Difference between revisions of "AArch64 QEMU User Space Emulation"

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(Setting Up Qemu User Space Emulation)
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== Setting Up Qemu User Space Emulation ==
 
== Setting Up Qemu User Space Emulation ==
  
{{Admon/tip|Fedora 19|The tarball mentioned here contains Fedora 19. The library versions, etc. may be older than those on Red or Blue. Please feel free to update the image and contribute an updated tarball!}}
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{{Admon/important|Fedora 19|The tarball mentioned here contains Fedora 19. The library versions, etc. may be older than those on Red or Blue. Please feel free to update the image and contribute an updated tarball!}}
  
 
=== On Australia ===
 
=== On Australia ===

Revision as of 12:09, 15 November 2014

QEMU linux-user

There is a QEMU userspace emulator available to execute AArch64 applications on an x86_64 machine and kernel. This program interprets aarch64 binaries and translate operating system calls to the underlying x86_64 kernel, enabling many aarch64 binaries to be executed with good performance. However, because it does not emulate the full system, some capabilities are not available: in particular, debugging software such as gdb and strace will not work.

Special Mounts

In the arm64 chroot, some commands such as mount and top will not work correctly because special filesystems such as /proc and /sys are not mounted. If you need those filesystems, explicitly mount them within your chroot environment, remembering to unmount them when you're done.

Stop (medium size).png
Superuser access - Danger!
While in the chroot environment, you are a superuser. Although the chroot provides partial protection, it is still possible to cause major damage. Take care not to delete entries in the special mounts or perform other actions that would affect the host or other users.

Setting Up Qemu User Space Emulation

Important.png
Fedora 19
The tarball mentioned here contains Fedora 19. The library versions, etc. may be older than those on Red or Blue. Please feel free to update the image and contribute an updated tarball!

On Australia

1. Unpack the archive in your home directory:

cd ; sudo tar xvf /public/qemu-linux-user-aarch64

2. To switch to arm64/aarch64 mode, type:

sudo chroot ~/arm64
Idea.png
Alias Recommended
It's a good idea to create an alias (and additional sudoers entry) to simplify the transition to the arm64 chroot. Doing so is left as an exercise for the reader.

On your home system

1. Obtain the files in the /public/qemu-linux-user-aarch64 directory on Australia: arm64.qemu-userspace.tgz and qemu-arm64.conf

2. Copy those files your machine.

3. In a suitable location with at least 1.1GB of storage available, unpack the arm64.qemu-userspace.tgz archive as root (use -p to preserve permissions and timestamps).

4. Put the qemu-arm64.conf file into /etc/binfmt.d/qemu-arm64.conf on your local machine.

4. Activate the new qemu-arm64 binformat configuration:

sudo systemctl restart systemd-binfmt

5. To switch to arm64/aarch64 mode, type:

sudo chroot ~/arm64 # or wherever you put your arm64 directory