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Adding ovmf to runqemu commands since we switched to GRUB+EFI as boot solution. Without this argument it does not boot properly and remains stuck in "Booting from Hard Disk..." Signed-off-by:
Francesco Pham <francesco.pham@huawei.com>
Adding ovmf to runqemu commands since we switched to GRUB+EFI as boot solution. Without this argument it does not boot properly and remains stuck in "Booting from Hard Disk..." Signed-off-by:
Francesco Pham <francesco.pham@huawei.com>
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qemux86-64.rst 1.35 KiB
Qemu X86-64
Overview
|main_project_name| supports running the software stack into an virtual environment using Qemu.
Building an Oniro image
To clone the source code, perform the procedure in: :ref:`Setting up a repo workspace <RepoWorkspace>`.
Building a Linux image
Build Steps
- Source the environment with proper template settings, flavour being linux and target machine being qemux86-64. Pay attention to how relative paths are constructed. The value of TEMPLATECONF is relative to the location of the build directory ./build-oniro-linux, that is going to be created after this step:
$ TEMPLATECONF=../oniro/flavours/linux . ./oe-core/oe-init-build-env build-oniro-linux
- You will find yourself in the newly created build directory. Call bitbake to build the image. For example, if you are using oniro-image-base run the following command:
$ MACHINE=qemux86-64 bitbake oniro-image-base
Once the image is done, you can run the Qemu using the provided script wrapper:
$ MACHINE=qemux86-64 runqemu oniro-image-base wic ovmf