Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | ./usr/share/qps/translations/qps_et.qm |
FileSize | 1599 |
MD5 | EBCCEC49542F10315112BA39378E5B7B |
SHA-1 | 0D5B25125D33D832990C7E381CF232C0C32CB8C9 |
SHA-256 | 7F71C8CF8D76BA93179FF5B1673E0C6E8AF97B63B100AC4E9BB5174307FD7960 |
SSDEEP | 24:HnCkLV2CP92MGCzsGgg1MONqJhIXsu4DqqqW9tFepqNsFbkO7pJwpN99yCVUACq:Hvz9D91MkqhIsdzupxkO9+N99fUS |
TLSH | T18531488136FC2E2DF7F94C3D61538A199B6736172DA1C10B17A4B8BA88D4170EDB7392 |
hashlookup:parent-total | 5 |
hashlookup:trust | 75 |
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 |
---|---|
MD5 | EC30EBC8021E6AFCAB5A4F11BFA1D1A7 |
PackageArch | aarch64 |
PackageDescription | Qps is a visual process manager, an X11 version of "top" or "ps" that displays processes in a window and lets you sort and manipulate them. It displays some general system information, and many details about current processes. Qps can: * change nice value of a process * alter the scheduling policy and soft realtime priority of a process * display the TCP/UDP sockets used by a process, and names of the connected hosts (Linux only) * display the memory mappings of the process (which files and shared libraries are loaded where) * display the open files of a process, and the state of unix domain sockets * kill or send any other signal to selected processes * display the load average as a graph, and use this as its icon when iconified * show (as graph or numbers) current CPU, memory and swap usage * sort the process table on any attribute (size, cpu usage, owner etc) * on SMP systems running Linux 2.1 or later (or Solaris), display cpu usage for each processor, and which CPU a process is running on * display the environment variables of any process * show the process table in tree form, showing the parent-child relationship * execute user-defined commands on selected processes * display MOSIX-specific fields and migrate processes to other nodes in a cluster |
PackageMaintainer | umeabot <umeabot> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 2.mga9 |
PackageVersion | 2.3.0 |
SHA-1 | F5D825376588DE1ED61285F8AB356B8A53E08AEE |
SHA-256 | 872F5ACD6C8FE5226DF0390D1442874B10E8530063134DFDDBA3B5681421F205 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | FC5E7E3EF854AFAF867BD45ECDDEB119 |
PackageArch | i586 |
PackageDescription | Qps is a visual process manager, an X11 version of "top" or "ps" that displays processes in a window and lets you sort and manipulate them. It displays some general system information, and many details about current processes. Qps can: * change nice value of a process * alter the scheduling policy and soft realtime priority of a process * display the TCP/UDP sockets used by a process, and names of the connected hosts (Linux only) * display the memory mappings of the process (which files and shared libraries are loaded where) * display the open files of a process, and the state of unix domain sockets * kill or send any other signal to selected processes * display the load average as a graph, and use this as its icon when iconified * show (as graph or numbers) current CPU, memory and swap usage * sort the process table on any attribute (size, cpu usage, owner etc) * on SMP systems running Linux 2.1 or later (or Solaris), display cpu usage for each processor, and which CPU a process is running on * display the environment variables of any process * show the process table in tree form, showing the parent-child relationship * execute user-defined commands on selected processes * display MOSIX-specific fields and migrate processes to other nodes in a cluster |
PackageMaintainer | umeabot <umeabot> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 2.mga9 |
PackageVersion | 2.3.0 |
SHA-1 | 8D8F8D4C0F0525DBA2DEC67A814DAB331E98E099 |
SHA-256 | E438609276B8E627DC15BDFCFF1F5D2B32572BB0A4A36EBA350DAFB39317BC0A |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | A517F4EB4B36056EBEF22E4D460EA6E6 |
PackageArch | x86_64 |
PackageDescription | Qps is a visual process manager, an X11 version of "top" or "ps" that displays processes in a window and lets you sort and manipulate them. It displays some general system information, and many details about current processes. Qps can: * change nice value of a process * alter the scheduling policy and soft realtime priority of a process * display the TCP/UDP sockets used by a process, and names of the connected hosts (Linux only) * display the memory mappings of the process (which files and shared libraries are loaded where) * display the open files of a process, and the state of unix domain sockets * kill or send any other signal to selected processes * display the load average as a graph, and use this as its icon when iconified * show (as graph or numbers) current CPU, memory and swap usage * sort the process table on any attribute (size, cpu usage, owner etc) * on SMP systems running Linux 2.1 or later (or Solaris), display cpu usage for each processor, and which CPU a process is running on * display the environment variables of any process * show the process table in tree form, showing the parent-child relationship * execute user-defined commands on selected processes * display MOSIX-specific fields and migrate processes to other nodes in a cluster |
PackageMaintainer | umeabot <umeabot> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 2.mga9 |
PackageVersion | 2.3.0 |
SHA-1 | 66B24B0A7375765FBD2EFECBAD680BD89DE7054A |
SHA-256 | 41C1404D03D949A7773BFE2A4E050E125B8A5059DF532F3359D24173666B4E52 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 6022EF896BD7E07BA84C6D075048C1B1 |
PackageArch | armv7hl |
PackageDescription | Qps is a visual process manager, an X11 version of "top" or "ps" that displays processes in a window and lets you sort and manipulate them. It displays some general system information, and many details about current processes. Qps can: * change nice value of a process * alter the scheduling policy and soft realtime priority of a process * display the TCP/UDP sockets used by a process, and names of the connected hosts (Linux only) * display the memory mappings of the process (which files and shared libraries are loaded where) * display the open files of a process, and the state of unix domain sockets * kill or send any other signal to selected processes * display the load average as a graph, and use this as its icon when iconified * show (as graph or numbers) current CPU, memory and swap usage * sort the process table on any attribute (size, cpu usage, owner etc) * on SMP systems running Linux 2.1 or later (or Solaris), display cpu usage for each processor, and which CPU a process is running on * display the environment variables of any process * show the process table in tree form, showing the parent-child relationship * execute user-defined commands on selected processes * display MOSIX-specific fields and migrate processes to other nodes in a cluster |
PackageMaintainer | umeabot <umeabot> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 2.mga9 |
PackageVersion | 2.3.0 |
SHA-1 | 36A5CA4CAA95CBF3D6FDB4E3BE3CC5128B876A8F |
SHA-256 | E0D3474F95877A3B097FCE13FFA354888C415426F0943D6F4CEF878C248F3AF7 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | A934A22063BA8BC2AFFE67FC96248FC8 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | Provides translations for the "qps" package. |
PackageName | qps-lang |
PackageRelease | 1.1 |
PackageVersion | 2.3.0 |
SHA-1 | 024EA4460A19692F342A83FD8E42B45B58EEFBF3 |
SHA-256 | A056FDD626253A82059F08852ACEED2F919DBF6D680A39E21F23A7A25CD661F4 |