This would be interesting to see, I'm guessing the implications are being able to build iOS projects without requiring a Mac at any stage of the development process.
Repo looks a little stale to me? I wonder how similar this is to the Xcode Cloud beta QEMU used by Apple someone spotted <a href="https://twitter.com/khaost/status/1410332951963869185?lang=en" rel="nofollow">https://twitter.com/khaost/status/1410332951963869185?lang=e...</a>
The "this blogpost" link about KVM has the wrong domain, <a href="https://alephsecurity.com/2020/07/19/xnu-qemu-kvm/" rel="nofollow">https://alephsecurity.com/2020/07/19/xnu-qemu-kvm/</a> for the post.
> If you are passionate about iOS and kernel exploitation<p>So is the main use-case to find bugs in iOS or are there other major use-cases I'm not thinking about?<p>The only other use case I can think of is setting up a click-farm, or paid-review farm where you give positive reviews for apps for a small fee.
I want to get Android or iOS on QEMU with USB passthrough so that I can isolate it and pass it its own modem. (say a Quectel modem via a miniPCIe to USB card)<p>Is this possible as it stands? At least in bits and pieces I can put together?
I see in the instruction they're using iOS 12. Is it possible to run iOS 15? Does the image need to be jailbroken? Is there anything that allows to download and install iOS apps from the app store and run them?
> This project is a fork of the official QEMU repository<p>Why isn't it _actually_ a fork though? I don't like when projects do this and don't actually make it a fork.