![]() So I ended up installing QEMU from the sources. Unfortunately, I was unable to install a binary package through yum because the default package repositories don’t provide one. ![]() Today I wanted to try QEMU on IBM’s OpenClient Linux distribution. Author blogspot Posted on JCategories Uncategorized Tags FreeBSD, QEMU TianoCore on QEMU ![]() However, it’s not as straight forward as building from Linux or from a FreeBSD port, so here are the full instructions □ Since the repository is not (yet?) public, here is a tar-ball of the latest version.īuilding Qemu for FreeBSD from “my” sources is pretty straight forward. The repository is at svn+ssh:///usr/svnroot/qemu, a web frontend is available at. The goal is to have a working version of Qemu which can be built on FreeBSD and can run coreboot. So I’ve decided so maintain my own copy of the Qemu sources. Then some time later, I tried to build Qemu per those instructions, but had to discover that the port had been updated to a newer version of Qemu and no longer works. Some time ago, I took some notes on how to get Qemu running on FreeBSD and added them to the coreboot wiki. I’m now trying to build it on FreeBSD again. Since my attempts at getting Qemu running on Mac OS X were unsuccessfull, I’ve decided to go a different route.
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