Hello Alex,
Sorry for the late comments. I think that looks good to me as a proposal for Connect. I spotted a couple of typos that I've highlighted inline. Would it be worth mentioning if you are going to cover bare-metal system emulation or concentrate on Linux?
Peter
On 23 July 2018 at 15:07, Alex Bennée alex.bennee@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
Typo: it -> its "Thanks to its 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.
Typo: a -> an "into an inanimate brick". You might also be able to drop inanimate unless you know of a species of animated 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