+1. I would attend this presentation. QEMU has lots of power-user features that most people don't know about. -- Maxim Kuvyrkov www.linaro.org
> On Jul 23, 2018, at 5:07 PM, Alex Bennée <alex.ben...@linaro.org> wrote: > > > Following on from last weeks discussion here is an alternative abstract > which instead of looking to the future with where QEMU can go would > concentrate on what you can do with QEMU now. What do you think? > > _____________________________ > > MY OTHER MACHINE IS VIRTUAL > > Alex Bennée > _____________________________ > > > YVR18 > > > When working with new architectures there is often a scramble for > getting access to hardware. However hardware comes with it's own > problems - especially when it's new. It's hard to upgrade, hard to poke > around inside and hard to experiment with. > > This is an area where QEMU can help. Thanks to it cross-architecture > emulation and ability to run full-system emulation it provides a > platform for experimentation without the potential consequences of > turning your new board into a inanimate brick. > > This talk will start with an overview of QEMU and how various > configurations can be setup. We'll then examine various features > available that allow us to examine the run time behaviour of code inside > QEMU as well as discuss some of its limitations. Finally we'll look at > some experiments that would be hard to do with real hardware and what > they can tell us about the code we are running. > > > -- > Alex Bennée > _______________________________________________ > linaro-toolchain mailing list > linaro-toolchain@lists.linaro.org > https://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-toolchain _______________________________________________ linaro-toolchain mailing list linaro-toolchain@lists.linaro.org https://lists.linaro.org/mailman/listinfo/linaro-toolchain