Key | Value |
---|---|
CRC32 | 32A6C480 |
FileName | kvm_stat |
FileSize | 3622 |
MD5 | 046CE92F0EFA04CDC5FD46D1356E0ADD |
OpSystemCode | {'MfgCode': '1006', 'OpSystemCode': '362', 'OpSystemName': 'TBD', 'OpSystemVersion': 'none'} |
ProductCode | {'ApplicationType': 'Operating System', 'Language': 'English', 'MfgCode': '1927', 'OpSystemCode': '51', 'ProductCode': '14897', 'ProductName': 'CentOS', 'ProductVersion': '5.9'} |
SHA-1 | 28469021D7D906356008652008C3B4729A2B151E |
SHA-256 | 91A045FED09AFD94BF960AA8DE0143A1304D141009E12E67A227976BBCE9219E |
SSDEEP | 48:6qFBQz2XMoGIAhVZxyOXifugus3tdJwoG1GZkoAvYvz6Es05Had5U5BQBLZSS:6qFBbHwvau4FdWYvz6E8SQZUS |
SpecialCode | |
TLSH | T1F37112353D216529E6A70C5B5D0ED1036B2A7E236D043028BEDD82905F5A93DB2F7EA8 |
db | nsrl_modern_rds |
insert-timestamp | 1646993379.5597417 |
nsrl-sha256 | rds241-sha256.zip |
source | NSRL |
hashlookup:parent-total | 38 |
hashlookup:trust | 100 |
The searched file hash is included in 38 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 2564172 |
MD5 | A97701D8324574815CC807CEF282D95B |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support: . egrep "flags.*:.*(svm|vmx)" /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. Without hardware support, you can use qemu emulation instead. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images. . This package contains support for the x86 and x86-64 architectures only. Support for other architectures is provided by the qemu-kvm-extras package. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | qemu-kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 0.12.5+noroms-0ubuntu7 |
SHA-1 | 01E7A349AE9874FB8D925AD5230E752E2903B7B0 |
SHA-256 | 9A5C40F7F011F70FBE2E58BD4D1D4E8A752CA974FA1BD7EBF6B7CB152826A986 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 2959980 |
MD5 | DE52C587FDCAE984B658ECB31F339043 |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support: . egrep "flags.*:.*(svm|vmx)" /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. Without hardware support, you can use qemu emulation instead. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images. . This package contains support for the x86 and x86-64 architectures only. Support for other architectures is provided by the qemu-kvm-extras package. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | qemu-kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 0.12.5+noroms-0ubuntu7.11 |
SHA-1 | 071AD8C1385FEF264A7956EFDCA958C552C26E41 |
SHA-256 | 54E81D0121EB8B28894BBA845C3B9BE33A5434D1FEAE9D602CA6FB843E1F3461 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 2592266 |
MD5 | 0D0574EF0726F86B9A9C0C0EE825A4B7 |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support: . egrep "flags.*:.*(svm|vmx)" /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. Without hardware support, you can use qemu emulation instead. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images. . This package contains support for the x86 and x86-64 architectures only. Support for other architectures is provided by the qemu-kvm-extras package. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | qemu-kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 0.11.0-0ubuntu6.4 |
SHA-1 | 07E7F9CE0C6C2FB7D54447A4C7E4641F109ECF48 |
SHA-256 | 1D9D15BF333192C448A189B53684D2573620D740355F83A210F2EE2AB2C83D96 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 957398 |
MD5 | 699D7CC4987430613F930B726DF849F0 |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support, do as follows: . * Make sure you run Linux 2.6.16 or newer for AMD processors, or Linux 2.6.15 for Intel processors. Older Linux versions do not report the virtualization capabilities. . * Run this command in a shell: egrep '^flags.*(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. . Without hardware support, you can use qemu instead, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the script /usr/sbin/qemu-make-debian-root, which uses debootstrap to build a Debian disk image. See the man page for qemu-make-debian-root. The suggested hal package is only used for automatically reporting the system bios version and computer model when reporting bugs. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images or build them yourself from the kvm-source package which provides the module source. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 1:72+dfsg-1ubuntu6.1 |
SHA-1 | 1B65B73981C1018682A2669D078E3D4CC04B4996 |
SHA-256 | A74A2DE8EFAF4438E147D3C466E769EEA94949E123A351951B173C0E48895747 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 1142786 |
MD5 | AD60C26C760453EEF730D08294DECF80 |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support, do as follows: . * Make sure you run Linux 2.6.16 or newer for AMD processors, or Linux 2.6.15 for Intel processors. Older Linux versions do not report the virtualization capabilities. . * Run this command in a shell: egrep '^flags.*(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. . Without hardware support, you can use qemu instead, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the script /usr/sbin/qemu-make-debian-root, which uses debootstrap to build a Debian disk image. See the man page for qemu-make-debian-root. The suggested hal package is only used for automatically reporting the system bios version and computer model when reporting bugs. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images or build them yourself from the kvm-source package which provides the module source. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 1:84+dfsg-0ubuntu12.4 |
SHA-1 | 1E0E3A8B6E566D8A151C57C62D7369BA744784A4 |
SHA-256 | C7CC780ED3C719A0787042F3FC98C138F55D1088F441964BF194EDD7BD6E91D0 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 1027532 |
MD5 | E10CEF793CEF626D81487C6C844591B9 |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support, do as follows: . * Make sure you run Linux 2.6.16 or newer for AMD processors, or Linux 2.6.15 for Intel processors. Older Linux versions do not report the virtualization capabilities. . * Run this command in a shell: egrep '^flags.*(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. . Without hardware support, you can use qemu instead, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the script /usr/sbin/qemu-make-debian-root, which uses debootstrap to build a Debian disk image. See the man page for qemu-make-debian-root. The suggested hal package is only used for automatically reporting the system bios version and computer model when reporting bugs. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images or build them yourself from the kvm-source package which provides the module source. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 1:72+dfsg-1ubuntu6 |
SHA-1 | 22DDB929BD75F332779BA55BCDB6E30C69901370 |
SHA-256 | AD9DE47773416D703BC05F1F78E248D22288F31D21760D568A3841AB972C91D6 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 2880962 |
MD5 | 48C45CF0DE567DEA07CEC31FD4ADC26C |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support: . egrep "flags.*:.*(svm|vmx)" /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. Without hardware support, you can use qemu emulation instead. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images. . This package contains support for the x86 and x86-64 architectures only. Support for other architectures is provided by the qemu-kvm-extras package. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | qemu-kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 0.12.3+noroms-0ubuntu9.21 |
SHA-1 | 240712F9C4A8947B0E85A3396AD3AF8D3DFA84F2 |
SHA-256 | 899185BA47EED1B558AF606F013C3E08C2A42AB95CDA6AC1F078A6C8F3828C38 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 1073478 |
MD5 | AF84B2C1C5EC1C8276366619E1D9B254 |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support, do as follows: . * Make sure you run Linux 2.6.16 or newer for AMD processors, or Linux 2.6.15 for Intel processors. Older Linux versions do not report the virtualization capabilities. . * Run this command in a shell: egrep '^flags.*(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. . Without hardware support, you can use qemu instead, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the script /usr/sbin/qemu-make-debian-root, which uses debootstrap to build a Debian disk image. See the man page for qemu-make-debian-root. The suggested hal package is only used for automatically reporting the system bios version and computer model when reporting bugs. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images or build them yourself from the kvm-source package which provides the module source. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 1:84+dfsg-0ubuntu11 |
SHA-1 | 2C22A9D9470C268524546FF8904AB58A6F3B4C49 |
SHA-256 | 31D72F600F8754CFE3F5A70A104FE33BF929072EE60425755667495D91A9BC48 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 1066708 |
MD5 | 3478C2B080BF3FFB635F32550DFAB609 |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support, do as follows: . * Make sure you run Linux 2.6.16 or newer for AMD processors, or Linux 2.6.15 for Intel processors. Older Linux versions do not report the virtualization capabilities. . * Run this command in a shell: egrep '^flags.*(vmx|svm)' /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. . Without hardware support, you can use qemu instead, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the script /usr/sbin/qemu-make-debian-root, which uses debootstrap to build a Debian disk image. See the man page for qemu-make-debian-root. The suggested hal package is only used for automatically reporting the system bios version and computer model when reporting bugs. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images or build them yourself from the kvm-source package which provides the module source. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 1:84+dfsg-0ubuntu11 |
SHA-1 | 3D2017A6161A048282BE6E08F7F97C4E4C32D538 |
SHA-256 | 0AA1ED492764DD207C8CBBBC434B97283C56C5A2F5218143444C9A1015A2EA4F |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileSize | 2558696 |
MD5 | 405C31D0C59E8943A153C4673FEF67CE |
PackageDescription | Full virtualization on i386 and amd64 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PCs, each running unmodified Linux or Windows images. Each virtual machine has private virtualized hardware: a network card, disk, graphics adapter, etc. . KVM (for Kernel-based Virtual Machine) is a full virtualization solution for Linux hosts on x86 (32 and 64-bit) hardware. . KVM is intended for systems where the processor has hardware support for virtualization, see below for details. All combinations of 32-bit and 64-bit host and guest systems are supported, except 64-bit guests on 32-bit hosts. . KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability or Intel's VT. To find out if your processor has the necessary support: . egrep "flags.*:.*(svm|vmx)" /proc/cpuinfo . If it prints anything, the processor provides hardware virtualization support and is suitable for use with KVM. Without hardware support, you can use qemu emulation instead. . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and either kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, and you can get the kernel modules from the standard kernel images. . This package contains support for the x86 and x86-64 architectures only. Support for other architectures is provided by the qemu-kvm-extras package. |
PackageMaintainer | Ubuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com> |
PackageName | qemu-kvm |
PackageSection | misc |
PackageVersion | 0.12.3+noroms-0ubuntu9.21 |
SHA-1 | 3D84BB0F4EB6F094302D84A68D9233F214056D6E |
SHA-256 | A8B9E67D139EB74B11D644FB1217737479882E69C22A2DF10FD2B234177F125B |