Result for 2729A722EA127448A0BE1425EB157ECC981D52B1

Query result

Key Value
FileName05union
FileSize4516
MD5A9A0EAC67C1B0468162168313FD5AC1F
RDS:package_id222721
SHA-12729A722EA127448A0BE1425EB157ECC981D52B1
SHA-256A3E3ECC04E3193DFD462A1F9F9AA8A2812C4DCBBD262E7207500E6BBF253C8E3
SSDEEP48:CtzxJyUjHYMOaBJF+zu4pjdOIijCmK5w4octPorHC/URAGctgU:CtzxtzOoF1gYnjzoDPMoX
TLSHT199917C1860C513B977BB014A1FA25058464F76237E7B18503CAC66883FF86F6F277AE5
insert-timestamp1727040613.5237365
sourceRDS.db
hashlookup:parent-total14
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 14)

The searched file hash is included in 14 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize525674
MD5B6223C38FFBACBD553CC07281E077CD3
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu2
SHA-18CC54ED46CCB2D60908B57F790CCD658E234878A
SHA-25687038570A93BEE26132F9D8E357269B50A365578E72484DE9D72040A460CEF6F
Key Value
FileSize602880
MD519E25F8EC75056066D8BD302044CC3CD
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu1
SHA-113BF799ED4F7DA02F87891E77A24A44343D0F9FA
SHA-2566B7D1FE2A9A04A84A358A01E28D868F9FCF54EC576C56370F373E3632DCEAF16
Key Value
FileSize558596
MD5F453B415B4CADF59702411A082C2A3C4
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu1
SHA-1540FE462D8D33A623F7B3790CD5A14E0BE902B5B
SHA-25647F841813B40E520371D5E27D0FADA682E3ED8617DA6F22A323A7C28F6CE9D09
Key Value
FileSize534620
MD535107E0AE73D44506D35A281F7AA8647
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu1
SHA-14448601B8F04A843A2E3BCA9B04048BAC0E968C4
SHA-25621104E2B7D2AF59E406EE4E55641E1CCAF2F9EEE1E4E929C5D6641269716519D
Key Value
FileSize570682
MD554B5B2E0BBE2C58AA0DBDBEACDB8A028
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu2
SHA-198E7DF324B8D22D318B520E89375BEAAB006EED4
SHA-25673A9E6DED6620B3C6E1115823E2D9AC22D9FAE1A05143DE1DE4983859F4FE035
Key Value
FileSize584306
MD5C3B4F62F559373FA1C5414B42D0C5AF4
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu3
SHA-1A9BC630A091264D0CE9A5CF990AC4D61362398A2
SHA-2566A35BEB7D5E2678D10E1E0894D8BB892668353AC0FE21DCE54239C687621FB7B
Key Value
FileSize572666
MD588F49D0F296280AEF5DE56F1CA5AA7E5
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu3
SHA-1DEC2D59C34581A88107D35F7AA7F79E958BC3B32
SHA-256EAE96A9AF1F62CED992105458978CE710A1EA83B90258E6DB7AFCF14B2BB8FEB
Key Value
FileSize532660
MD590567785A5E738CAC689784A7C810ECA
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu2
SHA-1E6CD6B41B645098B19476953AE804487A249B053
SHA-256DE229ED837EACEA5BD22570580579DA0B8C8765C7FBCA7381C28189CD8ED50BA
Key Value
FileSize588312
MD55A08B2E3FB569C25A2439DADA1C9B1AA
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu1
SHA-1FA7DF66E38BC43F4FF1970994A15AC20E6FA383F
SHA-256EF2F11F5C0AEF88E00A69E84463F5F8BA637854F7F7FA9A4895161177CC5E82B
Key Value
FileSize568054
MD5983945C1EC7305AE84C8E87AFE9BF24F
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu2
SHA-1D98368D4A50B1C69A4134D9CBD709571683B5B8B
SHA-25615441A130EB297BC415F666EE5D4C39E12B147707D6FA6AE58E0F7BB8DBB3DF5
Key Value
FileSize576236
MD5920A1FC227577786874271E6A40E37E3
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu2
SHA-1BE3EE07CAF840E805169026B76876F14828C2E00
SHA-25621AE6B50081C23D5BB8E1F8CE34A8A5B6997D2B62B32D6D750DA3115FAFA5F58
Key Value
FileSize506798
MD54576F58CB349E60031F98903DC58D2A1
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu2
SHA-1124A70834B3BAC7EDBFF921E342C6A2C7F2527EF
SHA-2562C00F5B360070B5ED39EBE3916E0F1A8DF67323813AD0E45272C6EC63C2442BF
Key Value
FileSize563950
MD51051C26478702E427F66C82627C243CB
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu1
SHA-10FC3E1D17434FE76F34C8794A2077279901A2EA9
SHA-256CFB4615B6AA9851F661845F45ED748C922D508667FD54C08A83333D63CD4876F
Key Value
FileSize603464
MD51F1B8BA8DDD0C574D0F91C27642F0684
PackageDescriptionExecute commands in a chroot environment schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and access permissions given to each, including root access for normal users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for security. . Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions, persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported. . schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example, running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix. . schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots. . schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly more functionality.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1ubuntu1
SHA-1EA420CF0D3655A90D99DC8F7317D8AA4E8C3F568
SHA-256FD488481E87C5BDE13C66026FA59E37DC539CE990FD858C1A771EC488DA699D9