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Re: [Qemu-devel] Unmaintained QEMU builds


From: Avi Kivity
Subject: Re: [Qemu-devel] Unmaintained QEMU builds
Date: Sun, 05 Sep 2010 18:10:37 +0300
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 On 09/05/2010 06:01 PM, Andreas Färber wrote:
Am 05.09.2010 um 13:19 schrieb Avi Kivity:

On 09/04/2010 04:56 PM, Andreas Färber wrote:

Maybe it's time to rethink the relation between QEMU and its frontends / management tools? If we want to compete with the commercial products (sic), we might agree on some "official" frontend per GUI-centric platform, with a Git-based repository (like qemu-kvm.git) and synchronized releases that may call themselves "QEMU", linked from qemu.org, rather than having a variety of (outdated) Q* frontends per platform of which most are nothing more than a configuration window to spawn the regular qemu[-system-x86_64].

There is also virt-manager which is quite rich at this time.

Seems I didn't get the point across too well: Standard users on Windows-PC and Mac expect a solution to their needs, not a forest of well-designed libraries and tools with .tgz downloads. QEMU has no such product identity, and there's no prominent binary download link for Win/Mac on the qemu.org frontpage.

virt-manager is neither prominently advertised there either, nor does it have a Windows download.

Definitely, virt-manager is not a solution for Windows/Mac.

(Fwiw while it's certainly nice on Linux and to some limited degree on Solaris (ancient fork apparently), I wouldn't exactly describe the virt-install versions I've seen as "rich"... and setting up the VM is somewhat a prerequisite to using virt-manager's indeed nice features.

I believe you can install a guest through virt-manager; virt-install is just a shortcut.

Fedora's default security policies on top don't exactly make it easy to try out .isos or downloaded disk images with virt-manager, its German translation had a severe contentual error in the VM's menu and a felt 80% of the BRC bug reports get ignored and closed by a bot anyway, but that's another topic.) But sure, on Linux there's a plethora of simplistic Q* frontends, too. (n.b., virt-manager didn't match that regex ;)

Choice and diversity isn't wrong per se, just the comparison of the available options on the two given platforms has shown not to make QEMU a common choice. Whining about lack of bugfix contributions is unlikely going to change that imo.

As a baby step, is there any chance of publishing an automatic nightly Windows (cross-)build as a .zip file on qemu.org? That might give more users a chance of detecting runtime faults during the development cycle.

That's doable and useful, yes. But I don't really see a path towards a competitive full fledged bundled/native qemu GUI. It's a huge amount of work, no one seems interested (or has an employer who's interested), and it requires talent we don't have.

It will take a sustained effort by multiple people. Until then, Windows will be a second class host and we'll have to rely on external GUIs.

--
error compiling committee.c: too many arguments to function




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