## Hurd on QEMU I will assume you have already installed [QEMU](http://fabrice.bellard.free.fr/qemu/). You will need the [debian grub boot disk package](ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/g/grub/grub-disk_0.95+cvs20040624-17_all.deb) for the floppy.img. The floppy boot image is called grub-0.95-i386-pc.ext2fs.gz and you can gunzip this and rename it to floppy.img if you like. First off use `qemu-img` to create a disk image. I set mine to 2 gigabytes. # qemu-img create hd0.img 2G Now you will need a cdrom image or an install CD. I will use debian/hurd K9 in this example. I use a floppy image with grub on it to boot the system, after im done installing. The first time you run it you'll want to use `-boot d` to boot off the cdrom. # qemu -hda hd0.img -cdrom debian-K9-hurd-i386-CD1.iso -fda floppy.img -boot d Now at his point do the regular install using `hd0` as your harddrive. Partition it and install the base system. Instead of rebooting, just stop QEMU (it'll keep booting off the cdrom). **Important:** Debian K8's gnumach will not boot in QEMU unless you use QEMU's `-isa` command line option (and niether will Debian K9). Now run your image with floppy booting and finish the install (`./native-install` .. etc) # qemu -isa -hda hd0.img -cdrom debian-K9-hurd-i386-CD1.iso -fda floppy.img -boot a So far I haven't been able to get networking going, it seems as if gnumach is not finding the ethernet device, although I haven't really looked into it that far. ### Mounting disk image If you want to mount your disk image, you'll either have to use mount or a program called lomount to do this. If you are going to use mount, you will need to know the correct offset. # mount -o loop,offset=OFFSET hd0.img /mnt/diskimage -- [[Main/AndrewResch]] - 23 Feb 2005 Readers may be interested in [[Hurd/QemuImageForL4]] too. -- [[Main/OgnyanKulev]] - 23 Feb 2005 To find the offset, you can run (from your host OS): $ fdisk -ul hd0.img and multiply sectors by the # of bytes given -- [[Main/EldonKoyle]] - 25 Aug 2005