Difference between revisions of "QEMU"
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Revision as of 07:15, 8 January 2022
Developer(s) | Fabrice Bellard et al. |
---|---|
Latest version | 9.0.0-rc4 |
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 first project to implement usermode emulation on Linux, which allows one architecture to run software for another as if it were native.
Download
Recommended Builds Stable/Distro-dependent | ||
32-bit and 64-bit Builds Compiled by Stefan Weil | ||
Limbo Port Based on QEMU 2.9.1 | ||
qemu Package Listingat pkgs.org |
External links
- QEMU Wiki Documentation
- Wiki (Platforms available in QEMU)