Thank you very much Mike,

I think I have seen that what is missing on the PI is virtualized GIC
(VGIC/GICv2, RPI2/RPI3). The XVisor Pi port seems to do without it,
probably by implementing similar functionality itself (somehow).
Are there any plans in the pipeline to implement similar functionality on
the sel4-arm code tree (would it be possible)?

Thanks for pointing out the camkes-arm-vm gitrepo!

With the missing VGIC/GICv2 is there any point in even trying to adapt the
instructions in the camkes-arm-vm repo? I am guessing, no. But if I am
wrong and someone has been working in this direction, please let me know.

Thanks a lot and best regards

On Fri, Jan 26, 2018 at 3:12 PM, Mike Clark <[email protected]>
wrote:

> I don't believe raspberry pi is supported for virtualization. I followed
> the instructions on https://github.com/SEL4PROJ/camkes-arm-vm/blob/master/
> README.md to get it working on the TK1.  Wasn't too hard.
>
> On Jan 26, 2018 4:48 AM, "Joel Svensson" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I'm trying to form an understanding of what one can do with seL4 and how
>> much work is involved in doing it.
>>
>> I am currently under the impression that seL4 could act as a hypervisor
>> and run a linux guest. But I have not found easily accessible instructions
>> for how to do this (ARM targets are most interesting, the Raspberry Pi
>> preferably as it is cheap and ubiquitously available). Did anyone here set
>> up such a seL4 as hypervisor for linux guest and document the procedure? I
>> would be very thankful for links. If such a setup is doable, can you still
>> run some native seL4 code on the "hypervisor" then?
>>
>> Thank you very much
>> /JS
>>
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>>
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