ChangeLog/9.1
Release schedule: Planning/9.1.
System emulation
Removed features and incompatible changes
Consult the 'Removed features' page for details of suggested replacement functionality.
- The Nios II target has been removed.
- The "scsi" property of virtio-blk devices has been removed. SCSI command passthrough had never been present on virtio-blk 1.0 devices, and is now removed from legacy devices as well. Use virtio-scsi instead.
- The pvrdma device and rdmacm-mux helper has been removed.
- The "block migration" options to the migrate commands ("blk" and "inc" for QMP, "-b"/"-i" for the human monitor) have been removed; guest management software such as libvirt is able to perform block migration more efficiently using block jobs and NBD devices.
- The "compress" migration capability has been removed; multifd migration is able to do compression and can be used instead.
New deprecated options and features
Consult the "Deprecated Features" chapter of the QEMU System Emulation User's Guide for further details of the deprecations and their suggested replacements.
- Using the migration URI "fd" together with files has been deprecated. Use it only for sockets, and use "file:" to save a snapshot to a file.
- The "ref405ep" machine and PPC405 CPUs have been deprecated. Firmware images are not available and Linux is dropping support this year as well.
- The PCOMMIT instruction is not decoded by TCG anymore and the corresponding "-cpu pcommit=..." flag is deprecated.
68k
Alpha
Arm
- New CPU architectural features emulated:
- FEAT_NMI
- FEAT_CSV2_3
- FEAT_ETS2
- FEAT_Spec_FPACC
- FEAT_WFxT
- The 'max' CPU and any new CPU types will default to a 1GHz generic timer frequency rather than the old 62.5MHz (this is architecturally required from ARMv8.6 onwards)
- The emulated GICv3 also now has NMI support
- Changes to existing board models:
- Add DM163 display to B-L475E-IOT01A board
- xilinx_zynq: The cache controller is now present
- xilinx_zynq: Now supports up to two CPU cores
- sbsa-ref: The default CPU type is now Neoverse-N2
AVR
Hexagon
HPPA
LoongArch
ISA and Extensions
Machines
Microblaze
MIPS
Nios2
OpenRISC
PowerPC
Renesas RX
Renesas SH
ISA and Extensions
RISC-V
ISA and Extensions
Machines
Fixes and Misc
s390x
SPARC
Tricore
x86
- New CPU models Icelake-Server-v7, SapphireRapids-v3 and SierraForest.
- New CPU features "lam" and "rfds".
- The argument to the new command line option "-smp modules" is now encoded in CPUID.
- Support for SEV-SNP using the "-object sev-snp-guest" command line option.
TCG
Xtensa
Device emulation and assignment
ACPI / SMBIOS
Audio
Block devices
Graphics
Hyper-V
I2C
Input devices
IPMI
Multi-process QEMU
Network devices
NVDIMM
NVMe
PCI/PCIe
SCSI
SD card
SMBIOS
TPM
UFS
- Supports emulation of MCQ behaviour based on UFSHCI v4.0.
- MCQ Parameter Usage:
-device ufs,mcq=true,mcq-maxq=8
USB
VFIO
virtio
vDPA
Xen
fw_cfg
9pfs
virtiofs
Semihosting
Audio
Character devices
Crypto subsystem
Authorization subsystem
GUI
- Allow UNIX socket option for VNC websocket
GDBStub
TCG Plugins
- added STORE_U64 and conditional callback ops
- updated examples to use new ops
Host support
Memory backends
Migration
- New 'exit-on-error' option to migrate-incoming, if set to false causes QEMU to not exit on incoming migration failure, giving the management layer an opportunity to fetch the error through QMP.
Monitor
QMP
HMP
Network
Block device backends and tools
Tracing
Semihosting
Miscellaneous
User-mode emulation
runtime
binfmt_misc
alpha
arm/arm64/aarch64
LoongArch
HPPA
s390
x86
TCG
Record/Replay
RISC-V
Guest agent
Build Information
Build Dependencies
Configuration
- When building with the "--without-default-devices" option, boards have to be enabled specifically in the configs/devices/*/*.mak files. In previous versions, most targets (all except ARM) listed enabled all boards even for --without-default-devices builds, and they had to be disabled instead.
Host support
- When built for the x86 architecture (either 32-bit or 64-bit) QEMU now requires x86-64-v2 processors. This corresponds to CPUID features SSE4.2 and POPCNT, which are available on Intel Nehalem (Sandy Bridge for the Pentium and Celeron lines), Intel Atom Silvermont and AMD Bulldozer processors.