Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | ./usr/lib/.build-id/00/d6d87f3721aeafdcf1d75af7f777525ec9af76 |
FileSize | 23 |
MD5 | 42DAAE4437ED7FBC1155CAE740D8E625 |
SHA-1 | 36316147858196F6F954AD521AC6E18CD93DB728 |
SHA-256 | E790B8BF813D8087134D7432BC035484FAC68FBC6886FB9453869463B5ADEFCE |
SSDEEP | 3:gCDNg:XW |
TLSH | |
hashlookup:parent-total | 16 |
hashlookup:trust | 100 |
The searched file hash is included in 16 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | B1B83BE2C9BE521FEAC10885068E0AF0 |
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.mga7 |
PackageVersion | 1.10.20 |
SHA-1 | 0B7DA124F1DAB7F0D74E25A78C6E1B76732655F7 |
SHA-256 | 9BE00488067850625038B061356F4785AEA16CF735342A37208365861B64B882 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | E1E142B5D9C550D4EFC5147E90AAC9A8 |
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 | daviddavid <daviddavid> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 1.mga9 |
PackageVersion | 2.6.0 |
SHA-1 | 2263E487DAB3176924D8E175A2FC734AA1CC3E8E |
SHA-256 | AA3B341D35DC71A1DD8FE5E6263AC57B60B647FBBF09DB5EE3FAE750FCA7C086 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 43A4B8532513C4FF2386B31D1158E9AA |
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.mga7 |
PackageVersion | 1.10.20 |
SHA-1 | 2D6DA7DB6757ECF25FCB5256F48039C1690C325E |
SHA-256 | 266B6809F830CA9F7DBE6D1BB3392A4E74AB54932A47D2D420D5C6C92002AC6D |
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 | 13CB9DBED88ADDFF4C1AA9B5C3B7B498 |
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 | daviddavid <daviddavid> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 3.mga8 |
PackageVersion | 2.2.0 |
SHA-1 | 3B8B90142A1792ADFDB4986B641C6E0B0602137D |
SHA-256 | 952A780254B3B61F145BC16A0DDB682668A87BC4158D4D9914B9950D3F16B721 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | A19BDF80A00F3124AB295221C72325D8 |
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.mga7 |
PackageVersion | 1.10.20 |
SHA-1 | 4B13C8379040C53B35CBED4E07F701FE1BAEB6A4 |
SHA-256 | EAD5437DB03ACA1687BB0437FF1FC922E10AD6A66581578D726BC9337838CE50 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 145224DB692F4C2DB95DC73DA61705E4 |
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 | daviddavid <daviddavid> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 1.mga9 |
PackageVersion | 2.6.0 |
SHA-1 | 64B14C9B12393B4C07EED1FF10AA36FFEE093DB7 |
SHA-256 | 8471BFD9F65DF3861E36BD552D5B44D36F4BC54753404CCF30C81DB69DEA86DA |
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 | 42DDCCAB7EA80549B2D82D753115DBFC |
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 | daviddavid <daviddavid> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 3.mga8 |
PackageVersion | 2.2.0 |
SHA-1 | 7613AC953CD283EBFD3BBA3A9313A83B8766C826 |
SHA-256 | 7E69A20B72D60F4FA8921E1374D6D2DF558B32DAB863EAD68D0681788394E5EC |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 85FD1BC4D30967FA39C56315AFAD52F3 |
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 | daviddavid <daviddavid> |
PackageName | qps |
PackageRelease | 1.mga9 |
PackageVersion | 2.6.0 |
SHA-1 | 7B9A162FF519065517507E2EF3E3547125AAE968 |
SHA-256 | 7C3E6A0646CBAE7F6CA9CD3CCFBDA31095B7449692A1C50C0A511A36DD213809 |