qemu-t8030
QEMU
qemu-t8030 | QEMU | |
---|---|---|
16 | 190 | |
1,756 | 9,313 | |
- | 1.7% | |
9.8 | 10.0 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 days ago | |
C | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
qemu-t8030
- Vanilla OS can finish my distro hopping with these subsystems: MacOS, Fedora, Alpine, Void, Windows, Ubuntu, Arch and OpenSUSE. Also bye to these dual boots...
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Which is more popular android or ios development?
It also depends on how much money you want to invest in. iOS development is much more expensive overall you have to buy a developer account which is around 100$ a year while on Android it only cost 25$ (one-time purchase). And I'm not even talking about the other requirements. There are some solutions out there for iOS development on windows like Corellium but you'll have to spend a lot of money to test your application (295$/month for 6 cores). That's why I look forward to what the community can bring and you can have nice surprises like this iOS emulator that's in development : https://github.com/TrungNguyen1909/qemu-t8030
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[Question] this might be a dumb question, but is there an ios emulator for windows
Github: https://github.com/TrungNguyen1909/qemu-t8030
- iPhone 11 w/ iBoot & iOS16 emulated on QEMU
- qemu-t8030: iPhone 11 emulated on QEMU
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Rust playground on iOS
6) I haven't tried this one either, but there is a QEMU fork with T8030 support with a tutorial/guide too. I think this is enough to get you a shell, and maybe it can be used to run native binaries just like on a jailbroken device.
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QEMU Version 7.0.0 Released
A qemu fork for this was posted on HN a while ago:
https://github.com/TrungNguyen1909/qemu-t8030
- 在QEMU上仿真的iPhone 11 (iPhone 11 Emulated on QEMU)
- iPhone 11 Emulated on QEMU
QEMU
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QEMU Version 9.0.0 Released
My most-wanted QEMU feature: https://github.com/qemu/qemu/commit/a2260983c6553
Using `gic-version=3` on macOS you can now use more than 8 cores on ARM chips.
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Autoconf makes me think we stopped evolving too soon
A better solution is just to write a plain ass shell script that tests if various C snippets compile.
https://github.com/oilshell/oil/blob/master/configure
https://github.com/oilshell/oil/blob/master/build/detect-pwe...
Not an unholy mix of m4, shell, and C, all in the same file.
---
These are the same style as a the configure scripts that Fabrice Bellard wrote for tcc and QEMU.
They are plain ass shell scripts, because he actually understands the code he writes.
https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/master/configure
https://github.com/TinyCC/tinycc/blob/mob/configure
OCaml’s configure script is also “normal”.
You don’t have to copy and paste thousands of lines of GNU stuff that you don’t understand.
(copy of lobste.rs comment)
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WASM Instructions
Related:
A fast Pascal (Delphi) WebAssembly interpreter:
https://github.com/marat1961/wasm
WASM-4:
https://github.com/aduros/wasm4
Curated list of awesome things regarding WebAssembly (wasm) ecosystem:
https://github.com/mbasso/awesome-wasm
Also, it would be nice if there was a WASM (soft) CPU for QEMU, which (if it existed!) would go here:
https://github.com/qemu/qemu/tree/master/target
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Revng translates (i386, x86-64, MIPS, ARM, AArch64, s390x) binaries to LLVM IR
> architectural registers are always updated
In tiny code, the guest registers (global TCG variables) are stored in the host's registers until you either call an helper which can access the CPU state or you return (`git grep la_global_sync`). This is the reason why QEMU is not so terribly slow.
But after a check, this also happens when you access the guest memory address space! https://github.com/qemu/qemu/blob/master/include/tcg/tcg-opc... (TCG_OPF_SIDE_EFFECTS is what matters)
But still, in the end, it's the same problem. What QEMU does, can be done in LLVM too. You could probably be more efficient in LLVM by using the exception handling mechanism (invoke and friends) to only serialize back to memory when there's an actual exception, at the cost of higher register pressure. More or less what we do here: https://rev.ng/downloads/bar-2019-paper.pdf
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State of x86-64 emulation of non-MacOS binaries
Um, in case you don't know, UTM (based on QEMU) is out for quite a while.
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Multipass: Ubuntu Virtual Machines Made Easy
Some of these tools include Oracle VM VirtualBox (that I've used since before the acquisition of Sun Microsystems by Oracle), VMWare Workstation Player, and QEMU, but last year, I found out about Multipass.
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Libsodium: A modern, portable, easy to use crypto library
For C/C++ projects that use meson as the build system, there is an excellent way to manage dependencies:
https://mesonbuild.com/Wrapdb-projects.html
https://mesonbuild.com/Wrap-dependency-system-manual.html
meson will download and build the libraries automatically and give you a variable which you pass as a regular dependency into the built target:
https://github.com/qemu/qemu/tree/005ad32358f12fe9313a4a0191...
https://github.com/harfbuzz/harfbuzz/tree/main/subprojects
https://github.com/harfbuzz/harfbuzz/blob/37457412b3212463c5...
Or, if you're using proper operating systems, they're managed by the usual package manager, just like everything else.
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Top 6 Virtual Machine Software in 2023
For all the users of the Linux platform, QEMU is the VM that you should go for. This software comes without any price tag and works as an emulator of various machines with utmost ease and completion; the software uses dynamic translations to emulate hardware peripherals and enhances its overall performance. If you are using QEMU as a virtualizer, then it will function exactly like the host system (provided you have the right set of hardware).
- Show HN: I'm 17 and wrote this guide on how CPUs run programs
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UTM for Developers
In this tutorial, we set up macOS and Windows virtual machines on UTM, a macOS application that provides a GUI wrapper for QEMU, a powerful open-source emulator and virtualizer. UTM allows you to easily manage and run virtual machines without memorizing complex commands. It also has special handling for macOS, making it simpler to install compared to other virtual machine software.
What are some alternatives?
FEMU - FEMU: Accurate, Scalable and Extensible NVMe SSD Emulator (FAST'18). Please checkout https://github.com/vtess/FEMU for latest developments.
UTM - Virtual machines for iOS and macOS
Unicorn Engine - Unicorn CPU emulator framework (ARM, AArch64, M68K, Mips, Sparc, PowerPC, RiscV, S390x, TriCore, X86)
TermuxArch - Experience the pleasure of the Linux command prompt in Android, Chromebook, Fire OS and Windows on smartphone, smartTV, tablet and wearable https://termuxarch.github.io/TermuxArch/
PlayCover - PlayCover is a project that allows you to sideload iOS apps on macOS (currently arm, Intel support will be tested)
Docker-OSX - Run macOS VM in a Docker! Run near native OSX-KVM in Docker! X11 Forwarding! CI/CD for OS X Security Research! Docker mac Containers.
Vagrant - Vagrant is a tool for building and distributing development environments.
PlayCover - Community fork of PlayCover
xemu - Original Xbox Emulator for Windows, macOS, and Linux (Active Development)
haxm - Intel® Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager (Intel® HAXM)
em-dosbox - An Emscripten port of DOSBox