates whether the entry point is called
 *                    for a client logon or the client disconnect.
 *   clientId         Server side unique identifier of the client.
 *
 * Return code:
 *
 *   AuthResultAccessDenied    Client access has been denied.
 *   AuthResultAccessGranted   Client has the right to use the
 *                             virtual machine.
 *   AuthResultDelegateToGuest Guest operating system must
 *                             authenticate the client and the
 *                             library must be called again with
 *                             the result of the guest
 *                             authentication.
 *
 * Note: When 'fLogon' is 0, only pszCaller, pUuid and clientId are valid and the return
 *       code is ignored.
 */
AuthResult AUTHCALL AuthEntry(
    const char *szCaller,
    PAUTHUUID pUuid,
    AuthGuestJudgement guestJudgement,
    const char *szUser,
    const char *szPassword
    const char *szDomain
    int fLogon,
    unsigned clientId)
{
    /* Process request against your authentication source of choice. */
    // if (authSucceeded(...))
    //     return AuthResultAccessGranted;
    return AuthResultAccessDenied;
}</screen>

    <para>A note regarding the UUID implementation of the
    <computeroutput>pUuid</computeroutput> argument: VirtualBox uses a
    consistent binary representation of UUIDs on all platforms. For this
    reason the integer fields comprising the UUID are stored as little endian
    values. If you want to pass such UUIDs to code which assumes that the
    integer fields are big endian (often also called network byte order), you
    need to adjust the contents of the UUID to e.g. achieve the same string
    representation. The required changes are:<itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>reverse the order of byte 0, 1, 2 and 3</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>reverse the order of byte 4 and 5</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>reverse the order of byte 6 and 7.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>Using this conversion you will get identical results when
    converting the binary UUID to the string representation.</para>

    <para>The <computeroutput>guestJudgement</computeroutput> argument
    contains information about the guest authentication status. For the first
    call, it is always set to
    <computeroutput>AuthGuestNotAsked</computeroutput>. In case the
    <computeroutput>AuthEntry</computeroutput> function returns
    <computeroutput>AuthResultDelegateToGuest</computeroutput>, a guest
    authentication will be attempted and another call to the
    <computeroutput>AuthEntry</computeroutput> is made with its result. This
    can be either granted / denied or no judgement (the guest component chose
    for whatever reason to not make a decision). In case there is a problem
    with the guest authentication module (e.g. the Additions are not installed
    or not running or the guest did not respond within a timeout), the "not
    reacted" status will be returned.</para>
  </chapter>

  <chapter id="javaapi">
    <title>Using Java API</title>

    <sect1>
      <title>Introduction</title>

      <para>VirtualBox can be controlled by a Java API, both locally
      (COM/XPCOM) and from remote (SOAP) clients. As with the Python bindings,
      a generic glue layer tries to hide all platform differences, allowing
      for source and binary compatibility on different platforms.</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Requirements</title>

      <para>To use the Java bindings, there are certain requirements depending
      on the platform. First of all, you need JDK 1.5 (Java 5) or later. Also
      please make sure that the version of the VirtualBox API .jar file
      exactly matches the version of VirtualBox you use. To avoid confusion,
      the VirtualBox API provides versioning in the Java package name, e.g.
      the package is named <computeroutput>org.virtualbox_3_2</computeroutput>
      for VirtualBox version 3.2. <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para><emphasis role="bold">XPCOM</emphasis> - for all platforms,
            but Microsoft Windows. A Java bridge based on JavaXPCOM is shipped
            with VirtualBox. The classpath must contain
            <computeroutput>vboxjxpcom.jar</computeroutput> and the
            <computeroutput>vbox.home</computeroutput> property must be set to
            location where the VirtualBox binaries are. Please make sure that
            the JVM bitness matches bitness of VirtualBox you use as the XPCOM
            bridge relies on native libraries.</para>

            <para>Start your application like this: <programlisting>
 java -cp vboxjxpcom.jar -Dvbox.home=/opt/virtualbox MyProgram
              </programlisting></para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><emphasis role="bold">COM</emphasis> - for Microsoft
            Windows. We rely on <computeroutput>Jacob</computeroutput> - a
            generic Java to COM bridge - which has to be installed seperately.
            See <ulink
            url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/jacob-project/">http://sourceforge.net/projects/jacob-project/</ulink>
            for installation instructions. Also, the VirtualBox provided
            <computeroutput>vboxjmscom.jar</computeroutput> must be in the
            class path.</para>

            <para>Start your application like this:
            <programlisting>java -cp vboxjmscom.jar;c:\jacob\jacob.jar -Djava.library.path=c:\jacob MyProgram</programlisting></para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para><emphasis role="bold">SOAP</emphasis> - all platforms. Java
            6 is required, as it comes with builtin support for SOAP via the
            JAX-WS library. Also, the VirtualBox provided
            <computeroutput>vbojws.jar</computeroutput> must be in the class
            path. In the SOAP case it's possible to create several
            VirtualBoxManager instances to communicate with multiple
            VirtualBox hosts.</para>

            <para>Start your application like this: <programlisting>
 java -cp vboxjws.jar MyProgram
              </programlisting></para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist></para>

      <para>Exception handling is also generalized by the generic glue layer,
      so that all methods could throw
      <computeroutput>VBoxException</computeroutput> containing human-readable
      text message (see <computeroutput>getMessage()</computeroutput> method)
      along with wrapped original exception (see
      <computeroutput>getWrapped()</computeroutput> method).</para>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Example</title>

      <para>This example shows a simple use case of the Java API. Differences
      for SOAP vs. local version are minimal, and limited to the connection
      setup phase (see <computeroutput>ws</computeroutput> variable). In the
      SOAP case it's possible to create several VirtualBoxManager instances to
      communicate with multiple VirtualBox hosts. <programlisting>
          import org.virtualbox_4_3.*;
          ....
          VirtualBoxManager mgr = VirtualBoxManager.createInstance(null);
          boolean ws = false; // or true, if we need the SOAP version
          if (ws)
          {
              String url = "http://myhost:18034";
              String user = "test";
              String passwd = "test";
              mgr.connect(url, user, passwd);
          }
          IVirtualBox vbox = mgr.getVBox();
          System.out.println("VirtualBox version: " + vbox.getVersion() + "\n");
          // get first VM name
          String m =  vbox.getMachines().get(0).getName();
          System.out.println("\nAttempting to start VM '" + m + "'");
          // start it
          mgr.startVm(m, null, 7000);

          if (ws)
              mgr.disconnect();

          mgr.cleanup();
        </programlisting> For more a complete example, see
      <computeroutput>TestVBox.java</computeroutput>, shipped with the
      SDK. It contains exception handling and error printing code, which
      is important for reliable larger scale projects.</para>

      <para>It is good practice in long-running API clients to process the
      system events every now and then in the main thread (does not work
      in other threads). As a rule of thumb it makes sense to process them
      every few 100msec to every few seconds). This is done by
      calling<programlisting>
        mgr.waitForEvents(0);
        </programlisting>
      This avoids that a large number of system events accumulate, which can
      need a significant amount of memory, and as they also play a role in
      object cleanup it helps freeing additional memory in a timely manner
      which is used by the API implementation itself. Java's garbage collection
      approach already needs more memory due to the delayed freeing of memory
      used by no longer accessible objects, and not processing the system
      events exacerbates the memory usage. The
      <computeroutput>TestVBox.java</computeroutput> example code sprinkles
      such lines over the code to achieve the desired effect. In multi-threaded
      applications it can be called from the main thread periodically.
      Sometimes it's possible to use the non-zero timeout variant of the
      method, which then waits the specified number of milliseconds for
      events, processing them immediately as they arrive. It achieves better
      runtime behavior than separate sleeping/processing.</para>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>

  <chapter>
    <title>License information</title>

    <para>The sample code files shipped with the SDK are generally licensed
    liberally to make it easy for anyone to use this code for their own
    application code.</para>

    <para>The Java files under
    <computeroutput>bindings/webservice/java/jax-ws/</computeroutput> (library
    files for the object-oriented web service) are, by contrast, licensed
    under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) V2.1.</para>

    <para>See
    <computeroutput>sdk/bindings/webservice/java/jax-ws/src/COPYING.LIB</computeroutput>
    for the full text of the LGPL 2.1.</para>

    <para>When in doubt, please refer to the individual source code files
    shipped with this SDK.</para>
  </chapter>

  <chapter>
    <title>Main API change log</title>

    <para>Generally, VirtualBox will maintain API compatibility within a major
    release; a major release occurs when the first or the second of the three
    version components of VirtualBox change (that is, in the x.y.z scheme, a
    major release is one where x or y change, but not when only z
    changes).</para>

    <para>In other words, updates like those from 2.0.0 to 2.0.2 will not come
    with API breakages.</para>

    <para>Migration between major releases most likely will lead to API
    breakage, so please make sure you updated code accordingly. The OOWS Java
    wrappers enforce that mechanism by putting VirtualBox classes into
    version-specific packages such as
    <computeroutput>org.virtualbox_2_2</computeroutput>. This approach allows
    for connecting to multiple VirtualBox versions simultaneously from the
    same Java application.</para>

    <para>The following sections list incompatible changes that the Main API
    underwent since the original release of this SDK Reference with VirtualBox
    2.0. A change is deemed "incompatible" only if it breaks existing client
    code (e.g. changes in method parameter lists, renamed or removed
    interfaces and similar). In other words, the list does not contain new
    interfaces, methods or attributes or other changes that do not affect
    existing client code.</para>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 7.0</title>

      <itemizedlist>

        <listitem><para>The machine's audio adapter has been moved into the new IAudioSettings interface, which in turn
          takes care of of all audio settings of a virtual machine.
          See <link linkend="IMachine__audioSettings">IMachine::audioSettings</link> and
          <link linkend="IAudioSettings">IAudioSettings</link> for more information.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para>The <link linkend="IVirtualBox__openMachine">IVirtualBox::openMachine</link> call now
          requires an additional password parameter. If the machine is not encrypted the parameter is ignored.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para>When a new VM is being created, the default audio driver will be now
          <link linkend="AudioDriverType__Default">AudioDriverType_Default</link>. This driver
          type will automatically choose the best audio driver (backend) for the host OS &VBOX_PRODUCT;
          currently is running on.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para>The host update functionality at IHost::update has been refactored into
          <link linkend="IHost__updateHost">IHost::updateHost</link>, which in turn uses the new
          <link linkend="IHostUpdateAgent">IHostUpdateAgent</link> interface, derived from the new
          <link linkend="IUpdateAgent">IUpdateAgent</link> interface.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para><link linkend="IGuestSession__directoryCopyFromGuest">IGuestSession::directoryCopyFromGuest()</link> and
          <link linkend="IGuestSession__directoryCopyToGuest">IGuestSession::directoryCopyToGuest()</link> no longer implicitly
          copy recursively and follow symbolic links -- for this to continue working, the newly introduced flags
          <link linkend="DirectoryCopyFlag__Recursive">DirectoryCopyFlag::Recursive</link> and/or
          <link linkend="DirectoryCopyFlag__FollowLinks">DirectoryCopyFlag::FollowLinks</link> have to be used.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para>VBoxEventType_Last has been renamed to <link linkend="VBoxEventType__End">VBoxEventType_End</link>
          for consistency.</para></listitem>

      </itemizedlist>

    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 6.1</title>

      <itemizedlist>

        <listitem><para>Split off the graphics adapter part of
          <link linkend="IMachine">IMachine</link> into
          <link linkend="IGraphicsAdapter">IGraphicsAdapter</link>.
          This moved 5 attributes.</para>
        </listitem>

      </itemizedlist>

    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 6.0</title>

      <itemizedlist>

        <listitem><para>Video recording APIs were changed as follows:
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem><para>All attributes which were living in <link linkend="IMachine">IMachine</link> before
              have been moved to an own, dedicated interface named <link linkend="IRecordingSettings">IRecordingSettings</link>.
              This new interface can be accessed via the new <link linkend="IMachine__recordingSettings">IMachine::recordingSettings</link>
              attribute. This should emphasize that recording is not limited to video capturing as such.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem><para>For further flexibility all specific per-VM-screen settings have been moved to a new interface
              called <link linkend="IRecordingScreenSettings">IRecordingScreenSettings</link>. Such settings now exist per configured
              VM display and can be retrieved via the <link linkend="IRecordingSettings__screens">IRecordingSettings::screens</link>
              attribute or the <link linkend="IRecordingSettings__getScreenSettings">IRecordingSettings::getScreenSettings</link>
              method.
              <note><para>For now all screen settings will share the same settings, e.g. different settings on a per-screen basis
                is not implemented yet.</para></note>
              </para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem><para>The event <computeroutput>IVideoCaptureChangedEvent</computeroutput> was renamed into
              <link linkend="IRecordingChangedEvent">IRecordingChangedEvent</link>.</para>
            </listitem>

          </itemizedlist>
        </para></listitem>

        <listitem><para>Guest Control APIs were changed as follows:
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem><para><link linkend="IGuest__createSession">IGuest::createSession()</link>,
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__processCreate">IGuestSession::processCreate()</link>,
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__processCreateEx">IGuestSession::processCreateEx()</link>,
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__directoryOpen">IGuestSession::directoryOpen()</link> and
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__fileOpen">IGuestSession::fileOpen()</link> now will
              return the new error code VBOX_E_MAXIMUM_REACHED if the limit for the according object
              group has been reached.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem><para>The enumerations FileOpenExFlags, FsObjMoveFlags and DirectoryCopyFlags have
              been renamed to <link linkend="FileOpenExFlag">FileOpenExFlag</link>,
              <link linkend="FsObjMoveFlag">FsObjMoveFlag</link> and <link linkend="DirectoryCopyFlag">DirectoryCopyFlag</link>
              accordingly to match the rest of the API.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>The following methods have been implemented:
                <computeroutput>IGuestSession::directoryCopyFromGuest()</computeroutput> and
                <computeroutput>IGuestSession::directoryCopyToGuest()</computeroutput>.
              </para>

              <para>The following attributes have been implemented:
                <computeroutput>IGuestFsObjInfo::accessTime</computeroutput>,
                <computeroutput>IGuestFsObjInfo::birthTime</computeroutput>,
                <computeroutput>IGuestFsObjInfo::changeTime</computeroutput> and
                <computeroutput>IGuestFsObjInfo::modificationTime</computeroutput>.
              </para>

            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </para></listitem>

        <listitem><para>The webservice version of the <link linkend="ISharedFolder">ISharedFolder</link>
          interface was changed from a struct to a managed object. This causes incompatiblities on the
          protocol level as the shared folder attributes are not returned in the responses of
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__sharedFolders">IVirtualBox::getSharedFolders</link> and
          <link linkend="IMachine__sharedFolders">IMachine::getSharedFolders</link> anymore. They
          return object UUIDs instead which need be wrapped by stub objects. The change is not visible when
          using the appropriate client bindings from the most recent VirtualBox SDK.
        </para></listitem>

      </itemizedlist>

    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 5.x</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem><para>ProcessCreateFlag::NoProfile has been renamed to
          <link linkend="ProcessCreateFlag__Profile">ProcessCreateFlag::Profile</link>,
          whereas the semantics also has been changed: ProcessCreateFlag::NoProfile
          explicitly <emphasis role="bold">did not</emphasis> utilize the guest user's profile data,
          which in turn <link linkend="ProcessCreateFlag__Profile">ProcessCreateFlag::Profile</link>
          explicitly <emphasis role="bold">does now</emphasis>.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>

    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 5.0</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>The methods for saving state, adopting a saved state file,
          discarding a saved state, taking a snapshot, restoring
          a snapshot and deleting a snapshot have been moved from
          <computeroutput>IConsole</computeroutput> to
          <computeroutput>IMachine</computeroutput>. This straightens out the
          logical placement of methods and was necessary to resolve a
          long-standing issue, preventing 32-bit API clients from invoking
          those operations in the case where no VM is running.
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem><para><link linkend="IMachine__saveState">IMachine::saveState()</link>
              replaces
              <computeroutput>IConsole::saveState()</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para><link linkend="IMachine__adoptSavedState">IMachine::adoptSavedState()</link>
              replaces
              <computeroutput>IConsole::adoptSavedState()</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para><link linkend="IMachine__discardSavedState">IMachine::discardSavedState()</link>
              replaces
              <computeroutput>IConsole::discardSavedState()</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para><link linkend="IMachine__takeSnapshot">IMachine::takeSnapshot()</link>
              replaces
              <computeroutput>IConsole::takeSnapshot()</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para><link linkend="IMachine__deleteSnapshot">IMachine::deleteSnapshot()</link>
              replaces
              <computeroutput>IConsole::deleteSnapshot()</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para><link linkend="IMachine__deleteSnapshotAndAllChildren">IMachine::deleteSnapshotAndAllChildren()</link>
              replaces
              <computeroutput>IConsole::deleteSnapshotAndAllChildren()</computeroutput></para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
               <para><link linkend="IMachine__deleteSnapshotRange">IMachine::deleteSnapshotRange()</link>
               replaces
               <computeroutput>IConsole::deleteSnapshotRange()</computeroutput></para>
             </listitem>
             <listitem>
               <para><link linkend="IMachine__restoreSnapshot">IMachine::restoreSnapshot()</link>
               replaces
               <computeroutput>IConsole::restoreSnapshot()</computeroutput></para>
             </listitem>
           </itemizedlist>
          Small adjustments to the parameter lists have been made to reduce
          the number of API calls when taking online snapshots (no longer
          needs explicit pausing), and taking a snapshot also returns now
          the snapshot id (useful for finding the right snapshot if there
          are non-unique snapshot names).</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Two new machine states have been introduced to allow proper
          distinction between saving state and taking a snapshot.
          <link linkend="MachineState__Saving">MachineState::Saving</link>
          now is used exclusively while the VM's state is being saved, without
          any overlaps with snapshot functionality. The new state
          <link linkend="MachineState__Snapshotting">MachineState::Snapshotting</link>
          is used when an offline snapshot is taken and likewise the new state
          <link linkend="MachineState__OnlineSnapshotting">MachineState::OnlineSnapshotting</link>
          is used when an online snapshot is taken.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>A new event has been introduced, which signals when a snapshot
          has been restored:
          <link linkend="ISnapshotRestoredEvent">ISnapshotRestoredEvent</link>.
          Previously the event
          <link linkend="ISnapshotDeletedEvent">ISnapshotDeletedEvent</link>
          was signalled, which isn't logical (but could be distinguished from
          actual deletion by the fact that the snapshot was still
          there).</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The method
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__createMedium">IVirtualBox::createMedium()</link>
          replaces
          <computeroutput>VirtualBox::createHardDisk()</computeroutput>.
          Adjusting existing code needs adding two parameters with
          value <computeroutput>AccessMode_ReadWrite</computeroutput>
          and <computeroutput>DeviceType_HardDisk</computeroutput>
          respectively. The new method supports creating floppy and
          DVD images, and (less obviously) further API functionality
          such as cloning floppy images.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The method
          <link linkend="IMachine__getStorageControllerByInstance">IMachine::getStorageControllerByInstance()</link>
          now has an additional parameter (first parameter), for specifying the
          storage bus which the storage controller must be using. The method
          was not useful before, as the instance numbers are only unique for a
          specfic storage bus.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The attribute
          <computeroutput>IMachine::sessionType</computeroutput> has been
          renamed to
          <link linkend="IMachine__sessionName">IMachine::sessionName()</link>.
          This cleans up the confusing terminology (as the session type is
          something different).</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The attribute
          <computeroutput>IMachine::guestPropertyNotificationPatterns</computeroutput>
          has been removed. In practice it was not usable because it is too
          global and didn't distinguish between API clients.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para>Drag and drop APIs were changed as follows:<itemizedlist>

          <listitem>
            <para>Methods for providing host to guest drag and drop
              functionality, such as
              <computeroutput>IGuest::dragHGEnter</computeroutput>,
              <computeroutput>IGuest::dragHGMove()</computeroutput>,
              <computeroutput>IGuest::dragHGLeave()</computeroutput>,
              <computeroutput>IGuest::dragHGDrop()</computeroutput> and
              <computeroutput>IGuest::dragHGPutData()</computeroutput>,
              have been moved to an abstract base class called
              <link linkend="IDnDTarget">IDnDTarget</link>.
              VirtualBox implements this base class in the
              <link linkend="IGuestDnDTarget">IGuestDnDTarget</link>
              interface. The implementation can be used by using the
              <link linkend="IGuest__dnDTarget">IGuest::dnDTarget()</link>
              method.</para>
            <para>Methods for providing guest to host drag and drop
              functionality, such as
              <computeroutput>IGuest::dragGHPending()</computeroutput>,
              <computeroutput>IGuest::dragGHDropped()</computeroutput> and
              <computeroutput>IGuest::dragGHGetData()</computeroutput>,
              have been moved to an abstract base class called
              <link linkend="IDnDSource">IDnDSource</link>.
              VirtualBox implements this base class in the
              <link linkend="IGuestDnDSource">IGuestDnDSource</link>
              interface. The implementation can be used by using the
              <link linkend="IGuest__dnDSource">IGuest::dnDSource()</link>
              method.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>The <computeroutput>DragAndDropAction</computeroutput>
            enumeration has been renamed to
            <link linkend="DnDAction">DnDAction</link>.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>The <computeroutput>DragAndDropMode</computeroutput>
            enumeration has been renamed to
            <link linkend="DnDMode">DnDMode</link>.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>The attribute
            <computeroutput>IMachine::dragAndDropMode</computeroutput>
            has been renamed to
            <link linkend="IMachine__dnDMode">IMachine::dnDMode()</link>.</para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>The event
            <computeroutput>IDragAndDropModeChangedEvent</computeroutput>
            has been renamed to
            <link linkend="IDnDModeChangedEvent">IDnDModeChangedEvent</link>.</para>
          </listitem>

          </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para>IDisplay and IFramebuffer interfaces were changed to
          allow IFramebuffer object to reside in a separate frontend
          process:<itemizedlist>

          <listitem><para>
            IDisplay::ResizeCompleted() has been removed, because the
            IFramebuffer object does not provide the screen memory anymore.
          </para></listitem>

          <listitem><para>
            IDisplay::SetFramebuffer() has been replaced with
            IDisplay::AttachFramebuffer() and IDisplay::DetachFramebuffer().
          </para></listitem>

          <listitem><para>
            IDisplay::GetFramebuffer() has been replaced with
            IDisplay::QueryFramebuffer().
          </para></listitem>

          <listitem><para>
            IDisplay::GetScreenResolution() has a new output parameter
            <computeroutput>guestMonitorStatus</computeroutput>
            which tells whether the monitor is enabled in the guest.
          </para></listitem>

          <listitem><para>
            IDisplay::TakeScreenShot() and IDisplay::TakeScreenShotToArray()
            have a new parameter
            <computeroutput>bitmapFormat</computeroutput>. As a consequence of
            this, IDisplay::TakeScreenShotPNGToArray() has been removed.
          </para></listitem>

          <listitem><para>
            IFramebuffer::RequestResize() has been replaced with
            IFramebuffer::NotifyChange().
          </para></listitem>

          <listitem><para>
            IFramebuffer::NotifyUpdateImage() added to support IFramebuffer
            objects in a different process.
          </para></listitem>

          <listitem><para>
            IFramebuffer::Lock(), IFramebuffer::Unlock(),
            IFramebuffer::Address(), IFramebuffer::UsesGuestVRAM() have been
            removed because the IFramebuffer object does not provide the screen
            memory anymore.
          </para></listitem>

          </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para>IGuestSession, IGuestFile and IGuestProcess interfaces
        were changed as follows:
          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Replaced IGuestSession::directoryQueryInfo and
                 IGuestSession::fileQueryInfo with a new
                 <link linkend="IGuestSession__fsObjQueryInfo">IGuestSession::fsObjQueryInfo</link>
                 method that works on any type of file system object.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Replaced IGuestSession::fileRemove,
                 IGuestSession::symlinkRemoveDirectory and
                 IGuestSession::symlinkRemoveFile with a new
                 <link linkend="IGuestSession__fsObjRemove">IGuestSession::fsObjRemove</link>
                 method that works on any type of file system object except
                 directories. (fileRemove also worked on any type of object
                 too, though that was not the intent of the method.)</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Replaced IGuestSession::directoryRename and
                 IGuestSession::directoryRename with a new
                 <link linkend="IGuestSession__fsObjRename">IGuestSession::fsObjRename</link>
                 method that works on any type of file system object.
                 (directoryRename and fileRename may already have worked for
                 any kind of object, but that was never the intent of the
                 methods.)</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Replaced the unimplemented IGuestSession::directorySetACL
                 and IGuestSession::fileSetACL with a new
                 <link linkend="IGuestSession__fsObjSetACL">IGuestSession::fsObjSetACL</link>
                 method that works on all type of file system object. Also
                 added a UNIX-style mode parameter as an alternative to the
                 ACL.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Replaced IGuestSession::fileRemove,
                 IGuestSession::symlinkRemoveDirectory and
                 IGuestSession::symlinkRemoveFile with a new
                 <link linkend="IGuestSession__fsObjRemove">IGuestSession::fsObjRemove</link>
                 method that works on any type of file system object except
                 directories (fileRemove also worked on any type of object,
                 though that was not the intent of the method.)</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed IGuestSession::copyTo to
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__fileCopyToGuest">IGuestSession::fileCopyToGuest</link>.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed IGuestSession::copyFrom to
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__fileCopyFromGuest">IGuestSession::fileCopyFromGuest</link>.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed the CopyFileFlag enum to
              <link linkend="FileCopyFlag">FileCopyFlag</link>.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed the IGuestSession::environment attribute to
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__environmentChanges">IGuestSession::environmentChanges</link>
              to better reflect what it does.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Changed the
              <link linkend="IProcess__environment">IGuestProcess::environment</link>
              to a stub returning E_NOTIMPL since it wasn't doing what was
              advertised (returned changes, not the actual environment).</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed IGuestSession::environmentSet to
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__environmentScheduleSet">IGuestSession::environmentScheduleSet</link>
              to better reflect what it does.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed IGuestSession::environmentUnset to
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__environmentScheduleUnset">IGuestSession::environmentScheduleUnset</link>
              to better reflect what it does.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Removed IGuestSession::environmentGet it was only getting
              changes while giving the impression it was actual environment
              variables, and it did not represent scheduled unset
              operations.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Removed IGuestSession::environmentClear as it duplicates
              assigning an empty array to the
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__environmentChanges">IGuestSession::environmentChanges</link>
              (formerly known as IGuestSession::environment).</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Changed the
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__processCreate">IGuestSession::processCreate</link>
              and
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__processCreateEx">IGuestSession::processCreateEx</link>
              methods to accept arguments starting with argument zero (argv[0])
              instead of argument one (argv[1]). (Not yet implemented on the
              guest additions side, so argv[0] will probably be ignored for a
              short while.)</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>Added a followSymlink parameter to the following methods:
              <itemizedlist>
                <listitem><para><link linkend="IGuestSession__directoryExists">IGuestSession::directoryExists</link></para></listitem>
                <listitem><para><link linkend="IGuestSession__fileExists">IGuestSession::fileExists</link></para></listitem>
                <listitem><para><link linkend="IGuestSession__fileQuerySize">IGuestSession::fileQuerySize</link></para></listitem>
              </itemizedlist></para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>The parameters to the
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__fileOpen">IGuestSession::fileOpen</link>
                and
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__fileOpenEx">IGuestSession::fileOpenEx</link>
                methods were altered:<itemizedlist>
                <listitem><para>The openMode string parameter was replaced by
                  the enum
                  <link linkend="FileAccessMode">FileAccessMode</link>
                  and renamed to accessMode.</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>The disposition string parameter was replaced
                  by the enum
                  <link linkend="FileOpenAction">FileOpenAction</link>
                  and renamed to openAction.</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>The unimplemented sharingMode string parameter
                  was replaced by the enum
                  <link linkend="FileSharingMode">FileSharingMode</link>
                  (fileOpenEx only).</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Added a flags parameter taking a list of
                <link linkend="FileOpenExFlag">FileOpenExFlag</link> values
                (fileOpenEx only).</para></listitem>
                <listitem><para>Removed the offset parameter (fileOpenEx
                only).</para></listitem>
              </itemizedlist></para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para><link linkend="IFile__seek">IGuestFile::seek</link> now
              returns the new offset.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed the FileSeekType enum used by
              <link linkend="IFile__seek">IGuestFile::seek</link>
                to <link linkend="FileSeekOrigin">FileSeekOrigin</link> and
                added the missing End value and renaming the Set to
                Begin.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Extended the unimplemented
                <link linkend="IFile__setACL">IGuestFile::setACL</link>
                method with a UNIX-style mode parameter as an alternative to
                the ACL.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed the IFile::openMode attribute to
                <link linkend="IFile__accessMode">IFile::accessMode</link>
                and change the type from string to
                <link linkend="FileAccessMode">FileAccessMode</link> to reflect
                the changes to the fileOpen methods.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Renamed the IGuestFile::disposition attribute to
              <link linkend="IFile__openAction">IFile::openAction</link> and
              change the type from string to
              <link linkend="FileOpenAction">FileOpenAction</link> to reflect
              the changes to the fileOpen methods.</para>
            </listitem>

            <!-- Non-incompatible things worth mentioning (stubbed methods/attrs aren't worth it). -->
            <listitem>
              <para>Added
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__pathStyle">IGuestSession::pathStyle</link>
              attribute.</para>
            </listitem>
            <listitem>
              <para>Added
              <link linkend="IGuestSession__fsObjExists">IGuestSession::fsObjExists</link>
              attribute.</para>
            </listitem>

          </itemizedlist>
          </para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem><para>
          IConsole::GetDeviceActivity() returns information about multiple
          devices.
        </para></listitem>

        <listitem><para>
          IMachine::ReadSavedThumbnailToArray() has a new parameter
          <computeroutput>bitmapFormat</computeroutput>. As a consequence of
          this, IMachine::ReadSavedThumbnailPNGToArray() has been removed.
        </para></listitem>

        <listitem><para>
          IMachine::QuerySavedScreenshotPNGSize() has been renamed to
          IMachine::QuerySavedScreenshotInfo() which also returns
          an array of available screenshot formats.
        </para></listitem>

        <listitem><para>
          IMachine::ReadSavedScreenshotPNGToArray() has been renamed to
          IMachine::ReadSavedScreenshotToArray() which  has a new parameter
          <computeroutput>bitmapFormat</computeroutput>.
        </para></listitem>

        <listitem><para>
          IMachine::QuerySavedThumbnailSize() has been removed.
        </para></listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The method
          <link linkend="IWebsessionManager__getSessionObject">IWebsessionManager::getSessionObject()</link>
          now returns a new <link linkend="ISession">ISession</link> instance
          for every invocation. This puts the behavior in line with other
          binding styles, which never forced the equivalent of establishing
          another connection and logging in again to get another
          instance.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 4.3</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>The explicit medium locking methods
            <link linkend="IMedium__lockRead">IMedium::lockRead()</link>
            and <link linkend="IMedium__lockWrite">IMedium::lockWrite()</link>
            have been redesigned. They return a lock token object reference
            now, and calling the
            <link linkend="IToken__abandon">IToken::abandon()</link> method (or
            letting the reference count to this object drop to 0) will unlock
            it. This eliminates the rather common problem that an API client
            crash left behind locks, and also improves the safety (API clients
            can't release locks they didn't obtain).</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The parameter list of
          <link linkend="IAppliance__write">IAppliance::write()</link>
          has been changed slightly, to allow multiple flags to be
          passed.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para><computeroutput>IMachine::delete</computeroutput>
          has been renamed to
          <link linkend="IMachine__deleteConfig">IMachine::deleteConfig()</link>,
          to improve API client binding compatibility.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para><computeroutput>IMachine::export</computeroutput>
          has been renamed to
          <link linkend="IMachine__exportTo">IMachine::exportTo()</link>,
          to improve API client binding compatibility.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>For
          <link linkend="IMachine__launchVMProcess">IMachine::launchVMProcess()</link>
          the meaning of the <computeroutput>type</computeroutput> parameter
          has changed slightly. Empty string now means that the per-VM or
          global default frontend is launched. Most callers of this method
          should use the empty string now, unless they really want to override
          the default and launch a particular frontend.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Medium management APIs were changed as follows:<itemizedlist>

            <listitem>
              <para>The type of attribute
              <link linkend="IMedium__variant">IMedium::variant()</link>
              changed from <computeroutput>unsigned long</computeroutput>
              to <computeroutput>safe-array MediumVariant</computeroutput>.
              It is an array of flags instead of a set of flags which were
              stored inside one variable.
              </para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>The parameter list for
              <link linkend="IMedium__cloneTo">IMedium::cloneTo()</link>
              was modified. The type of parameter variant was changed from
              unsigned long to safe-array MediumVariant.
              </para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>The parameter list for
              <link linkend="IMedium__createBaseStorage">IMedium::createBaseStorage()</link>
              was modified. The type of parameter variant was changed from
              unsigned long to safe-array MediumVariant.
              </para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>The parameter list for
              <link linkend="IMedium__createDiffStorage">IMedium::createDiffStorage()</link>
              was modified. The type of parameter variant was changed from
              unsigned long to safe-array MediumVariant.
              </para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>The parameter list for
              <link linkend="IMedium__cloneToBase">IMedium::cloneToBase()</link>
              was modified. The type of parameter variant was changed from
              unsigned long to safe-array MediumVariant.
              </para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The type of attribute
          <link linkend="IMediumFormat__capabilities">IMediumFormat::capabilities()</link>
          changed from <computeroutput>unsigned long</computeroutput> to
          <computeroutput>safe-array MediumFormatCapabilities</computeroutput>.
          It is an array of flags instead of a set of flags which were stored
          inside one variable.
          </para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The attribute
          <link linkend="IMedium__logicalSize">IMedium::logicalSize()</link>
          now returns the logical size of exactly this medium object (whether
          it is a base or diff image). The old behavior was no longer
          acceptable, as each image can have a different capacity.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Guest control APIs - such as
          <link linkend="IGuest">IGuest</link>,
          <link linkend="IGuestSession">IGuestSession</link>,
          <link linkend="IGuestProcess">IGuestProcess</link> and so on - now
          emit own events to provide clients much finer control and the ability
          to write own frontends for guest operations. The event
          <link linkend="IGuestSessionEvent">IGuestSessionEvent</link> acts as
          an abstract base class for all guest control events. Certain guest
          events contain a
          <link linkend="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo">IVirtualBoxErrorInfo</link>
          member to provide more information in case of an error happened on
          the guest side.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Guest control sessions on the guest started by
            <link linkend="IGuest__createSession">IGuest::createSession()</link>
            now are dedicated guest processes to provide more safety and
            performance for certain operations. Also, the
            <link linkend="IGuest__createSession">IGuest::createSession()</link>
            call does not wait for the guest session being created anymore due
            to the dedicated guest session processes just mentioned. This also
            will enable webservice clients to handle guest session creation
            more gracefully. To wait for a guest session being started, use the
            newly added attribute
            <link linkend="IGuestSession__status">IGuestSession::status()</link>
            to query the current guest session status.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The <link linkend="IGuestFile">IGuestFile</link>
            APIs are now implemented to provide native guest file access from
            the host.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The parameter list for
          <link linkend="IGuest__updateGuestAdditions">IMedium::updateGuestAdditions()</link>
          was modified. It now supports specifying optional command line
          arguments for the Guest Additions installer performing the actual
          update on the guest.
          </para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>A new event
          <link linkend="IGuestUserStateChangedEvent">IGuestUserStateChangedEvent</link>
          was introduced to provide guest user status updates to the host via
          event listeners. To use this event there needs to be at least the 4.3
          Guest Additions installed on the guest. At the moment only the states
          "Idle" and "InUse" of the
          <link linkend="GuestUserState">GuestUserState</link> enumeration arei
          supported on Windows guests, starting at Windows 2000 SP2.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>
            The attribute
            <link linkend="IGuestSession__protocolVersion">IGuestSession::protocolVersion</link>
            was added to provide a convenient way to lookup the guest session's
            protocol version it uses to communicate with the installed Guest
            Additions on the guest. Older Guest Additions will set the protocol
            version to 1, whereas Guest Additions 4.3 will set the protocol
            version to 2. This might change in the future as new features
            arise.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para><computeroutput>IDisplay::getScreenResolution</computeroutput>
          has been extended to return the display position in the guest.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>
            The <link linkend="IUSBController">IUSBController</link>
            class is not a singleton of
            <link linkend="IMachine">IMachine</link> anymore but
            <link linkend="IMachine">IMachine</link> contains a list of USB
            controllers present in the VM. The USB device filter handling was
            moved to
            <link linkend="IUSBDeviceFilters">IUSBDeviceFilters</link>.
          </para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 4.2</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Guest control APIs for executing guest processes, working with
          guest files or directories have been moved to the newly introduced
          <link linkend="IGuestSession">IGuestSession</link> interface which
          can be created by calling
          <link linkend="IGuest__createSession">IGuest::createSession()</link>.</para>

          <para>A guest session will act as a
          guest user's impersonation so that the guest credentials only have to
          be provided when creating a new guest session. There can be up to 32
          guest sessions at once per VM, each session serving up to 2048 guest
          processes running or files opened.</para>

          <para>Instead of working with process or directory handles before
          version 4.2, there now are the dedicated interfaces
          <link linkend="IGuestProcess">IGuestProcess</link>,
          <link linkend="IGuestDirectory">IGuestDirectory</link> and
          <link linkend="IGuestFile">IGuestFile</link>. To retrieve more
          information of a file system object the new interface
          <link linkend="IGuestFsObjInfo">IGuestFsObjInfo</link> has been
          introduced.</para>

          <para>Even though the guest control API was changed it is backwards
          compatible so that it can be used with older installed Guest
          Additions. However, to use upcoming features like process termination
          or waiting for input / output new Guest Additions must be installed
          when these features got implemented.</para>

          <para>The following limitations apply:
            <itemizedlist>
              <listitem><para>The <link linkend="IGuestFile">IGuestFile</link>
                interface is not fully implemented yet.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem><para>The symbolic link APIs
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__symlinkCreate">IGuestSession::symlinkCreate()</link>,
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__symlinkExists">IGuestSession::symlinkExists()</link>,
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__symlinkRead">IGuestSession::symlinkRead()</link>,
                IGuestSession::symlinkRemoveDirectory() and
                IGuestSession::symlinkRemoveFile() are not
                implemented yet.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem><para>The directory APIs
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__directoryRemove">IGuestSession::directoryRemove()</link>,
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__directoryRemoveRecursive">IGuestSession::directoryRemoveRecursive()</link>,
                IGuestSession::directoryRename() and
                IGuestSession::directorySetACL() are not
                implemented yet.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem><para>The temporary file creation API
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__fileCreateTemp">IGuestSession::fileCreateTemp()</link>
                is not implemented yet.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem><para>Guest process termination via
                <link linkend="IProcess__terminate">IProcess::terminate()</link>
                is not implemented yet.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem><para>Waiting for guest process output via
                <link linkend="ProcessWaitForFlag__StdOut">ProcessWaitForFlag::StdOut</link>
                and
                <link linkend="ProcessWaitForFlag__StdErr">ProcessWaitForFlag::StdErr</link>
                is not implemented yet.</para>
                <para>To wait for process output,
                <link linkend="IProcess__read">IProcess::read()</link> with
                appropriate flags still can be used to periodically check for
                new output data to arrive. Note that
                <link linkend="ProcessCreateFlag__WaitForStdOut">ProcessCreateFlag::WaitForStdOut</link>
                and / or
                <link linkend="ProcessCreateFlag__WaitForStdErr">ProcessCreateFlag::WaitForStdErr</link>
                need to be specified when creating a guest process via
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__processCreate">IGuestSession::processCreate()</link>
                or
                <link linkend="IGuestSession__processCreateEx">IGuestSession::processCreateEx()</link>.</para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>ACL (Access Control List) handling in general is not
                implemented yet.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist>
          </para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The <link linkend="LockType">LockType</link>
          enumeration now has an additional value
          <computeroutput>VM</computeroutput> which tells
          <link linkend="IMachine__lockMachine">IMachine::lockMachine()</link>
          to create a full-blown object structure for running a VM. This was
          the previous behavior with <computeroutput>Write</computeroutput>,
          which now only creates the minimal object structure to save time and
          resources (at the moment the Console object is still created, but all
          sub-objects such as Display, Keyboard, Mouse, Guest are not.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Machines can be put in groups (actually an array of groups).
          The primary group affects the default placement of files belonging
          to a VM.
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine">IVirtualBox::createMachine()</link>
          and
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__composeMachineFilename">IVirtualBox::composeMachineFilename()</link>
          have been adjusted accordingly, the former taking an array of groups
          as an additional parameter and the latter taking a group as an
          additional parameter. The create option handling has been changed for
          those two methods, too.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The method IVirtualBox::findMedium() has been removed, since
          it provides a subset of the functionality of
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__openMedium">IVirtualBox::openMedium()</link>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The use of acronyms in API enumeration, interface, attribute
          and method names has been made much more consistent, previously they
          sometimes were lowercase and sometimes mixed case. They are now
          consistently all caps:<table>
          <title>Renamed identifiers in VirtualBox 4.2</title>

          <tgroup cols="2" style="verywide">
            <tbody>
              <row>
                <entry><emphasis role="bold">Old name</emphasis></entry>

                <entry><emphasis role="bold">New name</emphasis></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>PointingHidType</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="PointingHIDType">PointingHIDType</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>KeyboardHidType</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="KeyboardHIDType">KeyboardHIDType</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IPciAddress</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IPCIAddress">IPCIAddress</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IPciDeviceAttachment</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IPCIDeviceAttachment">IPCIDeviceAttachment</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::pointingHidType</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__pointingHIDType">IMachine::pointingHIDType</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::keyboardHidType</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__keyboardHIDType">IMachine::keyboardHIDType</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::hpetEnabled</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__HPETEnabled">IMachine::HPETEnabled</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::sessionPid</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__sessionPID">IMachine::sessionPID</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::ioCacheEnabled</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__IOCacheEnabled">IMachine::IOCacheEnabled</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::ioCacheSize</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__IOCacheSize">IMachine::IOCacheSize</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::pciDeviceAssignments</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__PCIDeviceAssignments">IMachine::PCIDeviceAssignments</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::attachHostPciDevice()</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__attachHostPCIDevice">IMachine::attachHostPCIDevice</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IMachine::detachHostPciDevice()</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IMachine__detachHostPCIDevice">IMachine::detachHostPCIDevice()</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IConsole::attachedPciDevices</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IConsole__attachedPCIDevices">IConsole::attachedPCIDevices</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::dhcpEnabled</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__DHCPEnabled">IHostNetworkInterface::DHCPEnabled</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::enableStaticIpConfig()</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__enableStaticIPConfig">IHostNetworkInterface::enableStaticIPConfig()</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::enableStaticIpConfigV6()</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__enableStaticIPConfigV6">IHostNetworkInterface::enableStaticIPConfigV6()</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::enableDynamicIpConfig()</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__enableDynamicIPConfig">IHostNetworkInterface::enableDynamicIPConfig()</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IHostNetworkInterface::dhcpRediscover()</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__DHCPRediscover">IHostNetworkInterface::DHCPRediscover()</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IHost::Acceleration3DAvailable</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IHost__acceleration3DAvailable">IHost::acceleration3DAvailable</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedPae</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedPAE">IGuestOSType::recommendedPAE</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedDvdStorageController</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedDVDStorageController">IGuestOSType::recommendedDVDStorageController</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedDvdStorageBus</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedDVDStorageBus">IGuestOSType::recommendedDVDStorageBus</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedHdStorageController</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedHDStorageController">IGuestOSType::recommendedHDStorageController</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedHdStorageBus</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedHDStorageBus">IGuestOSType::recommendedHDStorageBus</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedUsbHid</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedUSBHID">IGuestOSType::recommendedUSBHID</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedHpet</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedHPET">IGuestOSType::recommendedHPET</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedUsbTablet</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedUSBTablet">IGuestOSType::recommendedUSBTablet</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedRtcUseUtc</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedRTCUseUTC">IGuestOSType::recommendedRTCUseUTC</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IGuestOSType::recommendedUsb</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IGuestOSType__recommendedUSB">IGuestOSType::recommendedUSB</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INetworkAdapter::natDriver</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INetworkAdapter__NATEngine">INetworkAdapter::NATEngine</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IUSBController::enabledEhci</entry>
                <entry>IUSBController::enabledEHCI"</entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INATEngine::tftpPrefix</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INATEngine__TFTPPrefix">INATEngine::TFTPPrefix</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INATEngine::tftpBootFile</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INATEngine__TFTPBootFile">INATEngine::TFTPBootFile</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INATEngine::tftpNextServer</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INATEngine__TFTPNextServer">INATEngine::TFTPNextServer</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INATEngine::dnsPassDomain</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INATEngine__DNSPassDomain">INATEngine::DNSPassDomain</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INATEngine::dnsProxy</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INATEngine__DNSProxy">INATEngine::DNSProxy</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INATEngine::dnsUseHostResolver</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INATEngine__DNSUseHostResolver">INATEngine::DNSUseHostResolver</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>VBoxEventType::OnHostPciDevicePlug</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="VBoxEventType__OnHostPCIDevicePlug">VBoxEventType::OnHostPCIDevicePlug</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>ICPUChangedEvent::cpu</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="ICPUChangedEvent__CPU">ICPUChangedEvent::CPU</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INATRedirectEvent::hostIp</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INATRedirectEvent__hostIP">INATRedirectEvent::hostIP</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>INATRedirectEvent::guestIp</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="INATRedirectEvent__guestIP">INATRedirectEvent::guestIP</link></entry>
              </row>
              <row>
                <entry>IHostPciDevicePlugEvent</entry>
                <entry><link linkend="IHostPCIDevicePlugEvent">IHostPCIDevicePlugEvent</link></entry>
              </row>
            </tbody>
          </tgroup></table></para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 4.1</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>The method
          <link linkend="IAppliance__importMachines">IAppliance::importMachines()</link>
          has one more parameter now, which allows to configure the import
          process in more detail.
          </para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The method
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__openMedium">IVirtualBox::openMedium()</link>
          has one more parameter now, which allows resolving duplicate medium
          UUIDs without the need for external tools.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The <link linkend="INetworkAdapter">INetworkAdapter</link>
          interface has been cleaned up. The various methods to activate an
          attachment type have been replaced by the
          <link linkend="INetworkAdapter__attachmentType">INetworkAdapter::attachmentType</link>
          setter.</para>
          <para>Additionally each attachment mode now has its own attribute,
          which means that host only networks no longer share the settings with
          bridged interfaces.</para>
          <para>To allow introducing new network attachment implementations
          without making API changes, the concept of a generic network
          attachment driver has been introduced, which is configurable through
          key/value properties.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>This version introduces the guest facilities concept. A guest
          facility either represents a module or feature the guest is running
          or offering, which is defined by
          <link linkend="AdditionsFacilityType">AdditionsFacilityType</link>.
          Each facility is member of a
          <link linkend="AdditionsFacilityClass">AdditionsFacilityClass</link>
          and has a current status indicated by
          <link linkend="AdditionsFacilityStatus">AdditionsFacilityStatus</link>,
          together with a timestamp (in ms) of the last status update.</para>
          <para>To address the above concept, the following changes were made:
            <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                  In the <link linkend="IGuest">IGuest</link> interface, the
                  following were removed:
                  <itemizedlist>
                    <listitem>
                      <para>the
                      <computeroutput>supportsSeamless</computeroutput>
                      attribute;</para>
                    </listitem>
                    <listitem>
                      <para>the
                      <computeroutput>supportsGraphics</computeroutput>
                      attribute;</para>
                    </listitem>
                  </itemizedlist>
                </para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                  The function
                  <link linkend="IGuest__getFacilityStatus">IGuest::getFacilityStatus()</link>
                  was added. It quickly provides a facility's status without
                  the need to get the facility collection with
                  <link linkend="IGuest__facilities">IGuest::facilities</link>.
                </para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                  The attribute
                  <link linkend="IGuest__facilities">IGuest::facilities</link>
                  was added to provide an easy to access collection of all
                  currently known guest facilities, that is, it contains all
                  facilies where at least one status update was made since the
                  guest was started.
                </para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                  The interface
                  <link linkend="IAdditionsFacility">IAdditionsFacility</link>
                  was added to represent a single facility returned by
                  <link linkend="IGuest__facilities">IGuest::facilities</link>.
                </para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                  <link linkend="AdditionsFacilityStatus">AdditionsFacilityStatus</link>
                  was added to represent a facility's overall status.
                </para>
              </listitem>
              <listitem>
                <para>
                  <link linkend="AdditionsFacilityType">AdditionsFacilityType</link> and
                  <link linkend="AdditionsFacilityClass">AdditionsFacilityClass</link> were
                  added to represent the facility's type and class.
                </para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist>
          </para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 4.0</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>A new Java glue layer replacing the previous OOWS JAX-WS
          bindings was introduced. The new library allows for uniform code
          targeting both local (COM/XPCOM) and remote (SOAP) transports. Now,
          instead of <computeroutput>IWebsessionManager</computeroutput>, the
          new class <computeroutput>VirtualBoxManager</computeroutput> must be
          used. See <xref linkend="javaapi"/> for details.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The confusingly named and impractical session APIs were
          changed. In existing client code, the following changes need to be
          made:<itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>Replace any
                <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::openSession(uuidMachine,
                ...)</computeroutput> API call with the machine's
                <link linkend="IMachine__lockMachine">IMachine::lockMachine()</link>
                call and a
                <computeroutput>LockType.Write</computeroutput> argument. The
                functionality is unchanged, but instead of "opening a direct
                session on a machine" all documentation now refers to
                "obtaining a write lock on a machine for the client
                session".</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>Similarly, replace any
                <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::openExistingSession(uuidMachine,
                ...)</computeroutput> call with the machine's
                <link linkend="IMachine__lockMachine">IMachine::lockMachine()</link>
                call and a <computeroutput>LockType.Shared</computeroutput>
                argument. Whereas it was previously impossible to connect a
                client session to a running VM process in a race-free manner,
                the new API will atomically either write-lock the machine for
                the current session or establish a remote link to an existing
                session. Existing client code which tried calling both
                <computeroutput>openSession()</computeroutput> and
                <computeroutput>openExistingSession()</computeroutput> can now
                use this one call instead.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>Third, replace any
                <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::openRemoteSession(uuidMachine,
                ...)</computeroutput> call with the machine's
                <link linkend="IMachine__launchVMProcess">IMachine::launchVMProcess()</link>
                call. The functionality is unchanged.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>The <link linkend="SessionState">SessionState</link> enum
                was adjusted accordingly: "Open" is now "Locked", "Closed" is
                now "Unlocked", "Closing" is now "Unlocking".</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Virtual machines created with VirtualBox 4.0 or later no
          longer register their media in the global media registry in the
          <computeroutput>VirtualBox.xml</computeroutput> file. Instead, such
          machines list all their media in their own machine XML files. As a
          result, a number of media-related APIs had to be modified again.
          <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>Neither
                <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::createHardDisk()</computeroutput>
                nor
                <link linkend="IVirtualBox__openMedium">IVirtualBox::openMedium()</link>
                register media automatically any more.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IMachine__attachDevice">IMachine::attachDevice()</link>
                and
                <link linkend="IMachine__mountMedium">IMachine::mountMedium()</link>
                now take an IMedium object instead of a UUID as an argument. It
                is these two calls which add media to a registry now (either a
                machine registry for machines created with VirtualBox 4.0 or
                later or the global registry otherwise). As a consequence, if a
                medium is opened but never attached to a machine, it is no
                longer added to any registry any more.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>To reduce code duplication, the APIs
                IVirtualBox::findHardDisk(), getHardDisk(), findDVDImage(),
                getDVDImage(), findFloppyImage() and getFloppyImage() have all
                been merged into IVirtualBox::findMedium(), and
                IVirtualBox::openHardDisk(), openDVDImage() and
                openFloppyImage() have all been merged into
                <link linkend="IVirtualBox__openMedium">IVirtualBox::openMedium()</link>.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>The rare use case of changing the UUID and parent UUID
                of a medium previously handled by
                <computeroutput>openHardDisk()</computeroutput> is now in a
                separate IMedium::setIDs method.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>ISystemProperties::get/setDefaultHardDiskFolder()</computeroutput>
                have been removed since disk images are now by default placed
                in each machine's folder.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>The
                <link linkend="ISystemProperties__infoVDSize">ISystemProperties::infoVDSize</link>
                attribute replaces the
                <computeroutput>getMaxVDISize()</computeroutput>
                API call; this now uses bytes instead of megabytes.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Machine management APIs were enhanced as follows:<itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine">IVirtualBox::createMachine()</link>
                is no longer restricted to creating machines in the default
                "Machines" folder, but can now create machines at arbitrary
                locations. For this to work, the parameter list had to be
                changed.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>The long-deprecated
                <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::createLegacyMachine()</computeroutput>
                API has been removed.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>To reduce code duplication and for consistency with the
                aforementioned media APIs,
                <computeroutput>IVirtualBox::getMachine()</computeroutput> has
                been merged with
                <link linkend="IVirtualBox__findMachine">IVirtualBox::findMachine()</link>,
                and
                <computeroutput>IMachine::getSnapshot()</computeroutput> has
                been merged with
                <link linkend="IMachine__findSnapshot">IMachine::findSnapshot()</link>.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>IVirtualBox::unregisterMachine()</computeroutput>
                was replaced with
                <link linkend="IMachine__unregister">IMachine::unregister()</link>
                with additional functionality for cleaning up machine
                files.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>IMachine::deleteSettings</computeroutput>
                has been replaced by IMachine::delete, which allows specifying
                which disk images are to be deleted as part of the deletion,
                and because it can take a while it also returns a
                <computeroutput>IProgress</computeroutput> object reference,
                so that the completion of the asynchronous activities can be
                monitored.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>IConsole::forgetSavedState</computeroutput>
                has been renamed to
                <computeroutput>IConsole::discardSavedState()</computeroutput>.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>All event callbacks APIs were replaced with a new, generic
          event mechanism that can be used both locally (COM, XPCOM) and
          remotely (web services). Also, the new mechanism is usable from
          scripting languages and a local Java. See
          <link linkend="IEvent">events</link> for details. The new concept
          will require changes to all clients that used event callbacks.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para><computeroutput>additionsActive()</computeroutput> was replaced
          with
          <link linkend="IGuest__additionsRunLevel">additionsRunLevel()</link>
          and
          <link linkend="IGuest__getAdditionsStatus">getAdditionsStatus()</link>
          in order to support a more detailed status of the current Guest
          Additions loading/readiness state.
          <link linkend="IGuest__additionsVersion">IGuest::additionsVersion()</link>
          no longer returns the Guest Additions interface version but the
          installed Guest Additions version and revision in form of
          <computeroutput>3.3.0r12345</computeroutput>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>To address shared folders auto-mounting support, the following
          APIs were extended to require an additional
          <computeroutput>automount</computeroutput> parameter: <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IVirtualBox__createSharedFolder">IVirtualBox::createSharedFolder()</link></para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IMachine__createSharedFolder">IMachine::createSharedFolder()</link></para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IConsole__createSharedFolder">IConsole::createSharedFolder()</link></para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist> Also, a new property named
          <computeroutput>autoMount</computeroutput> was added to the
          <link linkend="ISharedFolder">ISharedFolder</link>
          interface.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The appliance (OVF) APIs were enhanced as
          follows:<itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>IMachine::export</computeroutput>
                received an extra parameter
                <computeroutput>location</computeroutput>, which is used to
                decide for the disk naming.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IAppliance__write">IAppliance::write()</link>
                received an extra parameter
                <computeroutput>manifest</computeroutput>, which can suppress
                creating the manifest file on export.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IVFSExplorer__entryList">IVFSExplorer::entryList()</link>
                received two extra parameters
                <computeroutput>sizes</computeroutput> and
                <computeroutput>modes</computeroutput>, which contains the
                sizes (in bytes) and the file access modes (in octal form) of
                the returned files.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Support for remote desktop access to virtual machines has been
          cleaned up to allow third party implementations of the remote
          desktop server. This is called the VirtualBox Remote Desktop
          Extension (VRDE) and can be added to VirtualBox by installing the
          corresponding extension package; see the VirtualBox User Manual for
          details.</para>

          <para>The following API changes were made to support the VRDE
          interface: <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer</computeroutput> has been
                renamed to
                <link linkend="IVRDEServer">IVRDEServer</link>.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><computeroutput>IRemoteDisplayInfo</computeroutput> has
                been renamed to
                <link linkend="IVRDEServerInfo">IVRDEServerInfo</link>.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IMachine__VRDEServer">IMachine::VRDEServer</link>
                replaces
                <computeroutput>VRDPServer.</computeroutput></para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IConsole__VRDEServerInfo">IConsole::VRDEServerInfo</link>
                replaces
                <computeroutput>RemoteDisplayInfo</computeroutput>.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="ISystemProperties__VRDEAuthLibrary">ISystemProperties::VRDEAuthLibrary</link>
                replaces
                <computeroutput>RemoteDisplayAuthLibrary</computeroutput>.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>The following methods have been implemented in
                <computeroutput>IVRDEServer</computeroutput> to support
                generic VRDE properties: <itemizedlist>
                    <listitem>
                      <para><link linkend="IVRDEServer__setVRDEProperty">IVRDEServer::setVRDEProperty</link></para>
                    </listitem>

                    <listitem>
                      <para><link linkend="IVRDEServer__getVRDEProperty">IVRDEServer::getVRDEProperty</link></para>
                    </listitem>

                    <listitem>
                      <para><link linkend="IVRDEServer__VRDEProperties">IVRDEServer::VRDEProperties</link></para>
                    </listitem>
                  </itemizedlist></para>

                <para>A few implementation-specific attributes of the old
                <computeroutput>IVRDPServer</computeroutput> interface have
                been removed and replaced with properties: <itemizedlist>
                    <listitem>
                      <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer::Ports</computeroutput>
                      has been replaced with the
                      <computeroutput>"TCP/Ports"</computeroutput> property.
                      The property value is a string, which contains a
                      comma-separated list of ports or ranges of ports. Use a
                      dash between two port numbers to specify a range.
                      Example:
                      <computeroutput>"5000,5010-5012"</computeroutput></para>
                    </listitem>

                    <listitem>
                      <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer::NetAddress</computeroutput>
                      has been replaced with the
                      <computeroutput>"TCP/Address"</computeroutput> property.
                      The property value is an IP address string. Example:
                      <computeroutput>"127.0.0.1"</computeroutput></para>
                    </listitem>

                    <listitem>
                      <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer::VideoChannel</computeroutput>
                      has been replaced with the
                      <computeroutput>"VideoChannel/Enabled"</computeroutput>
                      property. The property value is either
                      <computeroutput>"true"</computeroutput> or
                      <computeroutput>"false"</computeroutput></para>
                    </listitem>

                    <listitem>
                      <para><computeroutput>IVRDPServer::VideoChannelQuality</computeroutput>
                      has been replaced with the
                      <computeroutput>"VideoChannel/Quality"</computeroutput>
                      property. The property value is a string which contain a
                      decimal number in range 10..100. Invalid values are
                      ignored and the quality is set to the default value 75.
                      Example: <computeroutput>"50"</computeroutput></para>
                    </listitem>
                  </itemizedlist></para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The VirtualBox external authentication module interface has
          been updated and made more generic. Because of that,
          <computeroutput>VRDPAuthType</computeroutput> enumeration has been
          renamed to <link linkend="AuthType">AuthType</link>.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 3.2</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>The following interfaces were renamed for consistency:
          <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>IMachine::getCpuProperty() is now
                <link linkend="IMachine__getCPUProperty">IMachine::getCPUProperty()</link>;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>IMachine::setCpuProperty() is now
                <link linkend="IMachine__setCPUProperty">IMachine::setCPUProperty()</link>;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>IMachine::getCpuIdLeaf() is now
                <link linkend="IMachine__getCPUIDLeaf">IMachine::getCPUIDLeaf()</link>;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>IMachine::setCpuIdLeaf() is now
                <link linkend="IMachine__setCPUIDLeaf">IMachine::setCPUIDLeaf()</link>;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>IMachine::removeCpuIdLeaf() is now
                <link linkend="IMachine__removeCPUIDLeaf">IMachine::removeCPUIDLeaf()</link>;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>IMachine::removeAllCpuIdLeafs() is now
                <link linkend="IMachine__removeAllCPUIDLeaves">IMachine::removeAllCPUIDLeaves()</link>;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>the CpuPropertyType enum is now
                <link linkend="CPUPropertyType">CPUPropertyType</link>.</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>IVirtualBoxCallback::onSnapshotDiscarded() is now
                IVirtualBoxCallback::onSnapshotDeleted.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>When creating a VM configuration with
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine">IVirtualBox::createMachine()</link>
          it is now possible to ignore existing configuration files which would
          previously have caused a failure. For this the
          <computeroutput>override</computeroutput> parameter was added.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Deleting snapshots via
          <computeroutput>IConsole::deleteSnapshot()</computeroutput> is now
          possible while the associated VM is running in almost all cases.
          The API is unchanged, but client code that verifies machine states
          to determine whether snapshots can be deleted may need to be
          adjusted.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The IoBackendType enumeration was replaced with a boolean flag
          (see
          <link linkend="IStorageController__useHostIOCache">IStorageController::useHostIOCache</link>).</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>To address multi-monitor support, the following APIs were
          extended to require an additional
          <computeroutput>screenId</computeroutput> parameter: <itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>IMachine::querySavedThumbnailSize()</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IMachine__readSavedThumbnailToArray">IMachine::readSavedThumbnailToArray()</link></para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IMachine__querySavedScreenshotInfo">IMachine::querySavedScreenshotPNGSize()</link></para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IMachine__readSavedScreenshotToArray">IMachine::readSavedScreenshotPNGToArray()</link></para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The <computeroutput>shape</computeroutput> parameter of
          IConsoleCallback::onMousePointerShapeChange was changed from a
          implementation-specific pointer to a safearray, enabling scripting
          languages to process pointer shapes.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 3.1</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Due to the new flexibility in medium attachments that was
          introduced with version 3.1 (in particular, full flexibility with
          attaching CD/DVD drives to arbitrary controllers), we seized the
          opportunity to rework all interfaces dealing with storage media to
          make the API more flexible as well as logical. The
          <link linkend="IStorageController">IStorageController</link>,
          <link linkend="IMedium">IMedium</link>,
          <link linkend="IMediumAttachment">IMediumAttachment</link> and
          <link linkend="IMachine">IMachine</link> interfaces were
          affected the most. Existing code using them to configure storage and
          media needs to be carefully checked.</para>

          <para>All media (hard disks, floppies and CDs/DVDs) are now
          uniformly handled through the <link linkend="IMedium">IMedium</link>
          interface. The device-specific interfaces
          (<code>IHardDisk</code>, <code>IDVDImage</code>,
          <code>IHostDVDDrive</code>, <code>IFloppyImage</code> and
          <code>IHostFloppyDrive</code>) have been merged into IMedium; CD/DVD
          and floppy media no longer need special treatment. The device type
          of a medium determines in which context it can be used. Some
          functionality was moved to the other storage-related
          interfaces.</para>

          <para><code>IMachine::attachHardDisk</code> and similar methods have
          been renamed and generalized to deal with any type of drive and
          medium.
          <link linkend="IMachine__attachDevice">IMachine::attachDevice()</link>
          is the API method for adding any drive to a storage controller. The
          floppy and DVD/CD drives are no longer handled specially, and that
          means you can have more than one of them. As before, drives can only
          be changed while the VM is powered off. Mounting (or unmounting)
          removable media at runtime is possible with
          <link linkend="IMachine__mountMedium">IMachine::mountMedium()</link>.</para>

          <para>Newly created virtual machines have no storage controllers
          associated with them. Even the IDE Controller needs to be created
          explicitly. The floppy controller is now visible as a separate
          controller, with a new storage bus type. For each storage bus type
          you can query the device types which can be attached, so that it is
          not necessary to hardcode any attachment rules.</para>

          <para>This required matching changes e.g. in the callback interfaces
          (the medium specific change notification was replaced by a generic
          medium change notification) and removing associated enums (e.g.
          <code>DriveState</code>). In many places the incorrect use of the
          plural form "media" was replaced by "medium", to improve
          consistency.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Reading the
          <link linkend="IMedium__state">IMedium::state</link> attribute no
          longer automatically performs an accessibility check; a new method
          <link linkend="IMedium__refreshState">IMedium::refreshState()</link>
          does this. The attribute only returns the state now.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>There were substantial changes related to snapshots, triggered
          by the "branched snapshots" functionality introduced with version
          3.1. IConsole::discardSnapshot was renamed to
          <computeroutput>IConsole::deleteSnapshot()</computeroutput>.
          IConsole::discardCurrentState and
          IConsole::discardCurrentSnapshotAndState were removed; corresponding
          new functionality is in
          <computeroutput>IConsole::restoreSnapshot()</computeroutput>.
          Also, when <computeroutput>IConsole::takeSnapshot()</computeroutput>
          is called on a running virtual machine, a live snapshot will be
          created. The old behavior was to temporarily pause the virtual
          machine while creating an online snapshot.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The <computeroutput>IVRDPServer</computeroutput>,
          <computeroutput>IRemoteDisplayInfo"</computeroutput> and
          <computeroutput>IConsoleCallback</computeroutput> interfaces were
          changed to reflect VRDP server ability to bind to one of available
          ports from a list of ports.</para>

          <para>The <computeroutput>IVRDPServer::port</computeroutput>
          attribute has been replaced with
          <computeroutput>IVRDPServer::ports</computeroutput>, which is a
          comma-separated list of ports or ranges of ports.</para>

          <para>An <computeroutput>IRemoteDisplayInfo::port"</computeroutput>
          attribute has been added for querying the actual port VRDP server
          listens on.</para>

          <para>An IConsoleCallback::onRemoteDisplayInfoChange() notification
          callback has been added.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The parameter lists for the following functions were
          modified:<itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IHost__removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface">IHost::removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface()</link></para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para><link linkend="IHost__removeUSBDeviceFilter">IHost::removeUSBDeviceFilter()</link></para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>In the OOWS bindings for JAX-WS, the behavior of structures
          changed: for one, we implemented natural structures field access so
          you can just call a "get" method to obtain a field. Secondly,
          setters in structures were disabled as they have no expected effect
          and were at best misleading.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 3.0</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>In the object-oriented web service bindings for JAX-WS, proper
          inheritance has been introduced for some classes, so explicit
          casting is no longer needed to call methods from a parent class. In
          particular, IHardDisk and other classes now properly derive from
          <link linkend="IMedium">IMedium</link>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>All object identifiers (machines, snapshots, disks, etc)
          switched from GUIDs to strings (now still having string
          representation of GUIDs inside). As a result, no particular internal
          structure can be assumed for object identifiers; instead, they
          should be treated as opaque unique handles. This change mostly
          affects Java and C++ programs; for other languages, GUIDs are
          transparently converted to strings.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The uses of NULL strings have been changed greatly. All out
          parameters now use empty strings to signal a null value. For in
          parameters both the old NULL and empty string is allowed. This
          change was necessary to support more client bindings, especially
          using the web service API. Many of them either have no special NULL
          value or have trouble dealing with it correctly in the respective
          library code.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Accidentally, the <code>TSBool</code> interface still appeared
          in 3.0.0, and was removed in 3.0.2. This is an SDK bug, do not use
          the SDK for VirtualBox 3.0.0 for developing clients.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The type of
          <link linkend="IVirtualBoxErrorInfo__resultCode">IVirtualBoxErrorInfo::resultCode</link>
          changed from
          <computeroutput>result</computeroutput> to
          <computeroutput>long</computeroutput>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The parameter list of IVirtualBox::openHardDisk was
          changed.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The method IConsole::discardSavedState was renamed to
          IConsole::forgetSavedState, and a parameter was added.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The method IConsole::powerDownAsync was renamed to
          <link linkend="IConsole__powerDown">IConsole::powerDown</link>,
          and the previous method with that name was deleted. So effectively a
          parameter was added.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>In the
          <link linkend="IFramebuffer">IFramebuffer</link> interface, the
          following were removed:<itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>the <computeroutput>operationSupported</computeroutput>
                attribute;</para>

                <para>(as a result, the
                <computeroutput>FramebufferAccelerationOperation</computeroutput>
                enum was no longer needed and removed as well);</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>the <computeroutput>solidFill()</computeroutput>
                method;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>the <computeroutput>copyScreenBits()</computeroutput>
                method.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>In the <link linkend="IDisplay">IDisplay</link>
          interface, the following were removed:<itemizedlist>
              <listitem>
                <para>the
                <computeroutput>setupInternalFramebuffer()</computeroutput>
                method;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>the <computeroutput>lockFramebuffer()</computeroutput>
                method;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>the <computeroutput>unlockFramebuffer()</computeroutput>
                method;</para>
              </listitem>

              <listitem>
                <para>the
                <computeroutput>registerExternalFramebuffer()</computeroutput>
                method.</para>
              </listitem>
            </itemizedlist></para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 2.2</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>Added explicit version number into JAX-WS Java package names,
          such as <computeroutput>org.virtualbox_2_2</computeroutput>,
          allowing connect to multiple VirtualBox clients from single Java
          application.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The interfaces having a "2" suffix attached to them with
          version 2.1 were renamed again to have that suffix removed. This
          time around, this change involves only the name, there are no
          functional differences.</para>

          <para>As a result, IDVDImage2 is now IDVDImage; IHardDisk2 is now
          IHardDisk; IHardDisk2Attachment is now IHardDiskAttachment.</para>

          <para>Consequentially, all related methods and attributes that had a
          "2" suffix have been renamed; for example, IMachine::attachHardDisk2
          now becomes IMachine::attachHardDisk().</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>IVirtualBox::openHardDisk has an extra parameter for opening a
          disk read/write or read-only.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The remaining collections were replaced by more performant
          safe-arrays. This affects the following collections:</para>

          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>IGuestOSTypeCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>IHostDVDDriveCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>IHostFloppyDriveCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>IHostUSBDeviceCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>IHostUSBDeviceFilterCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>IProgressCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>ISharedFolderCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>ISnapshotCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>IUSBDeviceCollection</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>IUSBDeviceFilterCollection</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Since "Host Interface Networking" was renamed to "bridged
          networking" and host-only networking was introduced, all associated
          interfaces needed renaming as well. In detail:</para>

          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>The HostNetworkInterfaceType enum has been renamed to
              <link linkend="HostNetworkInterfaceMediumType">HostNetworkInterfaceMediumType</link></para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>The IHostNetworkInterface::type attribute has been renamed
              to
              <link linkend="IHostNetworkInterface__mediumType">IHostNetworkInterface::mediumType</link></para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>INetworkAdapter::attachToHostInterface() has been renamed
              to INetworkAdapter::attachToBridgedInterface</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>In the IHost interface, createHostNetworkInterface() has
              been renamed to
              <link linkend="IHost__createHostOnlyNetworkInterface">createHostOnlyNetworkInterface()</link></para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>Similarly, removeHostNetworkInterface() has been renamed
              to
              <link linkend="IHost__removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface">removeHostOnlyNetworkInterface()</link></para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>

    <sect1>
      <title>Incompatible API changes with version 2.1</title>

      <itemizedlist>
        <listitem>
          <para>With VirtualBox 2.1, error codes were added to many error
          infos that give the caller a machine-readable (numeric) feedback in
          addition to the error string that has always been available. This is
          an ongoing process, and future versions of this SDK reference will
          document the error codes for each method call.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The hard disk and other media interfaces were completely
          redesigned. This was necessary to account for the support of VMDK,
          VHD and other image types; since backwards compatibility had to be
          broken anyway, we seized the moment to redesign the interfaces in a
          more logical way.</para>

          <itemizedlist>
            <listitem>
              <para>Previously, the old IHardDisk interface had several
              derivatives called IVirtualDiskImage, IVMDKImage, IVHDImage,
              IISCSIHardDisk and ICustomHardDisk for the various disk formats
              supported by VirtualBox. The new IHardDisk2 interface that comes
              with version 2.1 now supports all hard disk image formats
              itself.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>IHardDiskFormat is a new interface to describe the
              available back-ends for hard disk images (e.g. VDI, VMDK, VHD or
              iSCSI). The IHardDisk2::format attribute can be used to find out
              the back-end that is in use for a particular hard disk image.
              ISystemProperties::hardDiskFormats[] contains a list of all
              back-ends supported by the system.
              <link linkend="ISystemProperties__defaultHardDiskFormat">ISystemProperties::defaultHardDiskFormat</link>
              contains the default system format.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>In addition, the new
              <link linkend="IMedium">IMedium</link> interface is a generic
              interface for hard disk, DVD and floppy images that contains the
              attributes and methods shared between them. It can be considered
              a parent class of the more specific interfaces for those images,
              which are now IHardDisk2, IDVDImage2 and IFloppyImage2.</para>

              <para>In each case, the "2" versions of these interfaces replace
              the earlier versions that did not have the "2" suffix.
              Previously, the IDVDImage and IFloppyImage interfaces were
              entirely unrelated to IHardDisk.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>As a result, all parts of the API that previously
              referenced IHardDisk, IDVDImage or IFloppyImage or any of the
              old subclasses are gone and will have replacements that use
              IHardDisk2, IDVDImage2 and IFloppyImage2; see, for example,
              IMachine::attachHardDisk2.</para>
            </listitem>

            <listitem>
              <para>In particular, the IVirtualBox::hardDisks2 array replaces
              the earlier IVirtualBox::hardDisks collection.</para>
            </listitem>
          </itemizedlist>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para><link linkend="IGuestOSType">IGuestOSType</link> was
          extended to group operating systems into families and for 64-bit
          support.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The
          <link linkend="IHostNetworkInterface">IHostNetworkInterface</link>
          interface was completely rewritten to account for the changes in how
          Host Interface Networking is now implemented in VirtualBox
          2.1.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The IVirtualBox::machines2[] array replaces the former
          IVirtualBox::machines collection.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Added
          <link linkend="IHost__getProcessorFeature">IHost::getProcessorFeature()</link>
          and <link linkend="ProcessorFeature">ProcessorFeature</link>
          enumeration.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>The parameter list for
          <link linkend="IVirtualBox__createMachine">IVirtualBox::createMachine()</link>
          was modified.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Added IMachine::pushGuestProperty.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>New attributes in IMachine: accelerate3DEnabled,
          HWVirtExVPIDEnabled,
          <computeroutput>IMachine::guestPropertyNotificationPatterns</computeroutput>,
          <link linkend="IMachine__CPUCount">CPUCount</link>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Added
          <link linkend="IConsole__powerUpPaused">IConsole::powerUpPaused()</link>
          and
          <link linkend="IConsole__getGuestEnteredACPIMode">IConsole::getGuestEnteredACPIMode()</link>.</para>
        </listitem>

        <listitem>
          <para>Removed ResourceUsage enumeration.</para>
        </listitem>
      </itemizedlist>
    </sect1>
  </chapter>
</book>
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