On Sun, 2005-07-10 at 13:39 +0900, Norikatsu Shigemura wrote:
> On Sun, 03 Jul 2005 17:37:42 -0700
> Bakul Shah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Lock writes:
> > > Is kqemu and the freebsd wrapper smp aware? I just saw this panic
> > > report again,
> > > http://lists.freebsd.org/pipermail/freebs
I got the magic to work finally :)
Windows 2000 Pr is running fine and increased resolution that increased the
window size and I am comfortable with it.
I am using Q to run Qemu which has good feature like saving the state so
that I don't have to reboot again which takes time.
Thanks and Regar
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Hello,
what is the best solution to connect the vde "switch" to my real LAN so
that Qemu guests get IPs from my LAN-wide DHCP server?
So far I've experimented with bridging tap0 and eth0 so that the Qemu
guests are transparently on my LAN and get IPs
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 04:37:45PM +0530, Ashish Naik wrote:
> I am using Q to run Qemu which has good feature like saving the state so
> that I don't have to reboot again which takes time.
>
plain qemu has that.
Anyways, I just like to point out that I have never tested GTK with OS X, nor
have
Why not make a Win32 GUI version?
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On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 08:27:14AM -0700, user user wrote:
> Why not make a Win32 GUI version?
>
Keep in mind that I'm primarily a Linux/GNU/Xlib coder.
>From what Fabrice Bellard has told me, a native Win32 GUI is the eventual plan,
and he considers GTK version for Linux/X11 only.
He also said
On Tue, 5 Jul 2005 16:09 Jim C. Brown wrote:
> ...qemu still uses SDL. It does not support svgalib at all.
>
> However, SDL does support svgalib as an output device. Try getting a different
> SDL and seeing what that does for you. Probably you want to recompile SDL and
> tell it to support the X o
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005, Oliver Gerlich wrote:
what is the best solution to connect the vde "switch" to my real LAN so
that Qemu guests get IPs from my LAN-wide DHCP server?
bridgeing of your ethernet interface and the TAP interface connecting to
vde is undoubtly the best if you want to provide f
"Jim C. Brown"
>I personally feel that a scrollable window is not very useful unless your
>host
> resolution is smaller than your guest resolution. Hard to see what the
> point is
Or the same size. Don't forget, Windows XP will cover up part of the window
even when the GTK version switches t
Jim C. Brown a écrit :
I have some trouble using losetup to mount partitions
from the host.
I never realized how difficult it was to interpret error messages written in
a foreign language.
Ok, sorry, in plain english messages are:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/usr/src/qemu-test# fdisk -l zipsla
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 11:37:07AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> "Jim C. Brown"
>
>
> >I personally feel that a scrollable window is not very useful unless your
> >host
> > resolution is smaller than your guest resolution. Hard to see what the
> > point is
>
> Or the same size. Don't forg
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 06:42:30PM +0200, Henrik Nordstrom wrote:
> On Sun, 10 Jul 2005, Oliver Gerlich wrote:
>
> >what is the best solution to connect the vde "switch" to my real LAN so
> >that Qemu guests get IPs from my LAN-wide DHCP server?
>
> bridgeing of your ethernet interface and the TA
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Henrik Nordstrom schrieb:
> On Sun, 10 Jul 2005, Oliver Gerlich wrote:
>
>> what is the best solution to connect the vde "switch" to my real LAN so
>> that Qemu guests get IPs from my LAN-wide DHCP server?
>
>
> bridgeing of your ethernet interface
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 11:37:07AM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> "Jim C. Brown"
>
>
> >I personally feel that a scrollable window is not very useful unless your
> >host
> > resolution is smaller than your guest resolution. Hard to see what the
> > point is
>
> Or the same size. Don't forg
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 07:32:01PM +0200, Herbert Poetzl wrote:
> > Some, such as myself, still use 800x600. I do it out of necessity. I have
> > poor eyesight and don't have the spare cash (or desk space!) for a 21 inch
> > monitor. And LCD monitors tend to have too high a native resolution.
"Jim C. Brown"
>> Or the same size. Don't forget, Windows XP will cover up part of the
>> window
>> even when the GTK version switches to 'full screen'.
>
> This is easily worked around by activiating the auto-hide feature of the
> taskbar.
Kludge.
You should *never* have to modify your host f
"Herbert Poetzl"
>> Some, such as myself, still use 800x600. I do it out of necessity. I
>> have
>> poor eyesight and don't have the spare cash (or desk space!) for a 21
>> inch
>> monitor. And LCD monitors tend to have too high a native resolution.
>> With
>> my current 17" monitor, I simply c
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 04:43:54PM +, Bob Barry wrote:
> That sounds spot on. But it doesn't work. The cause of the problem was
> updating
> all packages (Gentoo "emerge world") which wiped my qemu-friendly sdl. I've
> tried installing sdl-1.2.7 and sdl-1.2.8, with both the Gentoo installer
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Jim C. Brown schrieb:
> On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 06:42:30PM +0200, Henrik Nordstrom wrote:
>
>>On Sun, 10 Jul 2005, Oliver Gerlich wrote:
>>
>>
>>>what is the best solution to connect the vde "switch" to my real LAN so
>>>that Qemu guests get IPs from
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 08:37:18PM +0200, Herbert Poetzl wrote:
> > That works too. So Herbert, tell us how does one set up a virtual screen
> > a la X Server style when one is using Windows? Presumably there is some
> > "powertoy" out there which does this, but I don't know of any myself.
>
> wel
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 01:57:57PM -0400, Jim C. Brown wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 07:32:01PM +0200, Herbert Poetzl wrote:
> > > Some, such as myself, still use 800x600. I do it out of necessity. I
> > > have
> > > poor eyesight and don't have the spare cash (or desk space!) for a 21
> >
http://awg.webchu.com/nanpara/?user1
$B=i$a$^$7$F!*!*FMA3%a!<%k$r:9$7>e$2$F$4LBOG$G$7$?$i$*5v$72<$5$$!#(B
$B?75,%5%$%HN)$A>e$2$KH<$$!"0lK|1_(B(1000$B%]%$%s%H(B)$BJ,%W%l%<%s%H$N$*CN$i$;$G$9!#(B
http://awg.webchu.com/nanpara/?user1
$B!X$^$?=P2q$$7O$+$!!Y$H;W$o$l$k$+$bCN$l$^$;$s$,!"$*BT$A2
> DHCP is Ethernet broadcast based, not IP.
Not that it matters in this case but strictly speaking DHCP
is an IP protocol, using UDP as its transport and the request
goes to IP broadcast address of 255.255.255.255.
> You could also run a local DHCP server on tap0, configured with the
> address s
On Sunday, July 10, 2005, 19:57:57, Jim C. Brown wrote:
> That works too. So Herbert, tell us how does one set up a virtual screen
> a la X Server style when one is using Windows? Presumably there is some
> "powertoy" out there which does this, but I don't know of any myself.
Windows 9x (and pres
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 08:23:17PM +0200, Oliver Gerlich wrote:
> > The best solution is to use a vde_switch with libpcap and libnet. This
> > allows
> > intercepting packets meant for the guests (via libnet) and forwarding them
> > thru
> > vde. libpcap allows for packets in vde to be passed on
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 01:21:23PM -0500, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> "Jim C. Brown"
>
>
> >> Or the same size. Don't forget, Windows XP will cover up part of the
> >> window
> >> even when the GTK version switches to 'full screen'.
> >
> > This is easily worked around by activiating the auto-hid
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 02:53:23PM -0400, Jim C. Brown wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 08:37:18PM +0200, Herbert Poetzl wrote:
> > > That works too. So Herbert, tell us how does one set up a virtual screen
> > > a la X Server style when one is using Windows? Presumably there is some
> > > "powerto
VmWare seems to let you do it any way you want. Full screen, scroll it
manually or auto scroll, etc. So clearly it can be done. Maybe the code
in something like VNC client would give some ideas.
Scaling an image *down* to fit in window of a given size seems totally
pointless other than to give a t
Here is a version of gtk2.c which includes an actual GUI.
It is really rough, and doesn't provide anything useful. Also, no buttons or
toolbar - the only GUI features are the scrollbars and the menus.
Right now, the GUI supports resetting the vm, quiting qemu, switching between
the 3 predefined v
hi,
When I use qemu to start a guest linux, I find the network performance
of the guest is asymmetric. When I examine the communicating rate
between qemu guest and its host with ttcp, the guest's receive rate is
twice than the send rate. While communicating between the qemu guest and
external gues
Slightly improved version which allows you to make the window as small as you
want and fixes a couple of scrollwindow-on-vbox bugs.
/*
* QEMU GTK2 display driver
* based on SDL driver by Fabrice
*
* Copyright (c) 2005 Jim Brown
*
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any perso
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005, Oliver Gerlich wrote:
Could you explain how you integrated vde_switch and bridging with your
current system? Do you start everything at boot and accept that this
changes the system-wide network configuration, or do you use some
bridging trick to avoid this?
I am not curren
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005, Jim C. Brown wrote:
The best solution is to use a vde_switch with libpcap and libnet. This allows
intercepting packets meant for the guests (via libnet) and forwarding them thru
vde.
Interesting idea. Would make full qemu networking truly a no-brainer.
Should even be poss
On Sun, 10 Jul 2005, octane wrote:
Jim C. Brown a écrit :
I have some trouble using losetup to mount partitions
from the host.
I never realized how difficult it was to interpret error messages written
in
a foreign language.
Ok, sorry, in plain english messages are:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/u
Attached is a patch to add arts support to qemu, plus the actual driver.
Apply the patch and place artsaudio.c in the qemu/audio directory, and
reconfigure with the --enable-arts option.
artsaudio.c is derived from ossaudio.c and artsdsp.c (from the source code of
arts 1.3.2).
--
Infinite compl
On Mon, Jul 11, 2005 at 04:21:31AM +0200, Henrik Nordstrom wrote:
> On Sun, 10 Jul 2005, Jim C. Brown wrote:
>
> >The best solution is to use a vde_switch with libpcap and libnet. This
> >allows
> >intercepting packets meant for the guests (via libnet) and forwarding them
> >thru
> >vde.
>
> In
On Sun, Jul 10, 2005 at 02:06:53PM -0700, John R. Hogerhuis wrote:
> VmWare seems to let you do it any way you want. Full screen, scroll it
> manually or auto scroll, etc. So clearly it can be done. Maybe the code
> in something like VNC client would give some ideas.
>
Scrolling manually works, j
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