QEMU is a generic and open source processor emulator
which achieves a good emulation speed by using dynamic translation.
QEMU has two operating modes:
* Full system emulation. In this mode, QEMU emulates
a full system (for example a PC), including a processor and
various peripherials. It can be used to launch different
Operating Systems without rebooting the PC or to debug system code.
* User mode emulation (Linux host only). In this mode,
.. many thanks for feedback from many people, and for Lars Hansson and
Michael Schmidt for posting early work on the port of qemu to ports@
For now, only for macppc and i386, as these are currently the only archs
that have reported success building qemu.
QEMU can launch Linux processes compiled for one CPU on another CPU.
This is a port of the basic program, it works so far enough to be able
to mix and match PDF/pictures/text and print the result to Encapsulated
PostScript.
I haven't tried out yet with more advanced stuff...
from ChangeLog:
-previously, for safety, getmail would re-retrieve messages after a session
that encountered errors. However, getmail had enough information to safely
remember those messages that had been successfully delivered. This behaviour
has been changed, to avoid delivering duplicate messages where it isn't
necessary. Thanks: Thomas Schwinge.
-in output/log files, getmailrc files are now specified only by filename,
instead of by complete paths. This will prevent some overly-long output
lines.
secure. It features some basic filtering to limit or tag the flows that
are recorded and is privilege separated, to limit security exposure from
bugs in flowd itself. Flowd is IPv6 capable - supporting flow export via
IPv6 transport and NetFlow v.9 IPv6 flow records. It also supports
reception of flow datagrams sent to multicast groups, allowing one to
build redundant flow gathering systems.