gpart 1:0.3-7 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

gpart (1:0.3-7) unstable; urgency=medium

  [ Joao Eriberto Mota Filho ]
  * debian/control:
      - Added 'Rules-Requires-Root: no' to source stanza.
      - Bumped Standards-Version to 4.4.1.
  * debian/copyright:
      - Added packaging rights for Samuel Henrique.
      - Using GitHub/issues in Upstream-Contact field.
  * debian/README.Debian: fixed a spelling error.
  * debian/watch: using variables instead of expressions.

  [ Samuel Henrique ]
  * Add salsa-ci.yml.

 -- Joao Eriberto Mota Filho <email address hidden>  Wed, 18 Dec 2019 23:29:12 -0300

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian Security Tools
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Security Tools
Architectures:
any
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
gpart_0.3-7.dsc 1.9 KiB 0df6f1e8d73468f4bb4aa38f406b623649417b4b6656d30e0f5c5bfc8bb2f043
gpart_0.3.orig.tar.gz 52.3 KiB ec56d12ec9ffdb9877c12692ea6e51620b1ae44473d3d253b27fc31ed9ebb4dd
gpart_0.3-7.debian.tar.xz 10.1 KiB 90964c32f1ded513fd6a4f17d0cbaa6f5edc68dabd96725289144d78ea4a7599

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

gpart: Guess PC disk partition table, find lost partitions

 Gpart is a tool which tries to guess the primary partition table of a PC-type
 disk in case the primary partition table in sector 0 is damaged, incorrect or
 deleted.
 .
 It is also good at finding and listing the types, locations, and sizes of
 inadvertently-deleted partitions, both primary and logical. It gives you the
 information you need to manually re-create them (using fdisk, cfdisk, sfdisk,
 etc.).
 .
 The guessed table can also be written to a file or (if you firmly believe the
 guessed table is entirely correct) directly to a disk device.
 .
 Currently supported (guessable) filesystem or partition types:
 .
  * BeOS filesystem type.
  * BtrFS filesystem type.
  * FreeBSD/NetBSD/386BSD disklabel sub-partitioning scheme used on Intel
    platforms.
  * Linux second extended filesystem (Ext2).
  * MS-DOS FAT12, FAT16 and FAT32 "filesystems".
  * IBM OS/2 High Performance filesystem.
  * Linux LVM and LVM2 physical volumes.
  * Linux swap partitions (versions 0 and 1).
  * The Minix operating system filesystem type.
  * MS Windows NT/2000 filesystem.
  * QNX 4.x filesystem.
  * The Reiser filesystem (version 3.5.X, X > 11).
  * Sun Solaris on Intel platforms uses a sub-partitioning scheme on PC hard
    disks similar to the BSD disklabels.
  * Silicon Graphics journaled filesystem for Linux.
 .
 Gpart is useful in recovery actions and forensics investigations.

gpart-dbgsym: debug symbols for gpart