We don't ship the tarball and users should generally look to the distribution specific packaging.
Resolves: https://gitlab.com/qemu-project/qemu/-/issues/560 Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.ben...@linaro.org> --- docs/system/devices/net.rst | 16 +++++++++++----- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/system/devices/net.rst b/docs/system/devices/net.rst index 4d787c3aeb0..7d76fe88c45 100644 --- a/docs/system/devices/net.rst +++ b/docs/system/devices/net.rst @@ -21,11 +21,17 @@ configure it as if it was a real ethernet card. Linux host ^^^^^^^^^^ -As an example, you can download the ``linux-test-xxx.tar.gz`` archive -and copy the script ``qemu-ifup`` in ``/etc`` and configure properly -``sudo`` so that the command ``ifconfig`` contained in ``qemu-ifup`` can -be executed as root. You must verify that your host kernel supports the -TAP network interfaces: the device ``/dev/net/tun`` must be present. +A distribution will generally provide specific helper scripts when it +packages QEMU. By default these are found at ``/etc/qemu-ifup`` and +``/etc/qemu-ifdown`` and are called appropriately when QEMU wants to +change the network state. + +If QEMU is being run as a non-privileged user you may need properly +configure ``sudo`` so that network commands in the scripts can be +executed as root. + +You must verify that your host kernel supports the TAP network +interfaces: the device ``/dev/net/tun`` must be present. See :ref:`sec_005finvocation` to have examples of command lines using the TAP network interfaces. -- 2.47.2