| Using OE images with QEMU |
| ========================= |
| |
| OE-Core can generate qemu bootable kernels and images which can be used |
| on a desktop system. The scripts currently support booting ARM, MIPS, PowerPC |
| and x86 (32 and 64 bit) images. The scripts can be used within the OE build |
| system or externally. |
| |
| The runqemu script is run as: |
| |
| runqemu <machine> <zimage> <filesystem> |
| |
| where: |
| |
| <machine> is the machine/architecture to use (qemuarm/qemumips/qemuppc/qemux86/qemux86-64) |
| <zimage> is the path to a kernel (e.g. zimage-qemuarm.bin) |
| <filesystem> is the path to an ext2 image (e.g. filesystem-qemuarm.ext2) or an nfs directory |
| |
| If <machine> isn't specified, the script will try to detect the machine name |
| from the name of the <zimage> file. |
| |
| If <filesystem> isn't specified, nfs booting will be assumed. |
| |
| When used within the build system, it will default to qemuarm, ext2 and the last kernel and |
| core-image-sato-sdk image built by the build system. If an sdk image isn't present it will look |
| for sato and minimal images. |
| |
| Full usage instructions can be seen by running the command with no options specified. |
| |
| |
| Notes |
| ===== |
| |
| - The scripts run qemu using sudo. Change perms on /dev/net/tun to |
| run as non root. The runqemu-gen-tapdevs script can also be used by |
| root to prepopulate the appropriate network devices. |
| - You can access the host computer at 192.168.7.1 within the image. |
| - Your qemu system will be accessible as 192.168.7.2. |
| - The script extracts the root filesystem specified under pseudo and sets up a userspace |
| NFS server to share the image over by default meaning the filesystem can be accessed by |
| both the host and guest systems. |
| |