VirtualBox

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1<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
2<!DOCTYPE topic PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DITA Topic//EN" "topic.dtd">
3<topic xml:lang="en-us" id="vmencryption">
4 <title>Encryption of VMs</title>
5
6 <body>
7 <p>
8 Oracle VM VirtualBox enables you to transparently encrypt the VM data
9 stored in the configuration file, saved state, and EFI boot data
10 for the guest.
11 </p>
12 <p>
13 Oracle VM VirtualBox uses the AES algorithm in various modes. The
14 selected mode depends on the encrypting component of the VM.
15 Oracle VM VirtualBox supports 128-bit or 256-bit data encryption keys
16 (DEK). The DEK is stored encrypted in the VM configuration file
17 and is decrypted during VM startup.
18 </p>
19 <p>
20 Since the DEK is stored as part of the VM configuration file, it
21 is important that the file is kept safe. Losing the DEK means that
22 the data stored in the VM is lost irrecoverably. Having complete
23 and up to date backups of all data related to the VM is the
24 responsibility of the user.
25 </p>
26 <p>
27 The VM, even if it is encrypted, may contain media encrypted with
28 different passwords. To deal with this, the password for the VM
29 has a password identifier, in the same way as passwords for media.
30 The password ID is an arbitrary string which uniquely identifies
31 the password in the VM and its media. You can use the same
32 password and ID for both the VM and its media.
33 </p>
34 </body>
35</topic>
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