![]() I may even eventually switch to Linux Mint or Ubuntu myself. I want to do this so that when I build a computer for someone that's a gamer, they don't have to waste ~$90 on buying a new version of Windows 7 just to be able to play games. This is why I'd like to be able to access my files on a shared folder or (preferably) an entire shared drive. Do I need to restart the VM? If so, how can I restart without erasing all of my settings? (Usually what happens when I exit is everything I did before is lost).ĮDIT: I don't know if this will help, but basically what I'm trying to do is try out Wine on Linux Mint with a few of the games I currently play on Windows to see which ones will work and so I can get used to using Wine and Linux. There's not even a folder there that's named "sf_Shared_Program_Files_x86". The shared folder is set to automount but it is not showing up in /media/sf_Shared_Program_Files_x86. For VirtualBox with a Linux guest, these are the steps to mount a shared folder: Use the VirtualBox hosts application, VirtualBox Manager, to specify host folders to share. ![]() Code: Select all sudo gpasswd -a your-user-name vboxsf You will have to logout and login again for group membership to take affect.
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