Hi, thanks again for your reply. It seems that, from the instruction log, we can find out "*which instructions belong to which process(task)*" according to CR3 register.
2012/3/15 陳韋任 <che...@iis.sinica.edu.tw> > O.K., then. You must specify which mode you're running, user mode or > system > mode? User mode shouldn't have the issue you described. For system mode, I > have > no good idea on how to track a specific program running on the guest OS. > > On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 09:40:48AM -0400, Yue Chen wrote: > > But it is hard to localize a specific program instead of lots of logs. > > On Mar 15, 2012 4:14 AM, "陳韋任" <che...@iis.sinica.edu.tw> wrote: > > > > > On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 01:26:44PM +0700, Mulyadi Santosa wrote: > > > > On Thu, Mar 15, 2012 at 09:12, Yue Chen <ycyc...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > Hi!~ > > > > > > > > > > Now I'd like to see what the micro-ops (intermediate operations > > > generated by > > > > > TCG) of a single Linux or Windows program, any approach to do this > > > under > > > > > QEMU? Thanks. > > > > > > > > are you referring to you Qemu system emulation or Qemu user mode? > > > > > > Does that matter? I think "-d op" should be enough, right? > > Regards, > chenwj > > -- > Wei-Ren Chen (陳韋任) > Computer Systems Lab, Institute of Information Science, > Academia Sinica, Taiwan (R.O.C.) > Tel:886-2-2788-3799 #1667 > Homepage: http://people.cs.nctu.edu.tw/~chenwj >