Result for 326231B03FCDAE8D4E1A5D6878D101527A9B303E

Query result

Key Value
FileNameschroot
FileSize61
MD532636019FC11AD99CA4D103B601F0230
RDS:package_id222721
SHA-1326231B03FCDAE8D4E1A5D6878D101527A9B303E
SHA-256B534FCE6A2F70D6A20FF8DA32EC65D5126D837BA10B673F7C3712DFA7B471598
SSDEEP3:GBh2cjFL9oNX2/+J:szjFLCX/
TLSHT124A00203F1961635FDE4DC16461365140001142E0C33F874355006847C042E5584918C
insert-timestamp1727040816.2540214
sourceRDS.db
hashlookup:parent-total98
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 98)

The searched file hash is included in 98 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize602216
MD5870285EA26DACFB1AE4516CE0EB1BAFA
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
PackageVersion1.6.10-4build1
SHA-10006C6E32C779F9D0EE9582CBC704D463475BF12
SHA-256A88EC49B5721DBB78A1C47099D48AEC2932AFC12C46ECB97653595FD60A829A6
Key Value
FileSize522572
MD56ED106B322CA593D613234CB769F96CF
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
PackageVersion1.6.10-2ubuntu2
SHA-10404A7638E96D3247AACEA99014C069311631AB3
SHA-2567D53151599F74E49E9E1D374CD510BA072B1AB34711F265E99D0CD54D99E4134
Key Value
FileSize734180
MD5234934A287B3E7BEA9D0383FED348824
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.
PackageMaintainerDebian buildd-tools Developers <buildd-tools-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-1+b1
SHA-1075A0467E7E09C77BCC4A9036126BAB2EA2E9C4F
SHA-256B031F21C807CB8340237E8EC39E9E820BA04FD873226FAD04D35E5C8A8A124D2
Key Value
FileSize604760
MD5FD2B4387255822D01F215007C0137542
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, ZFS, 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, ZFS, 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
PackageVersion1.6.10-11ubuntu2
SHA-10EB00624EFF25D3B658AF3E60724286E54686612
SHA-2568BB45CD505D6AA2FABC7C0DD9AA9CC2920455A04E98AF367FF11417C3A4061D0
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
FileSize547316
MD57D1BDC941E6175B8FF4EC34598606064
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
PackageVersion1.6.10-1
SHA-110C050C9790984DFEC61C0538B68A5201F0DAA2C
SHA-2569F234E4C4E6B34EAF8B17CA990DD6390AC0CCC3CBCE07D77CD90225359B41961
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
FileSize543916
MD50ED9B6ED13FDB627BDEC3F6438A807EF
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, ZFS, 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, ZFS, 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
PackageVersion1.6.10-12ubuntu1
SHA-1134436E9555B9D1F25C7F1B384768EF00D4DDF0D
SHA-2560068A69D4177B9B7BFE06FCEA3F6A92F363A63029D5FDCB9F9CD8287878E33D8
Key Value
FileSize586004
MD5C85AE1CA3EF9F2E36B282056BC67998E
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
PackageVersion1.6.10-4build1
SHA-1135A2D43D29BB3896EE78BF461B145BDE0B1338F
SHA-256E96354B1A7A40FBE1FD17DC3880C928CC4FA8DE8F94740363EFF7C8243352D2A
Key Value
FileSize791534
MD5DF54BAF6FE77414E83CA8D6FB8FE6DD9
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.
PackageMaintainerDebian buildd-tools Developers <buildd-tools-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNameschroot
PackageSectionadmin
PackageVersion1.6.10-3+deb9u1
SHA-1136A683506558C715B1B35739F5FF23290B8773F
SHA-25698C68D30A3B20CCEC881476C7C77571CF4022FAA0C1086C5349353490EF93C0F