The way virtualization works, to the guest OSes view, is that it
provides a standardized hardware environment within the guest, to
minimize the need for specialized drivers, as well as portability
between host systems, essentially clone your virtual machine, copy it
to another host, and import it and start it up no problem.

For Windows XP and older guests, at least IMO a virtualized IDE
controller to the guest is more than enough - the storage controller
only changes the driver that the guest uses to communicate with the
virtual disk. You should not encounter any performance hits on SATA
vs. IDE in a virtualized environment.

The reason for providing these different controllers is precisely for
this reason. If you were using a newer guest OS that supports it, SATA
would be the preferred choice, however, if you were using raw disk
access (which I have done in the past with VirtualBox), the same type
of controller being passed to the guest may be a prudent idea.

I had an HP ProLiant DL380 G4, using Ultra320 SCSI disks, and I added
a disk shelf to it - for me to use raw disk access, I used a SCSI
controller to the guest, to natively access the disks I made
available. Now your mileage may vary, this may not be necessary, I may
just have not known how to do this properly, but my use was only an
unusual circumstance.

Hope this helps. I'm still trying to wrap my head on *why* you need to do this.

On Wed, Oct 17, 2012 at 11:37 AM, John A. Wallace <[email protected]> wrote:
> Frank, hi.
>
> While I have enormous appreciation of Oracle VirtualBox, having no doubt
> that most reasonable persons share this opinion as well, it is not yet
> perfect. Yet, perfection of software is also not an expectation of
> reasonable persons but only a mark of excellence toward which to strive
> earnestly.


-- 
" ' With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech
censured, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied,
chains us all irrevocably.' Those words were uttered by Judge Aaron
Satie as wisdom and warning... The first time any man's freedom is
trodden on we’re all damaged." - Jean-Luc Picard, quoting Judge Aaron
Satie, Star Trek: TNG episode "The Drumhead"
- Alex Smith (K4RNT)
- Dulles Technology Corridor (Chantilly/Ashburn/Dulles), Virginia USA

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