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authorChristian Krinitsin <mail@krinitsin.com>2025-07-03 07:27:52 +0000
committerChristian Krinitsin <mail@krinitsin.com>2025-07-03 07:27:52 +0000
commitd0c85e36e4de67af628d54e9ab577cc3fad7796a (patch)
treef8f784b0f04343b90516a338d6df81df3a85dfa2 /results/classifier/deepseek-2/reasoning/hypervisor/430
parent7f4364274750eb8cb39a3e7493132fca1c01232e (diff)
downloademulator-bug-study-d0c85e36e4de67af628d54e9ab577cc3fad7796a.tar.gz
emulator-bug-study-d0c85e36e4de67af628d54e9ab577cc3fad7796a.zip
add deepseek and gemma results
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+<think>
+Okay, so I need to classify this bug report: "Microsoft Hyper-V acceleration not working". The categories provided are mistranslation, assembly, other, device, graphic, socket, network, KVM, boot, vnc, debug, files, permissions, performance, kernel, peripherals, hypervisor.
+
+First, let me understand what the issue is. Microsoft Hyper-V is a virtualization technology that allows running virtual machines on Windows. In QEMU's context, which is a machine emulator and virtualizer, Hyper-V acceleration likely refers to optimizations or features that improve the performance of virtualized environments, possibly through specific drivers or configurations.
+
+Looking at the categories, I need to match this to one. Mistranslation relates to incorrect semantic mapping in user-mode assembly; that doesn't seem relevant here. Assembly lowering is about generating machine code from IR, which also isn't directly related.
+
+Now, considering Hyper-V's context—since it's a hypervisor technology—it might relate to QEMU's hypervisor components. Hypervisor is one of the provided categories, so that seems like a good fit. Other possibilities could be 'peripherals' or 'kernel', but those don't capture the specific virtualization aspect as accurately.
+
+Additionally, KVM is another category listed, and while KVM is related to hypervisors in Linux contexts, Hyper-V here refers specifically to Microsoft's technology. However, since QEMU supports various hypervisors, including integration with KVM, 'hypervisor' still seems like the most appropriate category because it directly pertains to the virtualization layer.
+
+Therefore, the classification should be 'hypervisor'.
+</think>
+
+hypervisor
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