slirp is enabled by default

git-svn-id: svn://svn.savannah.nongnu.org/qemu/trunk@884 c046a42c-6fe2-441c-8c8c-71466251a162
This commit is contained in:
bellard 2004-06-04 11:13:20 +00:00
parent a3a91a355b
commit 443f1376bc
2 changed files with 9 additions and 8 deletions

5
configure vendored
View file

@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ bigendian="no"
mingw32="no"
EXESUF=""
gdbstub="yes"
slirp="no"
slirp="yes"
# OS specific
targetos=`uname -s`
@ -139,7 +139,7 @@ for opt do
;;
--enable-mingw32) mingw32="yes" ; cross_prefix="i386-mingw32-"
;;
--enable-slirp) slirp="yes"
--disable-slirp) slirp="no"
;;
esac
done
@ -157,6 +157,7 @@ if test "$mingw32" = "yes" ; then
target_list="i386-softmmu ppc-softmmu"
EXESUF=".exe"
gdbstub="no"
slirp="no"
fi
if test -z "$cross_prefix" ; then

View file

@ -597,12 +597,10 @@ Linux distribution.
@subsection Using the user mode network stack
This is @emph{experimental} (version 0.5.4). You must configure qemu
with @code{--enable-slirp}. Then by using the option
@option{-user-net} or if you have no tun/tap init script, QEMU uses a
completely user mode network stack (you don't need root priviledge to
use the virtual network). The virtual network configuration is the
following:
By using the option @option{-user-net} or if you have no tun/tap init
script, QEMU uses a completely user mode network stack (you don't need
root priviledge to use the virtual network). The virtual network
configuration is the following:
@example
@ -625,6 +623,8 @@ Note that @code{ping} is not supported reliably to the internet as it
would require root priviledges. It means you can only ping the local
router (10.0.2.2).
The user mode network is currently only supported on a Unix host.
@node direct_linux_boot
@section Direct Linux Boot