@petsoi@discuss.tchncs.de to Linux@lemmy.ml • 2 months agoFedora 42 On 64-bit ARM Might Make It Seamless To Run x86/x86_64 Programswww.phoronix.comexternal-linkmessage-square36fedilinkarrow-up1217arrow-down12cross-posted to: news
arrow-up1215arrow-down1external-linkFedora 42 On 64-bit ARM Might Make It Seamless To Run x86/x86_64 Programswww.phoronix.com@petsoi@discuss.tchncs.de to Linux@lemmy.ml • 2 months agomessage-square36fedilinkcross-posted to: news
minus-square@M500@lemmy.mllinkfedilinkEnglish4•2 months agoLet me know if I don’t know enough about what you are talking about, but I think your saying to use qemu to o run windows. This is about running x86 code on arm processors, like what Apple does with Rosetta.
minus-square@Penta@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink13•2 months agoQemu can emulate one architecture on another. And qemu-user can be used to run a single userspace-program on a different architecture.
minus-square@bruce965@lemmy.mllinkfedilink3•edit-22 months agoI might be very mistaken, but I don’t think QEMU can link mixed-architecture dependencies. Box86 can run an x86 game on ARM and link ARM-native shared objects for OpenGL, thus skipping emulation of some hotpath code.
Let me know if I don’t know enough about what you are talking about, but I think your saying to use qemu to o run windows.
This is about running x86 code on arm processors, like what Apple does with Rosetta.
Qemu can emulate one architecture on another. And qemu-user can be used to run a single userspace-program on a different architecture.
I might be very mistaken, but I don’t think QEMU can link mixed-architecture dependencies. Box86 can run an x86 game on ARM and link ARM-native shared objects for OpenGL, thus skipping emulation of some hotpath code.
This is what I was refering to.