vagrant/website/docs/source/v2/virtualbox/configuration.html.md

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---
page_title: "Configuration - VirtualBox Provider"
sidebar_current: "virtualbox-configuration"
---
# Configuration
The VirtualBox provider exposes some additional configuration options
that allow you to more finely control your VirtualBox-powered Vagrant
environments.
## GUI vs. Headless
By default, VirtualBox machines are started in headless mode, meaning
there is no UI for the machines visible on the host machine. Sometimes,
you want to have a UI. Common use cases include wanting to see a browser
that may be running in the machine, or debugging a strange boot issue.
You can easily tell the VirtualBox provider to boot with a GUI:
```
config.vm.provider "virtualbox" do |v|
v.gui = true
end
```
## Virtual Machine Name
You can customize the name that appears in the VirtualBox GUI by
setting the `name` property. By default, Vagrant sets it to the containing
folder of the Vagrantfile plus a timestamp of when the machine was created.
By setting another name, your VM can be more easily identified.
```ruby
config.vm.provider "virtualbox" do |v|
v.name = "my_vm"
end
```
## VBoxManage Customizations
[VBoxManage](http://www.virtualbox.org/manual/ch08.html) is a utility that can
be used to make modifications to VirtualBox virtual machines from the command
line.
Vagrant exposes a way to call any command against VBoxManage just prior
to booting the machine:
```ruby
config.vm.provider "virtualbox" do |v|
v.customize ["modifyvm", :id, "--cpuexecutioncap", "50"]
end
```
In the example above, the VM is modified to have a host CPU execution
cap of 50%, meaning that no matter how much CPU is used in the VM, no
more than 50% would be used on your own host machine. Some details:
* The `:id` special parameter is replaced with the ID of the virtual
machine being created, so when a VBoxManage command requires an ID, you
can pass this special parameter.
* Multiple `customize` directives can be used. They will be executed in the
order given.