Emulating the XO
Quick Start
To set up a "virtual XO", and get a taste of the XO software, see Quick Start.
Overview
One way to run oplc software is using an emulator on your pc. See Getting started programming for other options.
Note Category:Emulation and Help and tips.
For play, you can use LiveCd or Quick Start.
For development, you can use LiveCd, or qemu (as in quick start, but with a different image), or perhaps one of the Developer Images other than the LiveCd. An alternate approach is to attempt installing sugar. See Getting started programming for a comparison.
A common development approach is to use QEMU with kqemu acceleration. See Quick Start for the basics. Though for development, we will use a different .img, one with a few extra utility programs. See OS images, including latest stable build.
Instead of qemu, you can run VMware, and there are addition options on a Mac.
Please report your experiences in User Feedback on Images. There is a Virtualization Common Room.
There are limitations with XO disk images.
Alternatives
An OLPC laptop is custom hardware, running a stripped-down Red Hat linux, running Sugar. But what if you don't have a real olpc laptop? There are a several options.
option | updated | sound? | camera? | library? | etoys? | R/W? | development software? | net? | comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
LiveCd | April | yes? | ? | no | ? | no | toolchain, Gnome | yes? | Alternative Quick Start. Good for new developers. Problems: A. |
XO disk images: | yes? | no | yes | ||||||
LATEST-STABLE-BUILD http://olpc.download.redhat.com/olpc/streams/development/LATEST-STABLE-BUILD/ | |||||||||
development-ext3.img | ~monthly | yes? | no | yes | yes | yes | no | after config | Quick Start for getting a look at Sugar. |
development-devel_ext3.img | ~monthly | yes? | no | no | yes | yes | a little | after config | |
LATEST http://olpc.download.redhat.com/olpc/streams/development/LATEST/ | |||||||||
development-ext3.img | ~daily | yes? | no | yes | yes | yes | no | after config | |
development-devel_ext3.img | ~daily | yes? | no | no | yes | yes | a little | after config | Good for new developers (requires some command-line comfort). |
SOURCES http://dev.laptop.org/git | |||||||||
FC6+Sugar | April | yes? | ? | ? | no | yes | Full Fedora Softare Dev. | yes | 6GB (April version: no etoys) |
Installing Sugar | continuous | yes | ? | yes? | yes | yes | your own | yes | Quite hard to do. |
Notes:
- library: A library of sample content is included (english version). Ie, pretty text to web browse without having to get network.
- R/W (writable): With an .img, you can save things between sessions. With a .iso, your environment is the same each time you start.
- development software: are development tools included?
- Net (network): does the network "just work" or "manual" steps are required?
Problems:
- A: LiveCd (April) on fc6 x86_64, kernel panics under kqemu. A squashfs problem.
- Tam Tam is silent (but Etoys makes noise) on qemu-system-x86_64 -soundhw es1370 -hda -kernel-kqemuolpc-redhat-stream-development-build-422-20070514_1555-devel_ext3.img. MitchellNCharity 23:19, 1 June 2007 (EDT)
Doables:
- Try booting LiveCd, and remove LiveCd's "?" above.
- Find out what's going on with Tam Tam sound. It would be nice for the xo disk images to all be sound-yes.
- Add a microphone column? Reconsolidate sound/camera/mic into a H/W column?
Future possibilities
It would be nice to have:
- a small (like LiveCd) livecd with library/. To be an "intro" livecd for non-developers to try sugar.
- Perhaps create a mutant LiveCd. Take LiveCd, unsquash its squashfs, add library, resquash, and mkisofs. Downsides: LiveCd isn't updated very frequently (but since an update is coming rsn, perhaps we don't care just now).
- a small (like LiveCd) qemu image with full fedora host detection/configuration (like Big FC6 Build). To be an "intro" qemu image for non-developers, and a sound&video-works (hopefully) image for developers.
- Perhaps derive from LiveCd? The bottleneck is getting a clean sugar-jhbuild. LiveCd is the only production source of this human intensive process, other than the latest-stable-builds, which are xo-specific. It's not clear that one could get from any xo disk image to a hardware-independent build. Perhaps one might find out what versions of things went into a latest-stable-build? Perhaps sugar-jhbuild works not-infrequently for some particular environment, eg fc7 x86? Perhaps take someone's fc6+sugar image (Big FC6 Build lacks etoys), attempt updating it, and strip it down?
- Re derive from LiveCd, one might be able to unsquash the fs, customize for this role, make a qemu image with it, and add boot stuff?
Emulation for Development
Development using QEMU
If you wish to develop software on an emulated image, you will usually want a connection between your host and the laptop image.
You need a "*-devel*.img" image, rather than a standard (non-devel) one. The -devel image has extra software like sshd and wget.
Get network working on the laptop. See Using QEMU for Troubleshooting#Network. A simple echo ifup eth0 >> /etc/rc.local , run as root on the laptop, should do it. You should now be able to surf with the laptop's web activity. Under QEMU the Laptop image can see the host as IP address 10.0.2.2 .
Next, you have several alternatives:
- SSH using qemu -redir tcp:2222::22. (a good first approach)
- First-time setup
- Get the image's network working.
- Change the image's root password.
- Log into the image as root (no password needed yet!), type passwd , and then give it one. Complaints about "BAD" passwords won't stop things from working.
- Logging in as root is easy in qemu - you have a console window. Elsewhere...(? someone else will need to fill this in)
- Whenever you run qemu, add the argument -redir tcp:2222::22
- You can now log into the laptop image, from your real machine, using ssh. And you can use scp, etc.
- First-time setup
ssh -p 2222 root@localhost # simple ssh -o NoHostAuthenticationForLocalhost=yes -p 2222 root@localhost #avoids annoying warning
- SSH using a key. (if ssh passwords get annoying, you can try this)
- If you create an SSH server on your host and install a key on your Laptop image that has logon rights for that server, you can ssh from the OLPC to your host. This avoids password typing.
- Adding platform-specific instructions might be useful? MitchellNCharity 15:59, 21 May 2007 (EDT)
- Using a web server. (if you don't want to deal with ssh, and have a webserver)
- If you have a web server, you might simply download stuff onto the laptop using the laptops's web browser.