Le 12/11/2011 16:44, Kamil Rytarowski a écrit : > Let me paste from the Arch Linux wiki documentation: > > -- > Difference between qemu and qemu-kvm > > Depending on your needs, you can choose either to install upstream qemu > or qemu-kvm from the official repositories. > > Upstream QEMU is a pure emulator, with no hardware acceleration. qemu > versions < 0.15.0 do have initial KVM support when QEMU is started with > the -enable-kvm parameter, but this implementation is still buggy and > nowhere as complete as in qemu-kvm, as many functions still do not work. > Starting with qemu version 0.15.0, the qemu-kvm tree has been fully > integrated with the qemu tree, and there should not be any difference > between qemu -enable-kvm and qemu-kvm. See the [QEMU changelog] for more > details. > > Upstream QEMU is capable of emulating many different platforms (arm, > i386, m68k, mips, ppc, sparc, x86_64, etc). On the other hand, you have > qemu-kvm, which is qemu (i386 and x86_64 architecture support only) with > KVM (kernel-based virtual machine) additions, allowing you to run > virtual machines at close to native speed. qemu-kvm is the version you > want if you have a CPU that supports hardware virtualization and you > only need to run virtual machines for the i386 and x86_64 architectures > (Linux, Windows, BSD, etc). > > Not all processors support KVM. You will need an x86-based machine > running a recent ( >= 2.6.22 ) Linux kernel on an Intel processor with > VT-x (virtualization technology) extensions or an AMD processor with SVM > (Secure Virtual Machine) extensions (also called AMD-V). Xen has a > complete list of compatible processors. For Intel processors, see also > the Intel® Virtualization Technology List. > > https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/QEMU#Difference_between_qemu_and_qemu-kvm > > -- > > > And now from the qemu changelog > ~~ > KVM > Common > > Countless fixes ported over from qemu-kvm, core is now shared with > that tree, i.e. has the same quality > Pimped up threading model, now fully synchronized with qemu-kvm tree > Removed dependency on external kernel headers, all supported KVM > features are now built into the binary > > http://wiki.qemu.org/ChangeLog/0.15#KVM > ~~ > > What do you think? Can we move? > > There is also one important patch missed in Mageia - > http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/qemu-devel/2011-11/msg00787.html it's > dependency for the GNS3 simulator. OpenSUSE already includes it > https://build.opensuse.org/package/files?package=qemu&project=openSUSE%3ATools > > > If nobody is against I will do it and contact the maintainer (misc).
You should also contact pterjan wo was maintainer for a long time -- Anne http://mageia.org