Result for 13C23AD59254438FFCD0CDE6400FD991CBFE194E

Query result

Key Value
FileNamerear-2.6.tar.gz
FileSize781980
MD50856E3F6DA86D72CD45B36ECFCD29AAB
RDS:package_id293705
SHA-113C23AD59254438FFCD0CDE6400FD991CBFE194E
SHA-256712C0FDB0CF0B5BCCC7E0C44621EEB6ECFF1F2859C81A5B36601ACFA79783043
SSDEEP12288:Pgo+1c7qn4qS8SU0aswp5kb2guo6/J9TSUdAGwUOvxK7O7LAMZLjgBxBc4k3jRzR:u1c7S4qSXU0twp51guhR9iGwl7gfBc4M
TLSHT1B3F4237BE68C54468E288E615EB7830CBE1A432AD7954A464F533BFF0B4D805A3CE4DD
insert-timestamp1678967139.2566984
sourceRDS.db
hashlookup:parent-total9
hashlookup:trust95

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 9)

The searched file hash is included in 9 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5BEFB0EB9962C3D52A28B99E79AE51F7E
PackageArchi686
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover is the leading Open Source disaster recovery and system migration solution. It comprises of a modular frame-work and ready-to-go workflows for many common situations to produce a bootable image and restore from backup using this image. As a benefit, it allows to restore to different hardware and can therefore be used as a migration tool as well. Currently Relax-and-Recover supports various boot media (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) as well as a multitude of backup strategies (incl. IBM TSM, MircroFocus Data Protector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, Bacula, Bareos, BORG, Duplicity, rsync). Relax-and-Recover was designed to be easy to set up, requires no maintenance and is there to assist when disaster strikes. Its setup-and-forget nature removes any excuse for not having a disaster recovery solution implemented. Professional services and support are available.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamerear
PackageRelease5.fc34
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-10902FC5173C91A1A300BBE32544C6AD08BE35F59
SHA-2566FEFCC18CC0F62DB02AA8A9A8FFD8D562C3ADF5EC538291D1CBE59689BB15241
Key Value
MD5CCDECDCABAF93B8BF482B9EFDCFEB092
PackageArchi586
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover (abbreviated rear) is the leading Free Software disaster recovery framework. Relax-and-Recover is written entirely in the native language for system administration: as bash scripts. Experienced users and system admins can adapt or extend the rear scripts to make it work for their particular cases. Relax-and-Recover is a modular framework with ready-to-go workflows for common situations. The basic workflow is as follows: Specify its configuration in /etc/rear/local.conf (cf. /usr/share/rear/conf/examples) and run "rear mkbackup" to create a backup.tar.gz on a NFS server and a bootable recovery ISO image for your system. A recovery medium which is made from the ISO image boots a special rear recovery system. Log in as root and run "rear recover" which does the following steps: It runs the rear installer that recreates the basic system, in particular the system disk partitioning with filesystems and mount points, then it restores the backup from the NFS server and finally it installs the boot loader. Finally remove the recovery medium and reboot the recreated system. Relax-and-Recover supports various kind of boot media for the recovery system (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) for storage and backup as well as various external third-party backup methods (incl. IBM Tivoli Storage Manager, HP DataProtector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, FDR/Upstream, NovaBACKUP DC, Bareos, Bacula, rsync, rbme). Warning for users who like to upgrade Relax-and-Recover: Users who already use it must re-validate that their particular disaster recovery procedure still works. Additionally when you already use Relax-and-Recover and you upgrade software that is related to the basic system (e.g. kernel, storage, bootloader, init, networking) or you do other changes in your basic system, you must also re-validate that your particular disaster recovery procedure still works for you. You must test in advance that it works in your particular case to recreate your particular system with your particular recovery medium and that the recreated system can boot on its own and that the recreated system with all its system services still work as you need it in your particular case. You must have replacement hardware available on which your system can be recreated and you must try out if it works to recreate your system with your recovery medium on your replacement hardware. Be prepared that your system recovery fails to recreate your system. When it fails to recreate your system it is usually a dead end. Be prepared for a manual recreation from scratch. Always have all information available that you need to recreate your particular system manually. Manually recreate your system on your replacement hardware as an exercise. For more information see http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Disaster_Recovery Relax-and-Recover comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details see the GNU General Public License.
PackageNamerear
PackageReleasearchiving.76.30
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-12D27A3F65B6EAE3975023DEF602D1A5BE1F52616
SHA-256DB49E168ADBFDF06381FAC3434A97010AF4669F252091EFA5495FDC662C6D24E
Key Value
MD52350783AF3CA171C731CD8DF352632EE
PackageArchi686
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover is the leading Open Source disaster recovery and system migration solution. It comprises of a modular frame-work and ready-to-go workflows for many common situations to produce a bootable image and restore from backup using this image. As a benefit, it allows to restore to different hardware and can therefore be used as a migration tool as well. Currently Relax-and-Recover supports various boot media (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) as well as a multitude of backup strategies (incl. IBM TSM, MircroFocus Data Protector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, Bacula, Bareos, BORG, Duplicity, rsync). Relax-and-Recover was designed to be easy to set up, requires no maintenance and is there to assist when disaster strikes. Its setup-and-forget nature removes any excuse for not having a disaster recovery solution implemented. Professional services and support are available.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamerear
PackageRelease3.fc33
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-13C1BE68081671C189D8672E929B39E0B450E3DB6
SHA-2563F4C326422F628605B467BC34F098F4154ECBF52F1B2D5B71A5AD6B98EE4B8AC
Key Value
MD5C66BFEEB7811DB5B7922C1A909A54EA2
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover (abbreviated rear) is the leading Free Software disaster recovery framework. Relax-and-Recover is written entirely in the native language for system administration: as bash scripts. Experienced users and system admins can adapt or extend the rear scripts to make it work for their particular cases. Relax-and-Recover is a modular framework with ready-to-go workflows for common situations. The basic workflow is as follows: Specify its configuration in /etc/rear/local.conf (cf. /usr/share/rear/conf/examples) and run "rear mkbackup" to create a backup.tar.gz on a NFS server and a bootable recovery ISO image for your system. A recovery medium which is made from the ISO image boots a special rear recovery system. Log in as root and run "rear recover" which does the following steps: It runs the rear installer that recreates the basic system, in particular the system disk partitioning with filesystems and mount points, then it restores the backup from the NFS server and finally it installs the boot loader. Finally remove the recovery medium and reboot the recreated system. Relax-and-Recover supports various kind of boot media for the recovery system (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) for storage and backup as well as various external third-party backup methods (incl. IBM Tivoli Storage Manager, HP DataProtector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, FDR/Upstream, NovaBACKUP DC, Bareos, Bacula, rsync, rbme). Warning for users who like to upgrade Relax-and-Recover: Users who already use it must re-validate that their particular disaster recovery procedure still works. Additionally when you already use Relax-and-Recover and you upgrade software that is related to the basic system (e.g. kernel, storage, bootloader, init, networking) or you do other changes in your basic system, you must also re-validate that your particular disaster recovery procedure still works for you. You must test in advance that it works in your particular case to recreate your particular system with your particular recovery medium and that the recreated system can boot on its own and that the recreated system with all its system services still work as you need it in your particular case. You must have replacement hardware available on which your system can be recreated and you must try out if it works to recreate your system with your recovery medium on your replacement hardware. Be prepared that your system recovery fails to recreate your system. When it fails to recreate your system it is usually a dead end. Be prepared for a manual recreation from scratch. Always have all information available that you need to recreate your particular system manually. Manually recreate your system on your replacement hardware as an exercise. For more information see http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Disaster_Recovery Relax-and-Recover comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details see the GNU General Public License.
PackageNamerear
PackageReleasearchiving.76.14
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-148B36CDFB7076768CBC65D438BA8C197D83ADBF3
SHA-25627953EB4FBC2B70E501C70F8D36B105E8ED5B64A0DC4BC3256E5614F5C77C140
Key Value
MD50473EBC2F4563658E5DAFF680D4E3A8E
PackageArchppc64
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover (abbreviated rear) is the leading Free Software disaster recovery framework. Relax-and-Recover is written entirely in the native language for system administration: as bash scripts. Experienced users and system admins can adapt or extend the rear scripts to make it work for their particular cases. Relax-and-Recover is a modular framework with ready-to-go workflows for common situations. The basic workflow is as follows: Specify its configuration in /etc/rear/local.conf (cf. /usr/share/rear/conf/examples) and run "rear mkbackup" to create a backup.tar.gz on a NFS server and a bootable recovery ISO image for your system. A recovery medium which is made from the ISO image boots a special rear recovery system. Log in as root and run "rear recover" which does the following steps: It runs the rear installer that recreates the basic system, in particular the system disk partitioning with filesystems and mount points, then it restores the backup from the NFS server and finally it installs the boot loader. Finally remove the recovery medium and reboot the recreated system. Relax-and-Recover supports various kind of boot media for the recovery system (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) for storage and backup as well as various external third-party backup methods (incl. IBM Tivoli Storage Manager, HP DataProtector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, FDR/Upstream, NovaBACKUP DC, Bareos, Bacula, rsync, rbme). Warning for users who like to upgrade Relax-and-Recover: Users who already use it must re-validate that their particular disaster recovery procedure still works. Additionally when you already use Relax-and-Recover and you upgrade software that is related to the basic system (e.g. kernel, storage, bootloader, init, networking) or you do other changes in your basic system, you must also re-validate that your particular disaster recovery procedure still works for you. You must test in advance that it works in your particular case to recreate your particular system with your particular recovery medium and that the recreated system can boot on its own and that the recreated system with all its system services still work as you need it in your particular case. You must have replacement hardware available on which your system can be recreated and you must try out if it works to recreate your system with your recovery medium on your replacement hardware. Be prepared that your system recovery fails to recreate your system. When it fails to recreate your system it is usually a dead end. Be prepared for a manual recreation from scratch. Always have all information available that you need to recreate your particular system manually. Manually recreate your system on your replacement hardware as an exercise. For more information see http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Disaster_Recovery Relax-and-Recover comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details see the GNU General Public License.
PackageNamerear
PackageReleasearchiving.76.8
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-138F0EC38BD66AEBA847C28E5E9F539F48B1304FC
SHA-256043B037B4EE8D966DA2C50179B95ACA0DD44DB4728E24DB2E1DE835D65E4E9F4
Key Value
MD535CD642F8A13842FF07A0F1F190E866A
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover (abbreviated rear) is the leading Free Software disaster recovery framework. Relax-and-Recover is written entirely in the native language for system administration: as bash scripts. Experienced users and system admins can adapt or extend the rear scripts to make it work for their particular cases. Relax-and-Recover is a modular framework with ready-to-go workflows for common situations. The basic workflow is as follows: Specify its configuration in /etc/rear/local.conf (cf. /usr/share/rear/conf/examples) and run "rear mkbackup" to create a backup.tar.gz on a NFS server and a bootable recovery ISO image for your system. A recovery medium which is made from the ISO image boots a special rear recovery system. Log in as root and run "rear recover" which does the following steps: It runs the rear installer that recreates the basic system, in particular the system disk partitioning with filesystems and mount points, then it restores the backup from the NFS server and finally it installs the boot loader. Finally remove the recovery medium and reboot the recreated system. Relax-and-Recover supports various kind of boot media for the recovery system (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) for storage and backup as well as various external third-party backup methods (incl. IBM Tivoli Storage Manager, HP DataProtector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, FDR/Upstream, NovaBACKUP DC, Bareos, Bacula, rsync, rbme). Warning for users who like to upgrade Relax-and-Recover: Users who already use it must re-validate that their particular disaster recovery procedure still works. Additionally when you already use Relax-and-Recover and you upgrade software that is related to the basic system (e.g. kernel, storage, bootloader, init, networking) or you do other changes in your basic system, you must also re-validate that your particular disaster recovery procedure still works for you. You must test in advance that it works in your particular case to recreate your particular system with your particular recovery medium and that the recreated system can boot on its own and that the recreated system with all its system services still work as you need it in your particular case. You must have replacement hardware available on which your system can be recreated and you must try out if it works to recreate your system with your recovery medium on your replacement hardware. Be prepared that your system recovery fails to recreate your system. When it fails to recreate your system it is usually a dead end. Be prepared for a manual recreation from scratch. Always have all information available that you need to recreate your particular system manually. Manually recreate your system on your replacement hardware as an exercise. For more information see http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Disaster_Recovery Relax-and-Recover comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details see the GNU General Public License.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamerear
PackageRelease1.4
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-104C45671F98A192B70DB6C2F35496CB1FBA37C31
SHA-256CE7AF21D77B70F60478D21699CE42A47D15ECFBEF461559A4F88108236AB81D7
Key Value
MD5D52374D75467CA7EA54384AC688656E3
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover (abbreviated rear) is the leading Free Software disaster recovery framework. Relax-and-Recover is written entirely in the native language for system administration: as bash scripts. Experienced users and system admins can adapt or extend the rear scripts to make it work for their particular cases. Relax-and-Recover is a modular framework with ready-to-go workflows for common situations. The basic workflow is as follows: Specify its configuration in /etc/rear/local.conf (cf. /usr/share/rear/conf/examples) and run "rear mkbackup" to create a backup.tar.gz on a NFS server and a bootable recovery ISO image for your system. A recovery medium which is made from the ISO image boots a special rear recovery system. Log in as root and run "rear recover" which does the following steps: It runs the rear installer that recreates the basic system, in particular the system disk partitioning with filesystems and mount points, then it restores the backup from the NFS server and finally it installs the boot loader. Finally remove the recovery medium and reboot the recreated system. Relax-and-Recover supports various kind of boot media for the recovery system (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) for storage and backup as well as various external third-party backup methods (incl. IBM Tivoli Storage Manager, HP DataProtector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, FDR/Upstream, NovaBACKUP DC, Bareos, Bacula, rsync, rbme). Warning for users who like to upgrade Relax-and-Recover: Users who already use it must re-validate that their particular disaster recovery procedure still works. Additionally when you already use Relax-and-Recover and you upgrade software that is related to the basic system (e.g. kernel, storage, bootloader, init, networking) or you do other changes in your basic system, you must also re-validate that your particular disaster recovery procedure still works for you. You must test in advance that it works in your particular case to recreate your particular system with your particular recovery medium and that the recreated system can boot on its own and that the recreated system with all its system services still work as you need it in your particular case. You must have replacement hardware available on which your system can be recreated and you must try out if it works to recreate your system with your recovery medium on your replacement hardware. Be prepared that your system recovery fails to recreate your system. When it fails to recreate your system it is usually a dead end. Be prepared for a manual recreation from scratch. Always have all information available that you need to recreate your particular system manually. Manually recreate your system on your replacement hardware as an exercise. For more information see http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Disaster_Recovery Relax-and-Recover comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details see the GNU General Public License.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamerear
PackageRelease1.6
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-184EF76C311AE320F8C57A8A0076BEEB7B3CF828B
SHA-25618A7FD78CFEDABD1EAE6C7EFB56AAAEB991A8C703ECEF053F756A26B29153D97
Key Value
MD5E666DE2B725BC7DE365D6BE36B4CCE35
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover (abbreviated rear) is the leading Free Software disaster recovery framework. Relax-and-Recover is written entirely in the native language for system administration: as bash scripts. Experienced users and system admins can adapt or extend the rear scripts to make it work for their particular cases. Relax-and-Recover is a modular framework with ready-to-go workflows for common situations. The basic workflow is as follows: Specify its configuration in /etc/rear/local.conf (cf. /usr/share/rear/conf/examples) and run "rear mkbackup" to create a backup.tar.gz on a NFS server and a bootable recovery ISO image for your system. A recovery medium which is made from the ISO image boots a special rear recovery system. Log in as root and run "rear recover" which does the following steps: It runs the rear installer that recreates the basic system, in particular the system disk partitioning with filesystems and mount points, then it restores the backup from the NFS server and finally it installs the boot loader. Finally remove the recovery medium and reboot the recreated system. Relax-and-Recover supports various kind of boot media for the recovery system (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) for storage and backup as well as various external third-party backup methods (incl. IBM Tivoli Storage Manager, HP DataProtector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, FDR/Upstream, NovaBACKUP DC, Bareos, Bacula, rsync, rbme). Warning for users who like to upgrade Relax-and-Recover: Users who already use it must re-validate that their particular disaster recovery procedure still works. Additionally when you already use Relax-and-Recover and you upgrade software that is related to the basic system (e.g. kernel, storage, bootloader, init, networking) or you do other changes in your basic system, you must also re-validate that your particular disaster recovery procedure still works for you. You must test in advance that it works in your particular case to recreate your particular system with your particular recovery medium and that the recreated system can boot on its own and that the recreated system with all its system services still work as you need it in your particular case. You must have replacement hardware available on which your system can be recreated and you must try out if it works to recreate your system with your recovery medium on your replacement hardware. Be prepared that your system recovery fails to recreate your system. When it fails to recreate your system it is usually a dead end. Be prepared for a manual recreation from scratch. Always have all information available that you need to recreate your particular system manually. Manually recreate your system on your replacement hardware as an exercise. For more information see http://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Disaster_Recovery Relax-and-Recover comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details see the GNU General Public License.
PackageNamerear
PackageReleaselp152.76.2
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-10F7DDE2005A3A2DB7BC8A7B13526904186987297
SHA-256F7F7CAB3F8C5AC359B03CC584BFE5A9A5B7999D6BE16AB0CC8B646729322D6E1
Key Value
MD5C0D5831970705985F7620FE6039E0A15
PackageArchi686
PackageDescriptionRelax-and-Recover is the leading Open Source disaster recovery and system migration solution. It comprises of a modular frame-work and ready-to-go workflows for many common situations to produce a bootable image and restore from backup using this image. As a benefit, it allows to restore to different hardware and can therefore be used as a migration tool as well. Currently Relax-and-Recover supports various boot media (incl. ISO, PXE, OBDR tape, USB or eSATA storage), a variety of network protocols (incl. sftp, ftp, http, nfs, cifs) as well as a multitude of backup strategies (incl. IBM TSM, HP DataProtector, Symantec NetBackup, EMC NetWorker, Bacula, Bareos, BORG, Duplicity, rsync). Relax-and-Recover was designed to be easy to set up, requires no maintenance and is there to assist when disaster strikes. Its setup-and-forget nature removes any excuse for not having a disaster recovery solution implemented. Professional services and support are available.
PackageMaintainerAlmaLinux Packaging Team <packager@almalinux.org>
PackageNamerear
PackageRelease3.el8
PackageVersion2.6
SHA-16FBFE9AE9871BCD9D4863939B9B3C29C99C0ADD9
SHA-25651CF919B3F5A1586F14918A60FDBEDDE4E0C735164F5CD0FAEDC1F0C26FA12A6