Hosts/Haiku

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Revision as of 19:38, 7 August 2018 by Kallisti5 (talk | contribs) (add build requirements)

QEMU on Haiku hosts

QEMU can be built on Haiku hosts. Haiku users also maintain a Gentoo-like ports system (with a qemu port + patches) called haikuports

This page includes documentation of how to get Haiku running in a VM inside QEMU, so that Linux-based developers can do build tests on them.

If you're running natively on Haiku you can ignore the "VM setup" instructions.

Architectures

Haiku has several supported architecture targets:

 * x86_gcc2 gcc2, BeOS ABI compatible, 32-bit
 * x86_64 gcc7, 64-bit

There are also several "unsupported" architectures in various states of development:

 * arm (armv7) gcc7
 * arm64 (aarch64) gcc7
 * m68k gcc7
 * powerpc gcc7
 * riscv64 someday

Haiku is working towards clang native builds, but gcc7 is the current stable toolchain.

VM Setup

Haiku natively has robust support for virtio network and disk controllers, so it plays very nicely within a qemu container.

While Haiku is working towards their "R1" release, it is HIGHLY recommend to use nightly os images. These can be run live, or installed to a disk.

The latest x86_64 builds automatically populate here:

 * https://download.haiku-os.org/nightly-images/x86_64/

We generally offer at minimum two build types:

 * anyboot - an install ISO which can be burned to a cd, or dd'ed directly to a USB flash device.
 * raw - a raw disk image of Haiku.

After obtaining a boot media, you can create a new Haiku VM per the following steps:

  1. unzip the boot media


Build Requirements

 pkgman install glib2 glib2_devel pixman pixman_devel libsdl2 libsdl2_devel