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Port details on branch 2022Q2
qemu2 QEMU CPU Emulator
2.12.1_2 emulators Deleted on this many watch lists=0 search for ports that depend on this port Find issues related to this port Report an issue related to this port View this port on Repology. pkg-fallout 2.12.1_2Version of this port present on the latest quarterly branch.
Deprecated DEPRECATED: Latest 3.X branch is in ports tree
Expired This port expired on: 2019-09-04
Maintainer: bofh@FreeBSD.org search for ports maintained by this maintainer
Port Added: 2019-04-18 23:06:58
Last Update: 2019-09-05 11:40:24
SVN Revision: 511180
License: GPLv2
WWW:
http://wiki.qemu.org/Main_Page
Description:
QEMU is a FAST! processor emulator using dynamic translation to achieve good emulation speed. QEMU has two operating modes: * Full system emulation. In this mode, QEMU emulates a full system (for example a PC), including a processor and various peripherials. It can be used to launch different Operating Systems without rebooting the PC or to debug system code. * User mode emulation (Linux host only). In this mode, QEMU can launch Linux processes compiled for one CPU on another CPU. It can be used to launch the Wine Windows API emulator or to ease cross-compilation and cross-debugging. As QEMU requires no host kernel patches to run, it is very safe and easy to use. See also the preconfigured system images on http://oszoo.org/ Many live cd isos also work. WWW: http://wiki.qemu.org/Main_Page
Homepage    cgit ¦ GitHub ¦ GitHub ¦ GitLab ¦ SVNWeb

Manual pages:
pkg-plist: as obtained via: make generate-plist
Expand this list (147 items)
Collapse this list.
  1. /usr/local/share/licenses/qemu2-2.12.1_2/catalog.mk
  2. /usr/local/share/licenses/qemu2-2.12.1_2/LICENSE
  3. /usr/local/share/licenses/qemu2-2.12.1_2/GPLv2
  4. bin/qemu-ga
  5. bin/qemu-i386
  6. bin/qemu-img
  7. bin/qemu-io
  8. bin/qemu-keymap
  9. bin/qemu-nbd
  10. bin/qemu-sparc
  11. bin/qemu-sparc64
  12. bin/qemu-system-aarch64
  13. bin/qemu-system-alpha
  14. bin/qemu-system-arm
  15. bin/qemu-system-cris
  16. bin/qemu-system-hppa
  17. bin/qemu-system-i386
  18. bin/qemu-system-lm32
  19. bin/qemu-system-m68k
  20. bin/qemu-system-microblaze
  21. bin/qemu-system-microblazeel
  22. bin/qemu-system-mips
  23. bin/qemu-system-mips64
  24. bin/qemu-system-mips64el
  25. bin/qemu-system-mipsel
  26. bin/qemu-system-moxie
  27. bin/qemu-system-nios2
  28. bin/qemu-system-or1k
  29. bin/qemu-system-ppc
  30. bin/qemu-system-ppc64
  31. bin/qemu-system-ppcemb
  32. bin/qemu-system-riscv32
  33. bin/qemu-system-riscv64
  34. bin/qemu-system-s390x
  35. bin/qemu-system-sh4
  36. bin/qemu-system-sh4eb
  37. bin/qemu-system-sparc
  38. bin/qemu-system-sparc64
  39. bin/qemu-system-tricore
  40. bin/qemu-system-unicore32
  41. bin/qemu-system-x86_64
  42. bin/qemu-system-xtensa
  43. bin/qemu-system-xtensaeb
  44. bin/qemu-x86_64
  45. man/man1/qemu.1.gz
  46. man/man7/qemu-block-drivers.7.gz
  47. man/man1/qemu-img.1.gz
  48. man/man7/qemu-ga-ref.7.gz
  49. man/man7/qemu-qmp-ref.7.gz
  50. man/man8/qemu-ga.8.gz
  51. man/man8/qemu-nbd.8.gz
  52. @sample etc/qemu-ifup.sample
  53. @sample etc/qemu-ifdown.sample
  54. share/qemu/QEMU,tcx.bin
  55. share/qemu/QEMU,cgthree.bin
  56. share/qemu/bios-256k.bin
  57. share/qemu/bios.bin
  58. share/qemu/canyonlands.dtb
  59. share/qemu/efi-e1000.rom
  60. share/qemu/efi-e1000e.rom
  61. share/qemu/efi-eepro100.rom
  62. share/qemu/efi-ne2k_pci.rom
  63. share/qemu/efi-pcnet.rom
  64. share/qemu/efi-rtl8139.rom
  65. share/qemu/efi-virtio.rom
  66. share/qemu/efi-vmxnet3.rom
  67. share/qemu/hppa-firmware.img
  68. share/qemu/qemu_vga.ndrv
  69. share/qemu/s390-netboot.img
  70. share/qemu/u-boot-sam460-20100605.bin
  71. share/qemu/vgabios.bin
  72. share/qemu/vgabios-cirrus.bin
  73. share/qemu/vgabios-qxl.bin
  74. share/qemu/vgabios-stdvga.bin
  75. share/qemu/vgabios-virtio.bin
  76. share/qemu/vgabios-vmware.bin
  77. share/qemu/palcode-clipper
  78. share/qemu/ppc_rom.bin
  79. share/qemu/openbios-ppc
  80. share/qemu/openbios-sparc32
  81. share/qemu/openbios-sparc64
  82. share/qemu/pxe-e1000.rom
  83. share/qemu/pxe-eepro100.rom
  84. share/qemu/pxe-ne2k_pci.rom
  85. share/qemu/pxe-rtl8139.rom
  86. share/qemu/pxe-pcnet.rom
  87. share/qemu/pxe-virtio.rom
  88. share/qemu/petalogix-ml605.dtb
  89. share/qemu/spapr-rtas.bin
  90. share/qemu/slof.bin
  91. share/qemu/s390-ccw.img
  92. share/qemu/linuxboot.bin
  93. share/qemu/linuxboot_dma.bin
  94. share/qemu/multiboot.bin
  95. share/qemu/sgabios.bin
  96. share/qemu/skiboot.lid
  97. share/qemu/trace-events-all
  98. share/qemu/petalogix-s3adsp1800.dtb
  99. share/qemu/bamboo.dtb
  100. share/qemu/kvmvapic.bin
  101. share/qemu/qemu-icon.bmp
  102. share/qemu/qemu_logo_no_text.svg
  103. share/qemu/u-boot.e500
  104. share/qemu/keymaps/ar
  105. share/qemu/keymaps/bepo
  106. share/qemu/keymaps/common
  107. share/qemu/keymaps/cz
  108. share/qemu/keymaps/da
  109. share/qemu/keymaps/de
  110. share/qemu/keymaps/de-ch
  111. share/qemu/keymaps/en-gb
  112. share/qemu/keymaps/en-us
  113. share/qemu/keymaps/es
  114. share/qemu/keymaps/et
  115. share/qemu/keymaps/fi
  116. share/qemu/keymaps/fo
  117. share/qemu/keymaps/fr
  118. share/qemu/keymaps/fr-be
  119. share/qemu/keymaps/fr-ca
  120. share/qemu/keymaps/fr-ch
  121. share/qemu/keymaps/hr
  122. share/qemu/keymaps/hu
  123. share/qemu/keymaps/is
  124. share/qemu/keymaps/it
  125. share/qemu/keymaps/ja
  126. share/qemu/keymaps/lt
  127. share/qemu/keymaps/lv
  128. share/qemu/keymaps/mk
  129. share/qemu/keymaps/modifiers
  130. share/qemu/keymaps/nl
  131. share/qemu/keymaps/nl-be
  132. share/qemu/keymaps/no
  133. share/qemu/keymaps/pl
  134. share/qemu/keymaps/pt
  135. share/qemu/keymaps/pt-br
  136. share/qemu/keymaps/ru
  137. share/qemu/keymaps/sl
  138. share/qemu/keymaps/sv
  139. share/qemu/keymaps/th
  140. share/qemu/keymaps/tr
  141. share/locale/bg/LC_MESSAGES/qemu.mo
  142. share/locale/de_DE/LC_MESSAGES/qemu.mo
  143. share/locale/fr_FR/LC_MESSAGES/qemu.mo
  144. share/locale/it/LC_MESSAGES/qemu.mo
  145. share/locale/hu/LC_MESSAGES/qemu.mo
  146. share/locale/tr/LC_MESSAGES/qemu.mo
  147. share/locale/zh_CN/LC_MESSAGES/qemu.mo
Collapse this list.
Dependency lines:
  • qemu2>0:emulators/qemu2
No installation instructions:
This port has been deleted.
PKGNAME: qemu2
Flavors: there is no flavor information for this port.
distinfo:
TIMESTAMP = 1535379498 SHA256 (qemu/2.12.1/qemu-2.12.1.tar.xz) = 33583800e0006cd00b78226b85be5a27c8e3b156bed2e60e83ecbeb7b9b8364f SIZE (qemu/2.12.1/qemu-2.12.1.tar.xz) = 35416404

No package information for this port in our database
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Dependencies
NOTE: FreshPorts displays only information on required and default dependencies. Optional dependencies are not covered.
Build dependencies:
  1. texi2html : textproc/texi2html
  2. gmake : devel/gmake
  3. pkgconf>=1.3.0_1 : devel/pkgconf
  4. bison : devel/bison
  5. python3.6 : lang/python36
  6. makeinfo : print/texinfo
  7. msgfmt : devel/gettext-tools
  8. sdl2-config : devel/sdl20
  9. xorgproto>=0 : x11/xorgproto
  10. x11.pc : x11/libX11
  11. xext.pc : x11/libXext
  12. x11.pc : x11/libX11
  13. xext.pc : x11/libXext
  14. pixman-1.pc : x11/pixman
  15. perl5>=5.30.r1<5.31 : lang/perl5.30
Runtime dependencies:
  1. x11.pc : x11/libX11
  2. xext.pc : x11/libXext
  3. x11.pc : x11/libX11
  4. xext.pc : x11/libXext
  5. pixman-1.pc : x11/pixman
Library dependencies:
  1. libnettle.so : security/nettle
  2. libfontconfig.so : x11-fonts/fontconfig
  3. libfreetype.so : print/freetype2
  4. libcurl.so : ftp/curl
  5. libgnutls.so : security/gnutls
  6. libxkbcommon.so : x11/libxkbcommon
  7. libepoxy.so : graphics/libepoxy
  8. libdrm.so : graphics/libdrm
  9. libpcre2-8.so : devel/pcre2
  10. libpng.so : graphics/png
  11. libsasl2.so : security/cyrus-sasl2
  12. libvdeplug.so : net/vde2
  13. libatk-1.0.so : accessibility/atk
  14. libcairo.so : graphics/cairo
  15. libgdk_pixbuf-2.0.so : graphics/gdk-pixbuf2
  16. libglib-2.0.so : devel/glib20
  17. libintl.so : devel/gettext-runtime
  18. libgtk-3.so : x11-toolkits/gtk30
  19. libxml2.so : textproc/libxml2
  20. libpango-1.0.so : x11-toolkits/pango
  21. libvte-2.91.so : x11-toolkits/vte3
  22. libintl.so : devel/gettext-runtime
  23. libgbm.so : graphics/mesa-libs
  24. libGLU.so : graphics/libGLU
  25. libjpeg.so : graphics/jpeg-turbo
  26. libSDL2.so : devel/sdl20
There are no ports dependent upon this port

Configuration Options:
===> The following configuration options are available for qemu2-2.12.1_2: CDROM_DMA=on: IDE CDROM DMA CURL=on: Data transfer support via cURL DOCS=on: Build and/or install documentation GNUTLS=on: gnutls dependency (vnc encryption) GTK3=on: GTK+ 3 GUI toolkit support JPEG=on: jpeg dependency (vnc lossy compression) NCURSES=on: Console (text) interface support OPENGL=on: 2D/3D rendering support via OpenGL PCAP=on: pcap dependency (networking with bpf) PNG=on: png dependency (vnc compression) SAMBA=off: samba dependency (for -smb) SASL=on: cyrus-sasl dependency (vnc encryption) STATIC_LINK=off: Statically link the executables USBREDIR=off: usb device network redirection (experimental!) VDE=on: vde dependency (for vde networking) X11=on: X11 (graphics) support X86_TARGETS=off: Build only x86 system targets ===> Use 'make config' to modify these settings
Options name:
N/A
USES:
cpe gmake gnome pkgconfig bison perl5 python:build tar:xz makeinfo gettext gl jpeg ncurses:base gl sdl
pkg-message:
For install:
FreeBSD host notes ================== - Needs to set net.link.tap.user_open sysctl in order to use /dev/tap* networking as non-root. Don't forget to adjust device node permissions in /etc/devfs.rules. - slirp (usermode networking) is fixed now in cvs, on FreeSBIE 1.0 guests you still have to manually do: echo nameserver 10.0.2.3 >/etc/resolv.conf but i've been told that that's normal. (fixed on FreeSBIE 1.1.) And you have to wait a bit for dhclient to do its thing; traffic to address 10.0.2.2 is routed to 127.1 on the host. - Expect timer problems when guest kernel HZ is > hosts, for example time sleep 1 takes 49 seconds and booting sleeps for minutes at the acd0 probe with a FreeSBIE 1.0 guest, thats because its kernel is built with HZ=5000, and FreeBSD's default is 100... (no longer a problem with FreeSBIE 1.1.) The linux 2.6 kernel uses 1000 by default btw. (changed to 250 later, and recent linux kernels now no longer have a fixed HZ, aka `tickless kernel'...) Enabling /dev/rtc doesn't seem to help either (not included since it needs a patch to emulators/rtc.) - Update: the above problem has gotten worse with FreeBSD guests somewhere before 8.0, mainly since the kernel now usually wants double or even quadruple number of timer irqs compared to HZ if it detects an apic (and at least early versions of FreeBSD 8 had a bug that essentially halved qemu's clock rate too); the only reason you usually don't see symptoms of this with FreeBSD 8 guests is they automatically reduce their HZ to 100 when running in a VM while the default for the host kernel is still HZ=1000. Workaround: you can disable the apic clock in the guest by setting hint.apic.0.clock="0" in loader.conf(5) (or manually at the loader prompt), if that doesn't work the only things you can do is either reduce the guest's HZ to, say, 100 by setting e.g. kern.hz="100" from the loader as above (which usually is a good idea in a VM anyway and FreeBSD 8 now does by itself as mentioned), or otherwise increase the host's HZ to 2000 or even 4000 from the loader in the same way. - The -smb option (smb-export local dir to guest using the default slirp networking) needs the samba port/package installed in addition to qemu. (SAMBA knob.) - If you want to use usb devices connected to the host in the guest yot need either recent 10-current (not tested yet much) or you can use usbredir over the network (see below); also unless you are running qemu as root you then need to fix permissions for /dev/ugen* device nodes: if you are on 5.x or later (devfs) put a rule in /etc/devfs.rules, activate it in /etc/rc.conf and run /etc/rc.d/devfs restart. Example devfs.rules: [ugen_ruleset=20] add path 'ugen*' mode 660 group operator corresponding rc.conf line: devfs_system_ruleset="ugen_ruleset" - If you want to test the new (in 0.15.0) usb network redirection (USBREDIR option) see this thread by Hans de Goede <hdegoede <at> redhat.com>: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.emulators.qemu/110176/focus=110183 Quote: Example usage: 1) Start usbredirserver for a usb device: sudo usbredirserver 045e:0772 2) Start qemu with usb2 support + a chardev talking to usbredirserver + a usb-redir device using this chardev: qemu -usb \ -readconfig docs/ich9-ehci-uhci.cfg \ -chardev socket,id=usbredirchardev,host=localhost,port=4000 \ -device usb-redir,chardev=usbredirchardev,id=usbredirdev ... [you would replace docs/ich9-ehci-uhci.cfg with e.g. /usr/local/share/doc/qemu/docs/ich9-ehci-uhci.cfg, but turns out ehci was broken for me here with FreeBSD guests and the previous qemu version at least, I got: FETCHENTRY: entry at 22C5484 is of type 2 which is not supported yet processing error - resetting ehci HC Assertion failed: (0), function ehci_advance_state, file /data/ports/emulators/qemu-devel/work/qemu-0.15.0/hw/usb-ehci.c, line 2045. The new qemu version works better tho.] - Still usb: since the hub is no longer attached to the uchi controller and the wakeup mechanism, resume interrupt is not implemented yet linux guests will suspend the bus, i.e. they wont see devices usb_add'ed after its (linux') uhci module got loaded. Workaround: either add devices before linux loads the module or rmmod and modprobe it afterwards. [Not sure if this still applies to the new libusb host code used on recent 10-current.] - If you get repeated `atapi_poll called!' console messages with FreeBSD guests or other weird cdrom problems then thats probably because the guest has atapicam loaded, which for reasons still to be determined has problems with qemu's now by default enabled cdrom dma. You can build the port with CDROM_DMA disabled to disable it. [Looks like this is fixed in recent FreeBSD guest versions.] - If you build qemu wihout SDL and then get crashes running it try passing it -nographic. This should probably be default in that case... - qemu's network boot roms (-boot n) have a bug when bootfiles sizes are a multiple of blksize, if this affects you (like with FreeBSD's /boot/pxeboot) you can do like cp /boot/pxeboot pxeboot-qemu && chmod +w pxeboot-qemu && echo >>pxeboot-qemu and then use pxeboot-qemu. Actually you need recent btx code (from after 7.0 was released) because of the real mode boot problem, so use at least pxeboot from there. And I just did that for the pxeboot extracted out of ftp://ftp.freebsd.org/pub/FreeBSD/snapshots/200805/7.0-STABLE-200805-i386-bootonly.iso and placed it here: http://people.freebsd.org/~nox/qemu/pxeboot-qemu - If you use slirp (usernet, the default) and want to mount nfs into the guest and you are not running qemu as root, then mountd(8) on the exporting box needs to be run with -n in order to accept requests from ports >= 1024. - (not FreeBSD-specific:) There have been reports of qcow2 corruption with (at least) win2k guests on recent kvm (which uses similar qcow2 code than qemu now, see this thread: http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2009-02/msg00713.html - the consensus on that thread seems to be that qcow(2) code has always been experimental and you should use raw images if you want reliability; raw is also usually faster.) You should be able to migrate existing images to raw using qemu-img(1)'s convert function; raw doesn't support advanced features like snapshots tho. [a few important qcow2 bugfixed have been committed in the meantime so this _might_ be less of an issue now; and meanwhile there also is the new qed format - I don't know how stable that one is.] - (also not FreeBSD-specific:) It is recommended to pass raw images using the new -drive syntax, specifying format=raw explicitly in order to avoid malicious guests being able to exploit the format autodetection thats otherwise getting used. (Not that you should run malicious guests anyway, but this eleminates at least a known attack vector.) - qemu now has improved physical cdrom support, but still there is at least one known problem: you need to have the guest eject the disc if you want to change it/take it out, or otherwise the guest may continue using state (like size) of the old disc. (You can also do like `change ide1-cd0 /dev/acd0' in the monitor after taking out the disc if a guest cannot eject it itself.) - The default configuration location (qemu-ifup script etc.) has been changed from /etc to PREFIX/etc (usually /usr/local/etc). Move your files accordingly. - The pcap code (-net nic... -net pcap,ifname=...) should work properly now, with only one exception: Advanced features like TSO used on the host interface can cause oversize packets which now do get truncated to avoid confusing/panicing guests but of course still will cause retransmissions. So if you see slow throughput and `pcap_send: packet size > ..., truncating' messages on qemu's tty try disabling TSO etc on the host interface at least while using pcap. - kqemu is no longer supported in qemu upstream after the 0.11 branch was created, which means also not in this version. (Linux has moved on to kvm now for qemu(-like) virtualization needs, so if you want qemu to go faster and don't want to switch to virtualbox or stick to the older emulators/qemu port which is at 0.11.1 atm and as such still supports kqemu you should help getting the FreeBSD kvm port updated and completed: http://wiki.freebsd.org/FabioChecconi/PortingLinuxKVMToFreeBSD )
Master Sites:
Expand this list (1 items)
Collapse this list.
  1. https://download.qemu.org/
Collapse this list.

There are no commits on branch 2022Q2 for this port