-1

I have a 64-Bit computer and I am thinking about upgrading it to a 64-bit verson I am trying it out on virtualbox first but i get this error.

Failed to open a session for the virtual machine Linux Mint-64.

VT-x is disabled in the BIOS for all CPU modes (VERR_VMX_MSR_ALL_VMX_DISABLED).

Result Code: NS_ERROR_FAILURE (0x80004005) Component: ConsoleWrap Interface: IConsole {872da645-4a9b-1727-bee2-5585105b9eed}

Fake News
  • 1
  • 1
  • 4
  • 2
    Please enable `VT-X` in `BIOS` to use Virtualbox! – George Udosen Dec 11 '17 at 20:07
  • Are you trying to run a 64 bit virtual machine on a 32 bit OS? – ubfan1 Dec 11 '17 at 20:08
  • OP says 64bit computer @ubfan1 – George Udosen Dec 11 '17 at 20:10
  • Did you install 32bit Ubuntu before 'testing' 64-bit? If you did, you can't run a 64bit VM - you're limited by the 32bit architecture of the OS (not the system)> – Thomas Ward Dec 11 '17 at 20:14
  • @GeorgeUdosen if the OP is on a 32-bit OS they can't test run the 64-bit OS in a VM, because of system limitations by the OS and not the hardware itself. – Thomas Ward Dec 11 '17 at 20:14
  • 1
    I noticed you mentioned "Mint" here, are you using Mint or actual Ubuntu? – Thomas Ward Dec 11 '17 at 20:15
  • Yes I know @ThomasWard but I saw `64bit computer` – George Udosen Dec 11 '17 at 20:15
  • @GeorgeUdosen I saw that too, but 64-bit ***hardware*** and 32-bit ***OS*** are different, and the OS will limit the VM if it's 32bit. Hence why I asked what they're using. – Thomas Ward Dec 11 '17 at 20:16
  • Thanks. I am using 32-Bit OS thats probably the problem. I am using Linux Mint 32-Bit 17.2.3 I think. – Fake News Dec 11 '17 at 21:40
  • Possible duplicate of [How do I enable hardware virtualization technology (VT-x) for use in Virtualbox?](https://askubuntu.com/questions/256792/how-do-i-enable-hardware-virtualization-technology-vt-x-for-use-in-virtualbox) – karel Dec 12 '17 at 03:08
  • The answer provided doesn't work. The BIOS still rejects it even though system virtualization is enabled. How do I fix this. – Fake News Dec 13 '17 at 22:16

1 Answers1

2

Use these steps to enable VT-X in BIOS:

  1. Reboot the computer and open the system's BIOS menu. This can usually be done by pressing the delete key, the F1 key or Alt and F4 keys depending on the system.
  2. Select Restore Defaults or Restore Optimized Defaults, and then select Save & Exit.
  3. Power off the machine and disconnect the power supply.

  4. Enabling the virtualization extensions in BIOS:

    a. Power on the machine and open the BIOS (as per Step 1).

    b. Open the Processor submenu The processor settings menu may be hidden in the Chipset, Advanced CPU Configuration or Northbridge.

    c. Enable Intel Virtualization Technology (also known as Intel VT) or AMD-V depending on the brand of the processor. The virtualization extensions may be labeled Virtualization Extensions, Vanderpool or various other names depending on the OEM and system BIOS.

    d. Enable Intel VTd or AMD IOMMU, if the options are available. Intel VTd and AMD IOMMU are used for PCI passthrough.

    e. Select Save & Exit.

  5. Power off the machine and disconnect the power supply.

  6. Run cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep -E "vmx|svm". If the command outputs, the virtualization extensions are now enabled. If there is no output your system may not have the virtualization extensions or the correct BIOS setting enabled.

Source:

https://docs-old.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/13/html/Virtualization_Guide/sect-Virtualization-Troubleshooting-Enabling_Intel_VT_and_AMD_V_virtualization_hardware_extensions_in_BIOS.html

N0rbert
  • 97,162
  • 34
  • 239
  • 423
George Udosen
  • 35,970
  • 13
  • 99
  • 121
  • I used to run Windows 7 Ultimate 64-Bit but during a drive wipe I lost the OS and MBR so the recovery disk was worthless. I use a lenovo X300 and sometimes these older systems are a bit "resistant" to some changes you would like to make. Once I was downloading Window 10 onto my desktop which runs on Windows XP Media Center Edition and it saw what i was doing so it stopped the download and said "Permission Denied" – Fake News Dec 11 '17 at 21:52
  • Just adding to what I just said the BIOS on my computer recieved its last update in January 2009, so I am not sure if thats an option. – Fake News Dec 11 '17 at 21:56