Result for 3AABEEB12E23ED5A3248E1B5C8AD9FF6041F936A

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/liberis-doc/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize1575
MD54E4BE42F8D8F2839DC5FAD421DA8E02E
SHA-13AABEEB12E23ED5A3248E1B5C8AD9FF6041F936A
SHA-256449518944B9C32B59B8BD55AC99B5E5B5C2907147EF589CAA60BD5B9A8ED61B4
SSDEEP48:XBGuf0QdC0GKXcRhhuHHiNuePX6wCLMn0:RG2Rhg4KueC/LD
TLSHT1B731E8130CCDCE6465B490EF86A084D243BF86C5536ACADCD408EC1E614443BA8399AA
hashlookup:parent-total4
hashlookup:trust70

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Parents (Total: 4)

The searched file hash is included in 4 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize195566
MD5E656874E846F67DD6F7B225D4D787EB8
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - API documentation Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the API documentation in HTML format.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-doc
PackageSectiondoc
PackageVersion1.3.12-1
SHA-111B8A4C18FC202BAEA88438020F82F8936C0004F
SHA-256C04095D742A8A1F4B9A52A3F8E26C136280829A85CF7F5BE8D5B8FBA3E2DCBC5
Key Value
FileSize317498
MD582836BFD46A23629A34496430636C776
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-13
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion1.3.12-1
SHA-1D71D9426C75D663C0480BDBC6142A3B797707BE2
SHA-2565CCB0626B3E62399F4252C1DC7BB852DA7854F42F500F56BAA1B599123FB320A
Key Value
FileSize85174
MD5785C7B3F7E3687BA6D3595EAA9ED50DD
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - development files Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the development files for compiling software depending on Eris.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.12-1
SHA-1421C61431655862924EC3F8D780987809FA2672F
SHA-2567FF13E8B2019D0570EE245D8D116DB80329F788A2AD6E0305B2E065CBFC09486
Key Value
FileSize1728204
MD5F951412860B2E0139A3FEBF3ACD530CD
PackageDescriptionThe WorldForge client entity library - debugging library Eris is designed to simplify client development (and avoid repeating the same work several times), by providing a common system to deal with the back end tasks. Notably, Eris encapsulates most of the work in getting Atlas entities available on your client, logging into a server, and managing updates from the server. Thus it can be considered as a session layer above Atlas, providing persistent (for the session) objects as opposed to Atlas ones (which are transient). It handles the client-side implementation of the meta-server protocol, and querying game servers; out-of-game (OOG) operations (via the Lobby and Rooms), and most important in-game (IG) operations such as entity creation, movement and updates. . Eris provides a generic 'Entity' class, which you are free to sub-class and provide to the system (by registering a factory with the World); thus you are free to create different classes to handle characters, walls, vehicles, etc as your client dictates. An alternative approach is to simply create peer classes, and connect them to Eris via callbacks. Eris makes extensive use of libSigC++, which must be correctly installed and functioning on your system. Familiarity with signal/slot programming concepts is essential for using Eris; the libSigC++ home-page has some examples. Gtk+ or QT signal systems also provide a good introduction. . This package contains the debugging library.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu MOTU Developers <ubuntu-motu@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameliberis-1.3-13-dbg
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.3.12-1
SHA-155DEF990A08327B4B85C1A39F7F4D089FB9BB35C
SHA-2569C5988F487C7E1F10EF58A5DEEEBCB53A5A2A5E40E289CDF32790D285B7D358C