Result for 03D11CDDE091FFD18BE97B95CBB7FFDFC0D56E82

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/include/Eris-1.3/Eris/Redispatch.h
FileSize585
MD56E53103251FD51F655E74617D019B2A6
SHA-103D11CDDE091FFD18BE97B95CBB7FFDFC0D56E82
SHA-2562495189D63F9ABC17B8723B7EC62EE8649C834032A2A83544004A8C007F68B85
SSDEEP12:VWte7It2IAk6PAEZAVFuNWhqt06JdayxlPyfgBEdYab:VWo7I0IFgnGcN9tpqglPoXGab
TLSHT13FF0AC61A1ACB1C2093F80F79383D80521383923734EE4A0B64EA7E09F89188281BDDB
hashlookup:parent-total37
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 37)

The searched file hash is included in 37 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5B21C80DB8827645B5311AC7AE70CE12A
PackageArchsparcv9
PackageDescriptionLibraries and header files for developing applications that use Eris.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameeris-devel
PackageRelease2.fc9
PackageVersion1.3.13
SHA-1035602D5E28C3BB38C98512CC67F17F47C0894C9
SHA-256BE454D30C62F37A45A175737956833D1B6B427609AD6CE9AF732AA091252D54B
Key Value
FileSize36414
MD563096DB301EA9327AC84F071261368E3
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.13-2
SHA-107A4DA29AA818667BFECF4A47BC70C8F9B949494
SHA-2564499AD6532B0E434AF98D41FDB3B352FBB8680AA5318E89E3D6DCCF10C0EFC29
Key Value
FileSize36410
MD5CD410846FEAF3ED68573C128E1733C46
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.13-1
SHA-114198767222DF65796CB438469E1C2579E60F323
SHA-256EBEBC253CAB87BB1BEAFC266724BA6DB3204B90FCA5AB1DCA01C1F96E350027D
Key Value
FileSize82254
MD57E93439BC3A4A89B336CB6C1B5143728
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerMichael Koch <konqueror@gmx.de>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.10-2
SHA-11C3E041EE97753DFB1231068756A282A2533E9F1
SHA-256B7EA04794B9D555E515FED540C52CE96ECF07A0895212852A4D121C5EC6CDE73
Key Value
FileSize36414
MD5E0E6AAFA4C8345AFC93A4A27684F5978
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.13-2
SHA-11E6A7411D70394793C19AAF38BC1C4F7A4FE67E4
SHA-256DB299FCD40D46A2528363F7B4DE3D795F99FB3781B8C1E46531541A177D8399F
Key Value
FileSize36416
MD5DDB994167DE30E76282B05761F67F787
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.13-1
SHA-12A64DCDDA3C43B3641B83B1D7125D373B7509D50
SHA-2568E43BB6357C97D485AE940CB06A8EEF9A8CB9AA9EBBFA891D4A5E348A6DE32D8
Key Value
FileSize36402
MD5724282E30883E0484B43D0A0B360085C
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.13-1
SHA-12BCA282F70883AE412526BC20F24B6D42C2CC42F
SHA-25661FFE0F8C2957FA55305CE911EA243D995134F45A16F5B11D23862E898D10980
Key Value
FileSize82204
MD538044307D9389E48907A426A9970771D
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerMichael Koch <konqueror@gmx.de>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.10-2
SHA-12BCEA70E1B8202EE6B783D38CBF7A38EC610BEAA
SHA-256431D9973DE0EAC23AA8B4D68F497F515F52B6260EBDBC9F2C1A7A35EDC4392A9
Key Value
FileSize85166
MD53706A63D5D0D1E2AE32FD8164ECC84C0
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.12-1
SHA-137D479466AFAF02F565E19397EBFDB485B18494E
SHA-2561944B15C88E62DAF5E86DD4371341631C710E860572EA51466EBAC0981DE054A
Key Value
MD5B69E61FB0DA287FADFADCC075C4505A4
PackageArchsparc64
PackageDescriptionLibraries and header files for developing applications that use Eris.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameeris-devel
PackageRelease2.fc9
PackageVersion1.3.13
SHA-13C4DDABC62472CB9FE9DCEDA28A31C530928887D
SHA-25623BB63B14097B627D20584F4B8CC02F986342C2FB9138C9BFD4A4E57885F9CAC