Werner Dittmann wrote:
Just forgot to give the info about my system:
Qemu was built and runs on a Suse 10.1 64 bit system (AMD CPU). Also,
while compiling Qemu I got quite some warning about casting pointers to
integer of different size (64bit vs 32 bit). Is this ok?
I'm using Fedora Core 5 x86_64 with qemu 0.8.2 and I have noticed these
warnings as well. However, they do not seem to be a problem, at least
for what I'm currently doing, developing a new system on top of qemu.
They seem to be casts from "void *" to "int", which is OK on x86 but
generate a warning on x86_64 since sizeof(void *) != sizeof(int) on that
platform.
I other words, I doubt that these warnings are the source of the problem.
Regards,
Jonathan
Regards,
Werner
Werner Dittmann wrote:
All,
currently I'm trying to install an Opensuse 10.2 64Bit version in Qemu.
Using a plain 0.82 didn't work out, after the Install screen Qemu goes
in a loop. I've tried several parameters (witout net, ACPI, kqemu, etc).
I could not even stop Qemu but had to use kill -9 .
Because of some mail in the list that reported similar errors I
downloaded the latest CVS version and built it using a gcc 3.3.
That didn't solve the problem: It seems to be in a loop but I can close
the qemu window and the window also grabs the mouse cursor (that was not
the case with the 0.8.2 version).
After loading the kernel I get the following message on the console
(only in VESA mode):
"
Decompressing Linux ... done.
Booting the kernel.
"
and at the bottom of the console screen the message (without the qutes):
"kernel direct mapping tables up to 100000000 @ 8000-d000"
I tried to switch on some -d but I don't know which one is relevant
here. I tried "-d int" but this produced about 90MB log data in just
some seconds.
Which info do you need to get down to the problem? What can I try to
tackle the problem?
Regards,
Werner
PS: Because I'm somewhat experienced with security software I would ask
if there is any interest to have a TPM module (Software based TPM) for
Qemu that looks like a real HW TPM according the the TPM specs? If yes I
would start to look how to do it for Qemu. There is a software based TPM
avaliable with a GPL licence. The "only thing" to do would be to wrap it
with the HW interface functions (it's a memory mapped interface) so that
standard drivers would see it as standard TPM module.
Werner
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