Difference between revisions of "QEMU"

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|architecture  = x86_64, ARM, PowerPC, SPARC, MIPS, Itanium
 
|architecture  = x86_64, ARM, PowerPC, SPARC, MIPS, Itanium
 
|type          = Hypervisor
 
|type          = Hypervisor
|target        = [[86/286/386/486/Pentium/Pentium II]]<br/>Various PowerPC machines<br/>Various ARM devices<br/>SPARC<br/>MicroBlaze<br/>LatticeMico32<br/>CRIS<br/>OpenRISC
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|target        = [[Intel CPUs]]<br/>Various PowerPC machines<br/>Various ARM devices<br/>SPARC<br/>MicroBlaze<br/>LatticeMico32<br/>CRIS<br/>OpenRISC
 
|compatibility =  
 
|compatibility =  
 
|accuracy      =  
 
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Revision as of 17:17, 4 February 2019

Quick Emulator
Developer(s) Fabrice Bellard et al.
Latest version 3.1.0-rc2
Active Yes
Platform(s) Windows, Linux, macOS, Android (port)
Architecture(s) x86_64, ARM, PowerPC, SPARC, MIPS, Itanium
Type Hypervisor
Emulates Intel CPUs
Various PowerPC machines
Various ARM devices
SPARC
MicroBlaze
LatticeMico32
CRIS
OpenRISC
Programmed in C
Website qemu.org
Source code Official repository
GitHub mirror

QEMU (an acronym for Quick Emulator) is a general-purpose computer emulator and hypervisor originally developed by Fabrice Bellard in 2003. It emulates a wide range of architectures beyond x86, and has been used in Android emulation both officially and unofficially; it's also well-known in the server industry for its handling of virtual machines using KVM (and more recently libvirt), and is the choice of the VFIO community (running Windows in a virtual machine with a dedicated graphics card for gaming). QEMU is also the only known emulator to implement user-mode emulation (on Linux), which allows one architecture to run software for another as if it were native.

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External links