But at a minimum you'll need to place 0xAA55 in the last 2 bytes of the master boot record. You don't provide a minimal complete verifiable example showing a bootloader and how you get it into a VDI. Is there any way to solve this? Why is my virtual disk still not bootable? Edit So, I suppose it now means that the disk is bootable (because at the end of first sector is still signature 55 AA). Then, I basically filled from that address to the end of VDI file with pattern 55 AA. So, I found that data starts at some address (in my case it is 0x00200000 from the start of the VDI file). So, the start of VDI represents a header and the the rest is actual data stored on virtual drive. I was researching how VDI works and I found that it is usually dinamically allocated and that only the beginning of data is stored. So, I decided to put the binary machine code of my OS to virtual hard drive ( VDI file) and then set it to the top of boot order and load it instead of loading from virtual optical drive ISO. I don't want to convert my binary file to ISO every time. So, that is a lot of work I want to avoid. I found that I must compile C code to binary format, extract text section and save it as a file, then convert it to ISO, then mount it to virtual optical dive of diskete and then load my OS in VirtualBox. I am creating an operating system in assembler and C. I read all of them, but none of them answers my problem. There are a lot of question on stackoverflow with the similar title.
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