* Justin Hawkeye hawkeyeaz1@gmail.com [060419 20:16]: [..]
Assuming the Kernel does not get overwritten or lose control of system (crash), we now have a log of all neccesary and expected results of that bios on boot on that hardware. This would allow reverse engineering bioses and developing bioses for hardware legally?
Problems with this approach:
- compare it to driving a car. at one intersection the car just drives on. At another one it stops. This way you run into another car in the first intersection and most probably (murphy's law) halt without a reason on the second.
- you can never do better than factory bios
- the emulator would have to pass calls to the hardware. qemu, bochs and co emulate their own hardware.
Stefan