


Use the " -machine help" command to list the chips supported by QEMU. Replacing with your target chip name as defined by QEMU. Replacing with the real path to the FreeRTOS image, assumed to be RTOSDemo.elf in the above example. Replacing with your target's architecture, such as: Qemu-system-kernel /RTOSDemo.elf -S -s -machine The rest of this page assumes the executable is called RTOSDemo.elf. Download and install QEMU - there is a separate download pageīuild the demo application by following the instructions on the relevant demo specific documentation page, and note the name of the resultant executable.Note: At the time of writing all demo projects that target QEMU were developed and tested on Windows hosts. QEMU and VirtualBox are type 2 hypervisors that can utilize KVM (or other type 1 hypervisors, in the case of VirtualBox) to allow virtual machines direct access to your system’s hardware. This page describes how to install QEMU for use with FreeRTOS demo applications that target the QEMU emulator, rather than physical chips. KVM Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is the type 1 hypervisor built into every Linux kernel since version 2.6.20. Click the green create new volume button next to Volumes in the right pane. Now you’re back at the Choose Storage Volume screen. Check Select or create custom storage, and click the Manage button (Figure 4). Installing and Starting the QEMU Emulator Click Forward, and enable storage for your new VM. STM32U5 Arm Cortex-M33 MCU w/ TrustZone & TF-M.i.MX RT1060 Arm Cortex-M7 MCU & EdgeLock SE050.
