Just to re-cap (for others), Objective 102.6 is for Virtualization Guests.

The Oracle FAQ is confusing to say the least.  Allegedly the base
software includes the "Guest Additions."  [1a]

The 'Extensions' are still not GPLv2, but Oracle copyrighted and
licensed NON-FREE. [1b]

I've seen a lot of confusing information between versions and
conflicts, as well as some stating the 'Extensions' enable 'additional
guest features.'

That all said ...

Unless LPI's stance has changed in recent years, the 'Extensions'
cannot be a candidate for objective inclusion.  I defer to LPI Staff
and corresponding Exam Development leadership on the official answer.

- bjs

DISCLAIMER:  I speak for no one but myself, as a 'peer professional'
and fellow LPI Certified associate.

[1] Oracle - VirtualBox - Licensing: Frequently Asked Questions
 - https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Licensing_FAQ

[1a] From [1] - regarding 'base' and 'Guest Additions'

'How is VirtualBox licensed?
The VirtualBox base package contains the full VirtualBox source code
and platform binaries and is licensed under the GNU General Public
License, version 2. You can distribute and modify the base package,
provided that you distribute all modifications under the GPLv2 as
well.
 ...
What are “VirtualBox Guest Additions”?
The “VirtualBox Guest Additions” are a set of software drivers and
utilities that are shipped as a subset of the VirtualBox base package
and that are installed inside a virtual machine for better performance
and usability. Like the VirtualBox base package, the VirtualBox Guest
Additions are licensed under the GPLv2.'

[1b] From [1] - regarding 'extensions' ...

'How is VirtualBox licensed?
 ...
The VirtualBox Extension Pack is available under the VirtualBox
Extension Pack Personal Use and Evaluation License, which is a free
license for personal, educational or evaluation use, or an Enterprise
License, which is a for-fee license that allows most commercial,
non-distribution uses restricted by the PUEL.'

On Sun, Dec 30, 2018 at 9:13 PM Bryan Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Sergio Belkin <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Also it could be interesting be aware of conflicts between kvm and 
> > virtualbox.
>
> I think you're addressing your own comment there.
>
> I.e., 'conflicts between' the Linux Kernel[.org] Virtual Machine (KVM)
> and VirtualBox.
>
> AFAIC, there are no conflicts I'm aware of between KVM and the pure,
> GPLv2 VirtualBox ... however, using a 'NON-FREE' implementation of
> VirtualBox usually causes conflicts.**
>
> E.g., Fedora ships a virtualbox-* package set that is pure GPLv2 (even
> if not completely Upstream kernel.org), but that may have conflicts
> with the separate repositories that are not considered 100% GPLv2.
>
> - bjs
>
> **P.S.  Has the core of VirtualBox been accepted Upstream and is now
> in kernel.org?  Both the HyperVisor and guest tools?  I haven't
> tracked VirtualBox, but this has typically been an issue in the past.
>
>
> --
> Bryan J Smith  -  http://www.linkedin.com/in/bjsmith
> E-mail:  b.j.smith at ieee.org  or  me at bjsmith.me



-- 

-- 
Bryan J Smith  -  http://www.linkedin.com/in/bjsmith
E-mail:  b.j.smith at ieee.org  or  me at bjsmith.me
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