On 31/01/2020 22.11, Philippe Mathieu-Daudé wrote: > Add a test that verifies the Tux logo is displayed on the framebuffer. > > We simply follow the OpenCV "Template Matching with Multiple Objects" > tutorial, replacing Lionel Messi by Tux: > https://docs.opencv.org/4.2.0/d4/dc6/tutorial_py_template_matching.html
What a cool idea :-) If you like, there are some more images with Tux in the QEMU advent calendar 2018 which you could use for testing the framebuffer: https://www.qemu-advent-calendar.org/2018/download/day13.tar.xz https://www.qemu-advent-calendar.org/2018/download/day15.tar.xz https://www.qemu-advent-calendar.org/2018/download/day16.tar.xz https://www.qemu-advent-calendar.org/2018/download/day19.tar.xz These two use a slightly different tux: https://www.qemu-advent-calendar.org/2018/download/day09.tar.xz https://www.qemu-advent-calendar.org/2018/download/day11.tar.xz And day 22 (MIPS64) and 23 (SPARC64) use a framebuffer, too, but they seem to be broken with the current version from the git master branch. Thomas