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Diffstat (limited to 'results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/hypervisor/538808')
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diff --git a/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/hypervisor/538808 b/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/hypervisor/538808 new file mode 100644 index 00000000..1b37a536 --- /dev/null +++ b/results/classifier/deepseek-r1:14b/reasoning/hypervisor/538808 @@ -0,0 +1,49 @@ +<think> +Okay, so I need to classify this bug report for QEMU into one of the given categories. Let's read through the problem carefully. + +The user reports that qemu-system-x86_64 version 0.12.2 crashes when using -m 967 under Windows. They mention that any value below 967 works fine, but higher values cause the program to exit silently. This issue occurs with both qemu.exe and qemu-system-x86_64.exe on Windows XP. However, the same versions work fine under Linux (Ubuntu 8.10), and version 0.9.0 for Windows doesn't have this problem. + +Looking at the command used: qemu-system-x86_64 -L . -m 967 -hda linux.img -localtime -M pc. The user also mentions that there's plenty of RAM available on the host PC, so it's not a memory issue. + +Now, I need to figure out which category this falls into. Let's go through the options: + +- **mistranslation**: This would relate to incorrect mapping from source architecture to IR or target, likely in user-mode. The bug here seems related to memory allocation (-m parameter), so maybe not directly mistranslation. + +- **assembly**: Lowering assembly code. Doesn't seem relevant here since it's a memory issue during runtime, not compile-time. + +- **other**: A general category for anything that doesn't fit elsewhere. + +- **device**: Related to hardware devices. The user is using QEMU as a hypervisor or emulator, so maybe this could be part of device emulation. + +- **graphic**: Graphics-related issues. Doesn't seem applicable here since the problem occurs under Windows XP and also on Linux with different behavior. + +- **socket**: Network socket issues. Not mentioned in the bug report. + +- **network**: Networking problems. Again, not relevant here. + +- **KVM**: Kernel-based Virtual Machine. The issue is happening on Windows, but KVM is more of a Linux feature. + +- **boot**: Booting-related problems. The user is trying to boot an image, so maybe this could be related. + +- **vnc**: VNC remote desktop. Not relevant here as the problem occurs without any mention of VNC usage. + +- **debug**: Debugging options. The user isn't having trouble with debugging features but rather a crash when setting memory. + +- **files**: File-related issues. Doesn't seem to apply since it's about memory allocation, not file operations. + +- **permissions**: Access rights or permissions causing the issue. The user has plenty of RAM and no mention of permission errors. + +- **performance**: Could be related if there's an issue with handling large amounts of memory, but the crash is sudden at 967MB specifically. + +- **kernel**: Kernel-related issues in QEMU? Not sure; perhaps if it's a hypervisor issue. + +- **peripherals**: Hardware devices being emulated. Maybe not directly since it's about memory. + +- **hypervisor**: Since this is related to running virtual machines, and the issue is with allocating memory (RAM) for the VM, which is handled by the hypervisor layer in QEMU. + +So considering all these options, the bug occurs when setting a certain amount of memory (-m 967), which causes QEMU to crash on Windows but works on Linux. This suggests it's related to how QEMU handles memory allocation as a hypervisor under different operating systems. + +Therefore, the category is likely **hypervisor**. +</think> + +hypervisor \ No newline at end of file |