Result for 3670DB2FF67F5EC40FAA521079B0B664F3899C4C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/quilt/changelog.gz
FileSize11214
MD5012E25A2398F6A1F07C3DE8C004EBEB1
SHA-13670DB2FF67F5EC40FAA521079B0B664F3899C4C
SHA-25662F5D57915ACE72291659046C7AA8FA37FCCCBBDC316CC534181D098B3C4612E
SSDEEP192:Mi8wwQBYpSn7YUSOeL4f7zN414J87LBItodfQ9MTXzI5nmAJtABN9jY/bBTXnzy7:MiHnBYpSn07O7R41fXB5LqJJtA3tYTBU
TLSHT1A632D12CB953118439BD2708446B710855B769E88FF69F79CC331DD01E0B2C94329BA9
hashlookup:parent-total5
hashlookup:trust75

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Parents (Total: 5)

The searched file hash is included in 5 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize252590
MD5F708200333B0300DB243406BEEF90E8F
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
PackageVersion0.37-4
SHA-10EE6E4648B41ACDDE571979CA7C2AA261B9FF91C
SHA-256EE47F6BC9EE4222BCB9742268112D43E58683717F1C6D93357FB31D625862894
Key Value
FileNamequilt_0.37-4_i386.deb
FileSize251784
MD5760D08D54E5AA20F5DF4B4573C8084B5
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
PackageVersion0.37-4
SHA-1085A69AB72AC732806B5B69E68187C2202C27FDE
SHA-25660E5C85F631865C0A13BF1578167C1D9F2E582921571C8CFB11AD35724EB840B
nsrl-sha256rds241-sha256.zip
Key Value
FileSize251648
MD51F2243769311BF9B38BBFE8880F3B739
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
PackageVersion0.37-4
SHA-13205E166F18CE4FC12AAB3FC3BBDCD8F58053F5B
SHA-2562BB8E9307DD41DA81992575F4522E1B3139CB0AC91F5C6F94921E36A9B28C7EA
Key Value
FileSize254096
MD5B3260A5AE7D91BCA1837295D18A62C5C
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
PackageVersion0.37-4
SHA-19DB74882AE8473C7E5B0867A2D7071C67C2ACABD
SHA-2568C79EC495165CE6DC52CED9C1916482671CE338815909B29989FB1512A279E70
Key Value
FileSize252206
MD5FC021FCE62F5A3733F8F2F9CD4484883
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
PackageVersion0.37-4
SHA-179A1EA1C638CEDC4179C6F406E07AED472DC8F4B
SHA-256A33E835D3ACC97AB645C7AA24D629428C11AAD06AB388F866AE196172885D643