

Grep: /usr/src/linux/include/linux/version.h: Datei oder Verzeichnis nicht gefunden Jan 2008, 18:50Īctually, I run into the same problem (KDE 4.01 live CD installed): Kernel header, includes and source are installed, and I can easily recompile the kernel.Ĭode: Select all Expand view Collapse view export KERN_INCL=/usr/src/linux/includeĬode: Select all Expand view Collapse view Installing VirtualBox 1.5.2 Guest Additions, built Thu Oct 18 10:04:07 CEST 2007 Some gentle guidance would be appreciated. I assume I picked it up during my update frenzy. In particular, I notice I've got a release candidate kernel. I'm smart enough to notice that the versions don't match but not smart enough to know what to do about it. repositories/Virtualization:/VirtualBox/openSUSE_10.3/ I've installed linux-kernel-headers, kernel-source, autoyast, autoconf, automake, gcc, and probably a few others I'm forgetting. Makefile:38: *** Error: unable to find the include directory for your current Linux kernel. When I try to install the Guest additions, I get. I've got SUSE 10.3 installed under XP SP2. It is a universal way to enable a shared folder and it should work for all distributions.I've tried to be a good citizen and figure this out but so far I can't. If you use some other distributions as a guest, look at the instructions for Debian. So, I will show you the settings for Arch Linux, Linux Mint and Debian as guest systems. In this tutorial, my host system is Arch Linux, but the host system does not matter in this case because we will do all the setting in the guest systems. Change the user permission for the shared folder.



So, I will show you how to enable a shared folder in Virtualbox for Debian, Linux Mint/Ubuntu, and Arch Linux as guest systems. However, configuring the Virtualbox to share files between your main system and the system you installed in a VirtualBox is not trivial. VirtualBox is a very useful tool to install operating systems inside the main system.
