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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-tmp/reasoning/hypervisor/1533848
parent7f4364274750eb8cb39a3e7493132fca1c01232e (diff)
downloadqemu-analysis-d0c85e36e4de67af628d54e9ab577cc3fad7796a.tar.gz
qemu-analysis-d0c85e36e4de67af628d54e9ab577cc3fad7796a.zip
add deepseek and gemma results
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-<think>
-Alright, let me try to figure out the category for this bug report. The user provided some possible categories, and I need to choose one based on the description.
-
-The bug is about Windows 7 not reading the SLIC ACPI table when using OVMF in QEMU. It mentions that the issue arises because the OEM ID and table ID don't match across certain tables (SLIC, XSDT, RSDT, FADT). From what I know, OVMF is a firmware payload used by UEFI systems, which suggests this has to do with how virtualization handles ACPI tables.
-
-Looking at the categories: device, graphic, socket, network, KVM, boot, vnc, debug, files, permissions, performance, kernel, peripherals, hypervisor. Since it's related to ACPI and OVMF, which is part of UEFI and virtualized firmware, I think 'hypervisor' might be the right category because QEMU acts as a hypervisor when using KVM or other virtualization technologies. The issue is about how the hypervisor presents the hardware to the guest OS, specifically in the ACPI tables.
-
-Alternatively, 'boot' could be considered since it affects the boot process, but I think 'hypervisor' is more precise here because it's about the virtualization layer and how it handles firmware tables.
-</think>
-
-hypervisor
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