What Integrates with QEMU?
Find out what QEMU integrations exist in 2024. Learn what software and services currently integrate with QEMU, and sort them by reviews, cost, features, and more. Below is a list of products that QEMU currently integrates with:
-
1
Mayan EDMS
Mayan EDMS
FreeAdvanced search, tagging, and categorization capabilities make it easy to find what you need. Workflows allow you to automate your business processes. Role-based access control allows you to secure your documents. Web-based, cross-platform, open source, and free. Integrates with existing systems for low initial investment and low total costs of ownership. Mayan EDMS, a Free Open Source Electronic Document Management System (Open Source), was developed in Python using the Django web-application framework and released under the Apache 2.0 License. It acts as an electronic vault and repository for electronic documents. One installation, many devices. Mayan EDMS employs responsive design to adapt to different screen sizes and device capabilities. This includes smartphones, tablets, desktops, and tables. You can store multiple versions of the same document and download or revert back to an earlier version. When documents must be disposed of quickly, retention policies help to comply with local laws and corporate policies. -
2
VxWorks
Wind River
$18,500 /seat VxWorks®, a leading real-time operating platform in the industry, provides all the performance, reliability, safety and security capabilities you need for the most critical infrastructure's embedded computing systems. VxWorks is a preemptive, deterministic RTOS that prioritizes real-time embedded applications. It has low latency and minimaljitter. VxWorks has many security features that address the evolving security threats connected devices face at every stage, from boot-up to operation to data transfer to powered off. VxWorks has been certified to IEC 61508, ISO 26262, and DO-178C safety standards. VxWorks is built on an extensible, future-proof architecture that allows you to quickly respond to changing market demands, customer needs, technological advancements, and preserves your investment. -
3
RT-Thread
RT-Thread
RT-Thread, short for Real Time-Thread, is an embedded real-time multi-threaded operating system. It has been designed to support multi-tasking, allowing multiple tasks to run simultaneously. Although a processor core can only run one task at a time, RT-Thread executes every task quickly and switches between them rapidly according to priority, creating the illusion of simultaneous task execution. RT-Thread is mainly written in the C programming language, making it easy to understand and port. It applies object-oriented programming methods to real-time system design, resulting in elegant, structured, modular, and highly customizable code. The system comes in a few varieties. The NANO version is a minimal kernel that requires only 3KB of flash and 1.2KB of RAM. For resource-rich IoT devices, RT-Thread can use an online software package management tool, together with system configuration tools, to achieve an intuitive and rapid modular design. -
4
american fuzzy lop
Google
FreeAmerican fuzzy lop, a security-oriented fuzzer, uses a novel form of compile-time tooling and genetic algorithms to discover clean test cases that trigger internal states within the binary. This improves the functional coverage of the fuzzed codes. The compact corpora generated by the tool can also be used to seed other, more resource-intensive or labor-intensive testing regimes in the future. Afl-fuzz, in comparison to other instrumented fuzzers, is designed to be practical. It has a modest overhead, uses highly effective fuzzing techniques and effort minimization tricks. It requires little configuration and handles complex real-world use-cases, such as common image parsing and file compression libraries. It's an instrumentation-guided genetic fuzzer capable of synthesizing complex file semantics in a wide range of non-trivial targets. -
5
Fedora CoreOS
Fedora Project
Fedora CoreOS is an automatically-updating, minimal operating system for running containerized workloads securely and at scale. It is currently available for multiple platforms and more will be added soon. There are three Fedora CoreOS update streams (FCOS), stable, testing, or next. You will generally want to use stable. However, it is recommended that you run machines on testing and next to provide feedback. It is expected that stream metadata will be used to automate Fedora CoreOS installation. Fedora CoreOS provides automatic in-place updates. However, it is a good idea to start provisioning new machines using the most recent images. Fedora CoreOS doesn't have an install disk. Every instance starts with a generic disk image that is customized at first boot via Ignition. All of the software is free and open-source. You can also share, remix, or modify it.
- Previous
- You're on page 1
- Next