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authorChristian Krinitsin <mail@krinitsin.com>2025-06-30 12:34:26 +0000
committerChristian Krinitsin <mail@krinitsin.com>2025-06-30 12:35:44 +0000
commit25f8033d556aa17afaea4a5196ea7a69fe248320 (patch)
tree0f056db167683be54ea1e5e72d29d6069af55e7d /results/classifier/deepseek-2-tmp/reasoning/network/1839367
parent8e6da29e4ee5fc14bc1cc816a24f21271f14090d (diff)
downloademulator-bug-study-25f8033d556aa17afaea4a5196ea7a69fe248320.tar.gz
emulator-bug-study-25f8033d556aa17afaea4a5196ea7a69fe248320.zip
add new temporary deepseek-r1:14b results
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+<think>
+Alright, I'm looking at this bug report about QEMU incorrectly generating interrupts for the I.MX6 FEC controller. The problem causes the QNX Sabrelite BSP to hang during ethernet initialization because QEMU is sending the ENET_INT_TS_TIMER interrupt when it shouldn't.
+
+The comment in imx_fec.c explains that earlier versions of QEMU had swapped中断s, which worked with older Linux kernels but caused issues with newer ones. The current behavior is a workaround for compatibility but causes problems for some BSPs like QNX's.
+
+I need to classify this bug into one of the given categories: mistranslation, assembly, other, device, graphic, socket, network, KVM, boot, vnc, debug, files, permissions, performance, kernel, peripherals, hypervisor.
+
+The issue is with hardware-specific interrupt handling in QEMU. The FEC controller is a peripheral (network interface) on the I.MX6 SoC. The problem lies in how QEMU emulates these interrupts, which affects device behavior. Therefore, it's related to the device emulation and specifically to network peripherals.
+
+So the category should be 'peripherals' because it involves incorrect handling of hardware-specific signals (interrupts) in the emulator.
+</think>
+
+network \ No newline at end of file