by Morgan T. Aldridge [email protected]
basiliskiivm
is a utility I tossed together to package up BasiliskII emulator (see Emaculation's wiki for further details) preferences & disk images into a single .BasiliskIIVM
directory for each configuration to make it easier to manage, move, launch, and maintain multiple VMs. Think of it as the equivalent to VirtuaBox's VBoxManage
, VMware Fusion's vmrun
, or Parallels Desktop's prlctl
.
If you have already have a .BasiliskIIVM
generated, you can launch it by running basiliskiivm start <vm_name>.BasiliskIIVM
(replacing "<vm_name>" with the name of your BasiliskII VM name).
You can check whether a VM is already/still running by running basiliskiivm status <vm_name>.BasiliskIIVM
. While there is a stop
command, it currently just reminds you to safely shut the OS down using Special > Shutdown.
You can create snapshots of a VM by running basiliskiivm snapshot <vm_name>.BasiliskIIVM
. This currently just creates date-stamped copies of all the disks in the VM, so it's not particularly efficient. You can view all snapshots by running basiliskiivm snapshots <vm_name>.BasiliskIIVM
.
While not yet implemented, you will be able to package your existing BasiliskII configuration (for example, one you've configured & tested with BasiliskIIGUI
) into a .BasiliskIIVM
directory by running basiliskiivm package <vm_name>.BasiliskIIVM
. This will take your ~/.basilisk_ii_prefs
file, the ROM file, and disk images that are specified in it, and move them into the specified .BasiliskIIVM
directory.
Run basiliskiivm -h
for further usage instructions.
Each .BasiliskIIVM
directory contains all the configuration settings & data (including disk images) needed to run BasiliskII. This makes it very easy to move, backup, or run multiple individual VMs. Each directory contains:
- The BasiliskII
.basilisk_ii_prefs
preferences/configuration file. - A
.basiliskii.pid
file which exists & contains the PID of the active instance, when running. - The ROM file.
- Any number of disk images.
- If there are any snapshots, a
Snapshots
directory containing one folder per snapshot (named in the 'YYYYmmdd-HHMMSS' format). Inside each individual snapshot folder will be a copy of all the disk images at the time of the snapshot.
Copyright (c) 2016-2019, Morgan T. Aldridge. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
- Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
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