

Resuming from a hibernated state may not do the job. Remember to reboot your host PC after making BIOSĬhanges - in this case a full restart from power off is required, just If you see "Virtual Directed I/O" then that is aĭifferent thing. The option may be called something like "Enable Virtualization Look for something buried in a menu, perhaps in the security category. This is probably not something we here at the You need to check with your PC manual or support forum to find out how to boot You usually need to enable VT-x/AMD-v in the host PC BIOS. The CPU must have 64bit capability and supportĮither Intel or AMD virtualization technologies: VT-x or AMD-v. Note your exact CPU model or part number, then go online and check its capabilities. To enable 64bit guests, run through the following checklist :. Support for virtualization (Intel VT-x or AMD-v) is required forĬertain VMs, which includes all 64bit VMs - regardless of the host. The issue is that in VirtualBox, hardware You can install 64bit guests on 32bit hosts, so the "bittedness" of I'm quoting the below one from the Virtualbox forum moderator yet not working.This is normal if your CPU does not have hardware support for virtualization (Intel VT-x or AMD-v). Yet, I can't find 64-bit version of guest VM settings. (just googled and found): lsmod | grep vm I believe I don't have VM products such as KVM, and I tried searching VM products using lsmod. This is my processor information from the lscpu command: I believe my processor is 64-bit capable and my motherboard has enabled vt settings. It's my regular desktop, and I installed Oracle VirtualBox from. I have a Ubuntu desktop installed on Dell Optiplex 755.
