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author | Aleksandar Samardzic <asamardzic@gmail.com> | 2010-05-13 00:40:34 +0200 |
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committer | Robby Workman <rworkman@slackbuilds.org> | 2010-05-13 00:40:34 +0200 |
commit | 15e66c3852911b34c554b9f5167008040e4f4d32 (patch) | |
tree | 6e5262a025f79765731bc7cf7ea36ff14aceadc9 /system/gxemul/README | |
parent | b5ad5b304273b3cffb2ced880462fabaeb5595e4 (diff) | |
download | slackbuilds-15e66c3852911b34c554b9f5167008040e4f4d32.tar.gz |
system/gxemul: Updated for version 0.4.7.2
Diffstat (limited to 'system/gxemul/README')
-rw-r--r-- | system/gxemul/README | 21 |
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/system/gxemul/README b/system/gxemul/README index 554d204500..93bec0b849 100644 --- a/system/gxemul/README +++ b/system/gxemul/README @@ -1,15 +1,14 @@ GXemul is an experimental instruction-level machine emulator. Several -emulation modes are available. In some modes, processors and -surrounding hardware components are emulated well enough to let -unmodified operating systems (e.g. NetBSD) run as if they were running -on a real machine. +emulation modes are available. In some modes, processors and surrounding +hardware components are emulated well enough to let unmodified operating +systems (e.g. NetBSD) run as if they were running on a real machine. -The emulator is written in C, does not depend on third-party -libraries, and should compile and run on most 64-bit and 32-bit -Unix-like systems, with few or no modifications. +The emulator is written in C, does not depend on third-party libraries, +and should compile and run on most 64-bit and 32-bit Unix-like systems, +with few or no modifications. Devices and processors are not simulated with 100% accuracy. They are -only "faked" well enough to allow guest operating systems to run -without complaining too much. Still, the emulator could be of interest -for academic research and experiments, such as when learning how to -write operating system code. +only "faked" well enough to allow guest operating systems to run without +complaining too much. Still, the emulator could be of interest for +academic research and experiments, such as when learning how to write +operating system code. |