Emulating the XO

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Revision as of 15:15, 9 October 2007 by MitchellNCharity (talk | contribs) (→‎Simulating an XO: I disagree with raising and bolding VMWare, but have left it and noted the lack of concensus.)
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laptop-in-laptop

Simulating an XO

Emulators allow you to run a "virtual machine" on a (reasonably powerful) host machine. There are a number of emulator systems available which can be used to run a simulated OLPC-XO.

The best one depends on your platform and purpose -see #Comparison of alternatives. There is currently some disagreement on which to recommend.

As of official build 557, VirtualBox and VMWare are both able to load converted images with networking support. VirtualBox also provides sound support.

Is sound working in TamTam? Or only in general? MitchellNCharity 13:44, 29 September 2007 (EDT)

As of 602, Qemu is able to run the official images with networking support. Sound doesn't work in TamTam #1978.

The *img.bz2 disk image files work out of the box with Qemu. If you wish to use VirtualBox or VMWare, you can convert the downloaded files into the vmdk (virtual machine disk format), understood by both VirtualBox and VMWare with the commands

  bunzip2 <filename>.img.bz2
  qemu-img convert <filename>.img  -O vmdk <filename>.vmdk

Note that you will need to have Qemu tools installed to perform the above step.

Simulating the XO's 900x1200 display

The emulators listed have varying success at emulating the high-res display of the XOs. VMware comes close, but does not get the resolution quite right; particularly when emulating what the browser looks like (the browser does its own image scaling). Be sure to calibrate any image work you are doing with someone who has an actual XO before trusting the emulator to guide your further work.

To get 1200x900, use a remote X display. See /Help and tips#Run a Xephyr remote X display and How to set up for development on linux emulation#getting 1200x900. MitchellNCharity 11:06, 9 October 2007 (EDT)

Simulating a Developer's Desktop

Most core developers use Fedora 7 or Ubuntu Feisty desktops which are running sugar-jhbuild to track the latest developments in the code-base. This allows you to integrate into the core development process, but can be a considerable maintenance headache due to the fragile nature of the build process.

You can readily run a simulated Fedora/Ubuntu desktop in emulation. This setup is not substantially different from running a regular Linux desktop using sugar-jhbuild.

Note: This approach is really only recommended for those who want to work on core components of the environment, activity developers are probably better off using an official image.

Note: Previously we have attempted to provide LiveCD and Developer Images for download. Manpower issues have meant that these images have fallen far behind the official images, thus they are no longer a recommended approach for developers. If you are interested in volunteering to maintain the LiveCD or Developer Images, please contact Mike Fletcher.

Comparison of 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, which can each be used in a couple of ways.

platform purpose recommendation
Ubuntu play & development xo disk images on qemu. See Emulating the XO/Quick Start.
Ubuntu 32-bit core development Sugar with sugar-jhbuild and Sugar on Ubuntu Linux
Fedora play & development xo disk images on qemu. See Emulating the XO/Quick Start. Perhaps also on VirtualBox?
Fedora 32-bit core development Sugar with sugar-jhbuild and Category:Installing_Sugar
Gentoo 32-bit core development Sugar with sugar-jhbuild in F7 on qemu. Or Sugar on Gentoo Linux (more invasive, less stable).
Other linux & FreeBSD play & development xo disk images on qemu. See Emulating the XO/Quick Start. Perhaps also on VirtualBox?
Windows play & development emulated xo disk image, on VirtualBox, VMWare, or QEMU on Windows.
Mac play & development emulated xo disk image, on qemu. See Emulating the XO/Quick Start/Mac. Perhaps also VirtualBox and VMWare? See also /Mac.
Mac with Parallels play emulated xo disk image, networking works after manually "dhclient eth0", sound does not work (Build 593).
Mac with Parallels core development run Ubuntu 32-bit, and Sugar on Ubuntu Linux. See /Mac. F7 may be better - see below

Uncertainties:

  • Is F7 better than Ubuntu for sugar-jhbuild? If so, should the Mac Parallels recommendation for core development be F7 rather than Ubuntu, despite the latter having a track record in /Mac? MitchellNCharity 10:33, 20 September 2007 (EDT)
    • Yes, you will have less problems with Fedora 7, once you get it working in Parallels (which is harder than Ubuntu I think). I am running F7 because I need to be able to build RPMs. Bert 08:33, 25 September 2007 (EDT)

Build recommendations

For running XO disk images on an emulator, some builds are better than others, and the most recent one will not always work. Here is a summary of current status. Please add your own experiences here, and in User Feedback on Images.

LATEST has been working on qemu lately. TamTam sound doesn't work #1978.

611 has been run on qemu, but has not been extensively tested. MitchellNCharity 12:16, 3 October 2007 (EDT)

Build 593 is reported[1] to boot on VMWare.

Build 557 is reported to work on VirtualBox and VMWare.

Overview

This is the old introduction section. It needs to be updated. Eg, the LiveCd is currently not a useful alternative. And "just use the latest build" isn't good advice, as a more selective approach has been needed. MitchellNCharity 23:36, 19 September 2007 (EDT)

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 additional 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.

The LATEST-STABLE-BUILD versus LATEST build distinction is mostly of interest to people running on actual XO's. In emulation, developers should usually use LATEST. And when STABLE is old, non-developers probably should too.


See also