@item MusicPal (MV88W8618 ARM processor)
@item Gumstix "Connex" and "Verdex" motherboards (PXA255/270).
@item Siemens SX1 smartphone (OMAP310 processor)
+@item Syborg SVP base model (ARM Cortex-A8).
+@item AXIS-Devboard88 (CRISv32 ETRAX-FS).
+@item Petalogix Spartan 3aDSP1800 MMU ref design (MicroBlaze).
@end itemize
-For user emulation, x86, PowerPC, ARM, 32-bit MIPS, Sparc32/64 and ColdFire(m68k) CPUs are supported.
+For user emulation, x86, PowerPC, ARM, 32-bit MIPS, Sparc32/64, ColdFire(m68k), CRISv32 and MicroBlaze CPUs are supported.
@node Installation
@chapter Installation
Three on-chip UARTs
@end itemize
+The "Syborg" Symbian Virtual Platform base model includes the following
+elements:
+
+@itemize @minus
+@item
+ARM Cortex-A8 CPU
+@item
+Interrupt controller
+@item
+Timer
+@item
+Real Time Clock
+@item
+Keyboard
+@item
+Framebuffer
+@item
+Touchscreen
+@item
+UARTs
+@end itemize
+
A Linux 2.6 test image is available on the QEMU web site. More
information is available in the QEMU mailing-list archive.
@end example
to install QEMU in @file{/usr/local}.
-@subsection GCC version
-
-In order to compile QEMU successfully, it is very important that you
-have the right tools. The most important one is gcc. On most hosts and
-in particular on x86 ones, @emph{gcc 4.x is not supported}. If your
-Linux distribution includes a gcc 4.x compiler, you can usually
-install an older version (it is invoked by @code{gcc32} or
-@code{gcc34}). The QEMU configure script automatically probes for
-these older versions so that usually you don't have to do anything.
-
@node Windows
@section Windows