On 1/8/19 7:27 PM, Paolo Bonzini wrote: > On 08/01/19 18:12, Kamil Rytarowski wrote: >> On 25.11.2018 18:14, Paolo Bonzini wrote: >>> On 25/11/18 00:50, Kamil Rytarowski wrote: >>>> On 22.11.2018 08:24, Kamil Rytarowski wrote: >>>>> On 16.11.2018 13:52, Paolo Bonzini wrote: >>>>>> On 14/11/18 14:04, Alexandro Sanchez Bach wrote: >>>>>>> Intel HAXM supports now 32-bit and 64-bit Linux hosts. This patch includes >>>>>>> the corresponding userland changes. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Since the Darwin userland backend is POSIX-compliant, the hax-darwin.{c,h} >>>>>>> files have been renamed to hax-posix.{c,h}. This prefix is consistent with >>>>>>> the naming used in the rest of QEMU. >>>>>> >>>>>> What's the advantage of HAXM when Linux hosts can just run KVM? I guess >>>>>> avoiding bitrot? >>>>>> >>>>>> Paolo >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> This patch is also useful for NetBSD, even if it's not a Linux host. >>>>> There is a driver in progress again (thanks to the newly added Linux >>>>> port, it's now much easier to get done). >>>>> >>>>> I recommend to merge this patch. >>>>> >>>> >>>> For the record, I've a functional version of HAXM for NetBSD as host. >>>> Once you will merge this patch, I will submit another one to configure >>>> to enable haxm for NetBSD. >>>> >>>> I need to keep the patch by Alexandro in a local copy of qemu. >>> >>> Sure, it will be accepted for the release after 3.1. >>> >>> Paolo >>> >>> >> >> Ping. > > It's already queued, but the pull request was pretty big and it had some > issues (quite an understatement). Hopefully you queued Alexandro's v2 (which isn't named v2) with Alex comments fixed, thanks! Phil.