• TwitterFacebookGoogle PlusLinkedInRSS FeedEmail

Activation Windows Xp Contrefacon Definition

09.08.2019 
Activation Windows Xp Contrefacon Definition 3,8/5 6752 votes
Active7 months ago

Sale genuine official windows products key, windows 7, windows 8 and windows 10 key, 64bit/32bit support, send within 8 hours. A digital license (called a digital entitlement in Windows 10, Version 1511) is a method of activation in Windows 10 that doesn't require you to enter a product key. A product key is a 25-character code used to activate Windows. What you'll see is PRODUCT KEY: XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX.

Most guides for installing Windows on VirtualBox to act as a template for quick Windows jobs tell you to take a few steps to prepare the Virtual Machine before installing Windows (the best guide I found: grahamrhay.wordpress.com; another fairly good guide: www.windowstablettv.com). Unfortunately, I didn't read these guides before installing and activating Windows on the VM I wanted to use as a template.

I want to know how to clone my already-active VM in such a way that would not require re-activation from Windows.

Looking in the template VM Definition file (the VBOX or XML file for the VM), the /VirtualBox/Machine/Hardware (XPath ID) node has no uuid attribute. But, if I try to use VBoxManage modifyvm <uuid name> --hardwareuuid <uuid> to set a new UUID for the template VM, then the template VM loses its activation status! (Thankfully, I had made a backup of the template.) So, to accomplish my aim, I can't just follow those guides pretending that I haven't installed Windows yet.

palswim
palswimpalswim
1,8939 gold badges31 silver badges58 bronze badges

Activation Windows Xp Contrefacon Definition In Hindi

4 Answers

Thankfully, I noticed something about all of my Virtual Machines that I hadn't prepared as those guides had outlined.

I ran VBoxManage showvminfo <uuid name> and noticed that the UUID valued matched the Hardware UUID value, leading me to surmise that if any VM Definition didn't have a uuid attribute in the /VirtualBox/Machine/Hardware node, then the VM would use the 'Machine UUID' value as the 'Hardware UUID' value. So, for my template VM, it did have a 'Hardware UUID' that I could use; I just had to find how to transfer it to any clones I would make.

Bypass Activation Windows Xp

To ensure that the UUID transfers, you can take one of two approaches:

  • You can edit the template VM Definition file directly. The 'Hardware UUID' will only transfer to clones if the /VirtualBox/Machine/Hardware has the uuid attribute. So, copy the /VirtualBox/Machineuuid attribute and add it to the /VirtualBox/Machine/Hardwareuuid attribute. You probably want to re-initialize the VirtualBox machine database after this, by closing/killing any VirtualBox process you're running. (VBoxSVC sometimes lingers on Windows; you may have to kill it from the Task Manager.)
  • You can clone your template and make a new template VM, and then use VBoxManage modifyvm <uuid name> --hardwareuuid <uuid> to set the new template's 'Hardware UUID' to the original template's 'Machine UUID'/'Hardware UUID'. I say you have to clone the VM to create a new template VM because if you try to set the 'Hardware UUID' with this command on the original template, it won't add the uuid attribute to the /VirtualBox/Machine/Hardware node, since it can still imply it from the 'Machine UUID', and thus won't copy this value to any clone it makes.
palswimpalswim
1,8939 gold badges31 silver badges58 bronze badges

This powershell script does the work:

  1. clone the machine that is already activated.
  2. close virtualbox precesses from task manager.
  3. run this script, modifing the variables to your values.

Remember that the virtual machines names are case sensitive.

DavidPostill
114k27 gold badges255 silver badges285 bronze badges
Marcelo SaiedMarcelo Saied

Thanks to the hints above I have successfully cloned a machine with Win7 guest running on a Kubuntu host for test purposes without re-activation.

My machine was activated already and (as described above) actually had no hardware UUID.

For me it looks like the MACHINE UUID is only for Virtualbox management, whereas the HARDWARE UUID is used by Windows activation logic. If there is no hardware UUID then Virtualbox provides the machine UUID to the guest, i.e. Microsoft knows the machine UUID.

So this is how it worked well without re-activation in my case:1) Copy the virtual machine (folder) with normal file browser.2) Open the .vbox file in a simple text editor.3) As there was no UUID attribute for the 'hardware', copy the machine UUID attribute (e.g. uuid='{xxx11111-2222-3333-4444-xxxxxxxxxxxx}' ) to the 'hardware' entry.4) Generate a new UUID for the machine, e.g. with uuidgenerator.net.5) Overwrite the UUID machine VALUE with the generated UUID value. => Done.

In order to manage both machines in parallel in VB Manager it is more tricky:
1. Rename the clones's harddisk .vdi file.
2. In command line provide a new UUID to the harddisk via command 'VBoxManage internalcommands sethduuid .vdi. VBManager will set a new UUID and display it.
3. In VB Manager add the new machine. Edit the machine by adding the new harddisk file (and remove original vdi, if still present).

Now you have unique IDs for all virtual machines and harddisks. You can manage both machine's within the VB Manager in parallel.

Journeyman Geek
115k45 gold badges226 silver badges382 bronze badges
Contrefacon
Dieter SchlueterDieter Schlueter

Full clone the machine. Do not start it.

From command line:

VBoxManage modifyvm 'Cloned VM name' --hardwareuuid xxxxxxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxx-xxxxxxxxxxxx

As UUID use the the machine id (or hardware id if present) from the original machine.

To get the that UUID use:

VBoxManage showvminfo 'Original VM name'

Contrefacon

This should work. Tested on Windows 10 guest, already activated.

user4691user4691

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged windowsvirtualboxvirtual-machinewindows-activation or ask your own question.