Result for 2917B5D2077124CD50B005CD6F0E26EFD112F147

Query result

Key Value
CRC32C6C4DE3D
FileNamesv
FileSize1009
MD5B504DEEB3781B68E1999608EBAD403F0
OpSystemCode{'MfgCode': '1006', 'OpSystemCode': '362', 'OpSystemName': 'TBD', 'OpSystemVersion': 'none'}
ProductCode{'ApplicationType': 'Startup disk', 'Language': 'English', 'MfgCode': '1006', 'OpSystemCode': '51', 'ProductCode': '15790', 'ProductName': 'Linux Starter Kit Issue 104', 'ProductVersion': 'April 2008'}
RDS:package_id11981
SHA-12917B5D2077124CD50B005CD6F0E26EFD112F147
SHA-256955824ACDB2965A7C1F38BF8F7856802E3B7680E531D43BD9DC8BDD81A9B22E9
SSDEEP24:x50ic79pfLZqxHTzKxnsnZjZEYn/98olgp9/4j:4qp+YZjqYn18rEj
SpecialCode
TLSHT1F711E1B54FAFD207382E321780D6BE9CF3B9720564730027C4A99CBA6ED241EA63F451
dbnsrl_legacy
insert-timestamp1648508351.6533067
nsrl-sha256rds241-sha256.zip
sourceRDS_2022.03.1_legacy.db
tar:gnamewheel
tar:unameroot
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
FileSize708038
MD538A5E1241C503B0065F17F894238C312
PackageDescriptionFull virtualization on x86 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PC:s, 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 hardware with x86 guests. 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. . For the best performance the processor must support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability and 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, KVM falls back to the considerably slower QEMU-based software virtualization. In this case, it makes more sense to use the qemu package, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the the qemu-img program needed to create virtual disk images as well as 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. The suggested etherboot package contains Etherboot ROM images for, among others, the NE2000, PCNET and RTL8139 ethernet cards emulated (see appendix A. List of supported NICs in the package etherboot-doc). . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, while kvm-source provides the module source.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamekvm
PackageSectionmisc
PackageVersion1:62+dfsg-0ubuntu7
SHA-1D20A33D2F1A637DC3C561A287F5C87219DDDFF10
SHA-2565E861530B18458EE89417B2E5459B0F41C08904480CE2C4ACF4CDFE81AD04C08
Key Value
FileSize1027532
MD5E10CEF793CEF626D81487C6C844591B9
PackageDescriptionFull 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.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamekvm
PackageSectionmisc
PackageVersion1:72+dfsg-1ubuntu6
SHA-122DDB929BD75F332779BA55BCDB6E30C69901370
SHA-256AD9DE47773416D703BC05F1F78E248D22288F31D21760D568A3841AB972C91D6
Key Value
FileSize709496
MD5BE95457EF9553F5197F8A23A67C4B713
PackageDescriptionFull virtualization on x86 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PC:s, 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 hardware with x86 guests. 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. . For the best performance the processor must support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability and 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, KVM falls back to the considerably slower QEMU-based software virtualization. In this case, it makes more sense to use the qemu package, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the the qemu-img program needed to create virtual disk images as well as 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. The suggested etherboot package contains Etherboot ROM images for, among others, the NE2000, PCNET and RTL8139 ethernet cards emulated (see appendix A. List of supported NICs in the package etherboot-doc). . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, while kvm-source provides the module source.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamekvm
PackageSectionmisc
PackageVersion1:62+dfsg-0ubuntu8.2
SHA-1716A4A8A4E3FC52DCBB9D6ACE42E3F97EE08119E
SHA-2561938F0C8E93A71F68509F3D1B2470BE89FB41265CE80C9567039EC9417DBEEB4
Key Value
FileSize770350
MD5AF69ABA1E0A6ECD885ED13BE5DDB32C1
PackageDescriptionFull virtualization on x86 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PC:s, 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 hardware with x86 guests. 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. . For the best performance the processor must support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability and 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, KVM falls back to the considerably slower QEMU-based software virtualization. In this case, it makes more sense to use the qemu package, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the the qemu-img program needed to create virtual disk images as well as 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. The suggested etherboot package contains Etherboot ROM images for, among others, the NE2000, PCNET and RTL8139 ethernet cards emulated (see appendix A. List of supported NICs in the package etherboot-doc). . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, while kvm-source provides the module source.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamekvm
PackageSectionmisc
PackageVersion1:62+dfsg-0ubuntu8.2
SHA-1CEE40AAA9D8A315A490D6D46361D735DE8F324C6
SHA-2564DCA7C44A254020577765D1F30C909536FB7A51905B022459E2878EC3C0AB4F9
Key Value
FileSize956518
MD53401874269697942C909C79D7B9FC819
PackageDescriptionFull 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.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamekvm
PackageSectionmisc
PackageVersion1:72+dfsg-1ubuntu6
SHA-151D41D109DC1860093937E1E14D81AAF12AF60DA
SHA-256C2AB634C9FE05294FA417B8EECDEEDCE06257131CC063231044DCC1D75B39BCF
Key Value
FileSize1028390
MD5946F7DE2766B03EE6D8276B8733ACA86
PackageDescriptionFull 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.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamekvm
PackageSectionmisc
PackageVersion1:72+dfsg-1ubuntu6.1
SHA-1469CF2A969D4BCBB0E07C105847215CE4FF5FD52
SHA-2560D18067DFE6868A8A7BBF37730BC77107C9183959645E4BA70D65516B01200E0
Key Value
MD5676156F133AD2D67FCC272A7319CCC89
PackageArchsparc64
PackageDescriptionQEMU is a generic and open source processor emulator which achieves a good emulation speed by using dynamic translation. QEMU has two operating modes: * Full system emulation. In this mode, QEMU emulates a full system (for example a PC), including a processor and various peripherials. It can be used to launch different Operating Systems without rebooting the PC or to debug system code. * User mode emulation. In this mode, QEMU can launch Linux processes compiled for one CPU on another CPU. As QEMU requires no host kernel patches to run, it is safe and easy to use.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameqemu
PackageRelease7.fc9
PackageVersion0.9.1
SHA-1EF25764E2288FFEC429779CE66A63DFFAA615A1E
SHA-256C18FB3CFCB5C35FF3F0679A1BA0BEC7E4EB79F74F8177BE1C478534309DBAC52
Key Value
FileSize768350
MD5C633F32E246EC836005F78751A9D3307
PackageDescriptionFull virtualization on x86 hardware Using KVM, one can run multiple virtual PC:s, 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 hardware with x86 guests. 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. . For the best performance the processor must support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's SVM capability and 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, KVM falls back to the considerably slower QEMU-based software virtualization. In this case, it makes more sense to use the qemu package, possibly with the kqemu package for better performance. . The recommended qemu package contains the the qemu-img program needed to create virtual disk images as well as 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. The suggested etherboot package contains Etherboot ROM images for, among others, the NE2000, PCNET and RTL8139 ethernet cards emulated (see appendix A. List of supported NICs in the package etherboot-doc). . KVM consists of two loadable kernel modules (kvm.ko and kvm-amd.ko or kvm-intel.ko) and a userspace component. This package contains the userspace component, while kvm-source provides the module source.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamekvm
PackageSectionmisc
PackageVersion1:62+dfsg-0ubuntu7
SHA-1849F8EE43464F51825CF8EBB65B9D6406BB9EA0F
SHA-256E9D15054A9E977D48D49092BFA1480C5D9F64808FF37023AD1DBB848F2495BDA
Key Value
FileNamehttps://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD//4.4//packages//amd64//qemu-0.9.1p3.tgz
MD5BF82C60BB0BBC6BB267588D7295A484D
SHA-1338D4183F4EC1FD4D294F4A1A9BCA4D0CBA4E9A3
SHA-2569D4BBE544B5B453AFC39E811045A200ABB8AB1BD12C5E64F616CFA35ADA90CF5
SSDEEP196608:MoSzsNqK7RVLic6wN7hBI7ZT6M7O76Xou:NHNquD7heVW6p
TLSHT1F97633D807B8D66CE56E65BECC4BE7941701FE88473285EEC4BACA33A45F190049B2F5
Key Value
FileNamehttps://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD//4.5//packages//amd64//qemu-0.9.1p8.tgz
MD56DDAAD3D14B2F6F275A6A2FBA327D2B2
SHA-1A1DBF6309C1056267B7A277AAC84ADE242C61B48
SHA-25697B2CBCDA69BDC8C940DCD66D3AA834BE8C046F417C03A695FFE0DC39C111D63
SSDEEP196608:XQ5G5vr6tMSLG1djyZIEtDRdvMdWJNgwg/BnN4UkCJC8:XkGxaaXWTMYPIpnlX
TLSHT104763393CFA3DC4D0FC65D0AA53596813AC5C6F40EBE19B3E1E7E9B0A15F221C36485A
Key Value
FileSize957398
MD5699D7CC4987430613F930B726DF849F0
PackageDescriptionFull 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.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Core Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamekvm
PackageSectionmisc
PackageVersion1:72+dfsg-1ubuntu6.1
SHA-11B65B73981C1018682A2669D078E3D4CC04B4996
SHA-256A74A2DE8EFAF4438E147D3C466E769EEA94949E123A351951B173C0E48895747
Key Value
FileNamehttps://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD//4.4//packages//powerpc//qemu-0.9.1p3.tgz
MD5B348D350FF67FB84C599B332C41AC42C
SHA-12A705810405C00E59475789CE51FE95A368BBEC8
SHA-256CB6C432C12BDA4443C6C272706DEB124D366C1B34DAF1A213502FA03C7114459
SSDEEP196608:fu6vN3DD4xWlb8roIR9KPYne2woHU5dCtxjFyHHrPy2rHp:RN3DDJycIPKPWwoHUetx6rZrJ
TLSHT15076338325CED899C52857729F274D37563CDD4C84CA052E9E01FA782CB7FC9D86AA8C
Key Value
FileNamehttps://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD//4.4//packages//i386//qemu-0.9.1p3.tgz
MD55E4E79BC4B05F9F6801EB050FFE8EB41
SHA-135A90C3C84326F2D795DABAAE3A96C158CCB064A
SHA-2564A3BCF88A87207441A8E166787FD794D7291DD8285FB1F74BDCF668F7A9803D4
SSDEEP196608:EeCTy19x0bfL/bTCwqPfwZ6K7SO5cjF8mBa5:EeJ1/0bfLjUPftaSOajFla5
TLSHT14B5633424373E450EBCDF63B68D86E900A51E852BC7F8689F1C2E525E78FB1435E22B5
Key Value
MD51CC8CB199A0A7A4F4DB17434CE8EB49C
PackageArchsparcv9
PackageDescriptionQEMU is a generic and open source processor emulator which achieves a good emulation speed by using dynamic translation. QEMU has two operating modes: * Full system emulation. In this mode, QEMU emulates a full system (for example a PC), including a processor and various peripherials. It can be used to launch different Operating Systems without rebooting the PC or to debug system code. * User mode emulation. In this mode, QEMU can launch Linux processes compiled for one CPU on another CPU. As QEMU requires no host kernel patches to run, it is safe and easy to use.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameqemu
PackageRelease7.fc9
PackageVersion0.9.1
SHA-10E5D45C11E863966326166910692BBB121F617DF
SHA-256E372C8B1864CE28B33164B69C28BE615F03614F34F0E99ABD25BB3A80EAA09AF