Result for 30818B23756CF9CF0A38F03188C26D439AA32EA7

Query result

Key Value
CRC3277D194FF
FileNamepatchsys-quilt.mk
FileSize4515
MD5E53CFB9AA4B6B036744048B8F27FE499
OpSystemCode{'MfgCode': '1006', 'OpSystemCode': '362', 'OpSystemName': 'TBD', 'OpSystemVersion': 'none'}
ProductCode{'ApplicationType': 'Operating System', 'Language': 'English', 'MfgCode': '1111', 'OpSystemCode': '533', 'ProductCode': '13174', 'ProductName': 'Ubuntu', 'ProductVersion': '6.06 LTS'}
SHA-130818B23756CF9CF0A38F03188C26D439AA32EA7
SHA-256C4E9997A524E9F616F0E9464A70E469D6A7CE8D9556C2C72F4565AF1394C347F
SSDEEP96:Fr1npfCtKpZo6/n+Cs8uScVdjiehRfxdflifeH:rp68iG+bVdjiURfxddifq
SpecialCode
TLSHT1E49176E5E3C84B2248431A52B38773CAFE0B56F412B6292070ECD6552352AFF817B6E1
dbnsrl_legacy
insert-timestamp1647311481.555989
sourceNSRL
hashlookup:parent-total12
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 12)

The searched file hash is included in 12 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize245318
MD5D7C6F251A63FA8CE1349D899BE17BEA4
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.40-6
SHA-1A6E48E2FDCA273F74ACF7CB9A10695D8E079E3C6
SHA-2563E44CE232C1AE6A487F482753A612736AE1B771CC4D146A76B347BC4B6D27EBC
Key Value
FileSize248234
MD50F03478063C17C16BC2E8EC46EA94A72
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.40-6
SHA-1D2890BF0D60B12B44079AC0D3F66E7E22FA679FF
SHA-256EFA12CDDCAD6BFB9F10901344E8661754307B5A8BFEE82EE4A1926EF194A3CAF
Key Value
FileSize280024
MD56422DAC129833B6D7CC7EB7A4DBAE368
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.42-2
SHA-1401D00CB360C76006E3D860B41C9D98599B235C0
SHA-256550865500F83EAB92C2586FC1CEBB42B3A1A30A570E08A2B6F7522645711F178
Key Value
FileSize281872
MD59C8E12E262EAA54AE9C44FBDFD9F8DAB
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.42-2
SHA-1365FB026E50AA39A63D43A287E31988DECFF984F
SHA-256E3B2CCFAD2429DEBDC53B0A679ABB19EE0CD50FD425083F81D20F15A7378B91C
Key Value
FileNamequilt_0.40-6_i386.deb
FileSize245314
MD5773CB0AF5E2B23026FE4DD16F65295DF
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.40-6
SHA-112CBA706F01626E64C6E92420DEFB8E42AE6AAFD
SHA-2569739302EDA5B86EE3084F510A5CE9EAEF199BE8B163428B9DEE5F687CACDB578
nsrl-sha256rds241-sha256.zip
Key Value
FileSize245796
MD571E5B82D865D241EAAFC921E58535CBB
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.40-6
SHA-17D377CE05A73BA49283376337D969EE6B2981937
SHA-256577F5BA03C73B090CC9A4C54B9A9B6BA1294EB5407C70B8F77DE820197983D67
Key Value
FileSize278878
MD5FD2BE344FBEC155058D976D761A702ED
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.42-2
SHA-1C2DD766D0C274743AC8BF440CEBD29FDDE9F14BB
SHA-25645A5C71B6A2A24D89BF44C8B1361D7BD52190CC19197876B01B3FECB2B742C43
Key Value
CRC32CD58E29C
FileNamequilt_0.42-2_powerpc.deb
FileSize279426
MD51C839962B8445155C4CD930DB2918E76
OpSystemCode362
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.42-2
ProductCode13174
RDS:package_id13174
SHA-1C45D0498B699FE0BD5891CC8AA2CCB58FBADBDAA
SHA-25608F3F685B6585F27E9B777704DD62DF833E7432E3DF9D9F0D518B6BACE6F4148
SpecialCode
dbnsrl_legacy
insert-timestamp1648642306.772019
sourceRDS_2022.03.1_legacy.db
Key Value
FileSize246026
MD592B0975CB00B7E2646B979FBADC442CC
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.40-6
SHA-144B2FAB15E2B785E44A8BB4EC47F234A099F769B
SHA-256A886BF86FEA95C2FBEE4F314BB8EAC49F63A7FF88C958220F95F0199D0D621FB
Key Value
FileSize278892
MD56335E3D623AB4161EE704C17E2205FC2
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.42-2
SHA-106503F689209450941A94B9175BB21A92AA8C276
SHA-2565C37D17FC77352E229F0910CD639BB9D8B01054F2090B22D7F0FC00792E9FA55
Key Value
FileSize279668
MD5CE02DA9E8017ECCEF7EEFA08A2D5891A
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.42-2
SHA-18E9181783BAD405094D4E56813FE5E6150A97078
SHA-256A121E324C1B2467B998B5A29A06444C483D3D8D2EBC19BFD30A9EE4509B6612E
Key Value
FileSize246550
MD5130AC0957FD48ECBD579CE6FDE022E72
PackageDescriptionTool to work with series of patches Quilt manages a series of patches by keeping track of the changes each of them makes. They are logically organized as a stack, and you can apply, un-apply, refresh them easily by traveling into the stack (push/pop). . Quilt is good for managing additional patches applied to a package received as a tarball or maintained in another version control system. The stacked organization proved to be efficient for the management of very large patch sets (more than hundred patches). As matter of fact, it was designed by and for linux kernel hackers (Andrew Morton, from the -mm branch, is the original author), and its main use by the current upstream maintainer is to manage the (hundreds of) patches against the kernel made for the SUSE distribution. . This package completely integrates into the CDBS, allowing maintainers using this new paradigm for their packaging script to benefit of the quilt comfort when editing their diff against upstream. The package also provide some basic support for the fool not using CDBS (yet). . http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/quilt is the current best approximation of an upstream homepage.
PackageMaintainerMartin Quinson <mquinson@debian.org>
PackageNamequilt
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.40-6
SHA-1C119F1A94E8B64B7C4E90040699F7E47F62B4EF1
SHA-256A0CABD203D4115B16B9E8B288E2A074135EC343E5D824DBBA6B2BEC4019C74B5