I’m currently using a VM to run Visual Studio on Fedora. Because I want easy access to both systems at once, without having to minimise a VM or use hotkeys to access the host system, I require a VM solution that has “seamless” integration - I.E hiding the virtual desktop, and running applications in the VM as though they were running natively.

Virtualbox has this solution, but it is somewhat unreliable and doesn’t maintain seamless mode (or multi-monitor mode) between boots. VMWare has a feature called “Unity mode”, which seems to be a little more reliable - however, unity mode has not been a VMware Linux feature since v7 - we are now somewhere around v17.

I’m using v7 at the moment, but I’d like to find something that won’t fall over at some point in the future. RemoteApp isn’t a solution, because VS needs to be able to launch a browser and communicate with it during debugging. What other VM solutions have this “seamless” functionality?

    • @northernscrubOP
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      31 year ago

      Holy shit this looks practically perfect. Thanks!

  • @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    Technically Citrix if you want to spend the fortune it’ll cost to use it. Parallels on macOS also does this but after that I’m fresh out of ideas. It’s not a common feature unfortunately

  • Scraft161
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    11 year ago

    Look into X11 forwarding if the guest uses X11 (xwayland will happily play along if you use waykand on the host) or try something like way pipe if you want a full Wayland solution. Both will display an app over network as if it was running locally, but they do require a bit of setup with ssh.

    You may also be able to trick RDP into displaying one app remotely like winapps does if you don’t want to deal with ssh.