Result for 220A7245DCE853E26C9423E1253DE3BA6766058E

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/liberis-doc/copyright
FileSize1120
MD5F7ECC8AABF12745194EE845CD42DDD82
SHA-1220A7245DCE853E26C9423E1253DE3BA6766058E
SHA-256070BB79BDD0368044F1F36E6DE045B4EFAAE70B5991B0829A1D7A57481703F32
SSDEEP24:0R3dmJ8shmrejNE5byfOkHhylUHTbVu3zQH3qAyAmsT:E3dmFhKYN2byJHcp3/xOT
TLSHT10A21301D5548C7FA584005E1398A69DF936B96A73A9C8140354D832FEB1BA3982F68E4
hashlookup:parent-total66
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 66)

The searched file hash is included in 66 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize1702596
MD5624392F8166EF7EFDEA4BD9A79609A4C
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - debugging library 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 debugging library.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-14-dbg
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.13-2
SHA-10376ABF41ACB8BE0ABA4F8D62663B20A0C70CB30
SHA-256FAA619D9F47A861685B2F462B56F361A23956952B87CE6B9B2115ED77762B820
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
FileSize1677400
MD5809035FD506DE11F3F0C0BC7277B34FF
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - debugging library 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 debugging library.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-14-dbg
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.13-2
SHA-117024191A5F31D4E8C06368F4F1C0DAEC0FB590C
SHA-2565D26F8F3F0825DD579301415EC3FD0A2942C93EA1D1019943ABEEF9A7C90D381
Key Value
FileSize239594
MD5B4F420D67BF68F0252920EC9AF482EED
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - API documentation 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 API documentation in HTML format.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion1.3.13-2ubuntu1
SHA-11CF88C43331A3E58772D78B811D106768C53D86E
SHA-25632C6FAEF646A4EA6BECAEDBC01320D3C1229D9BACC272C5C26AB0705D4632A24
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
FileSize256306
MD5B0F33D4BF0275FF9F3C54735C2D64809
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library 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.
PackageMaintainerMichael Koch <konqueror@gmx.de>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-14
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion1.3.13-2
SHA-125359AE131913A0DEE933B26CA4E458D3C8B11D0
SHA-2565C8C51CDFDFEBE67D2BDE50DAEB891D6D72D26A0F8F5C4D2241A220B043711B8
Key Value
FileSize220982
MD56D5428DB56E9E15C12DCE67DF9491356
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library 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.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-14
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion1.3.13-2ubuntu1
SHA-12780609C20EF77130240AFDCDE293CC3D2BE480F
SHA-256EC140232AFACA3101114A3453C3F1B78B3F9985EB2A9DAAA378AB262F9F3FB84
Key Value
FileSize1663442
MD59556733D4827798D2EF9A64392F28982
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - debugging library 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 debugging library.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-14-dbg
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.13-2
SHA-12B856F086834AD6BA795B9099399B85F37CBE349
SHA-2568B7AF5EB0257F9158E9715DA9C792F73F51B4841048B6173C2895FFE3518BE71
Key Value
FileSize43880
MD5BD1A51F1A151EEDBAA8CB6272BD545AE
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 Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.14-3
SHA-12C4F3CD8D9BB2BC3408110A4DE06B8EFB9743540
SHA-256322DCA1D78F2DB2022CA6E4797B2EFE95A0CA58AB8C71B709D39B152EBD078C1
Key Value
FileSize230098
MD5A215AFDD2628C679D9D3DEE1E56FE796
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library 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.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-14
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion1.3.13-2ubuntu1
SHA-1331B332743A6DA66453DB04729DD01D5E91E0152
SHA-256BF52D4B8D78A9077B2BFCB50ADAAACE815F5E0B40A8176C19D22350F2940D339