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Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News whohas 0.17 (Default branch) Post 302258371 by Linux Bot on Friday 14th of November 2008 11:40:04 AM
Old 11-14-2008
whohas 0.17 (Default branch)

Imagewhohas is a command line tool that allows you toquery several package collections at once. Itcurrently supports Arch Linux, Debian, Fedora,Gentoo, Slackware (and linuxpackages.net), SourceMage Linux, Ubuntu, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Fink, and DarwinPorts repositories. whohas was designed to help package maintainers find ebuilds, pkgbuilds, and similar package definitions from otherdistributions to learn from. However, it can alsobe used by normal users who want to know whichdistribution provides certain packages, and whichversion of a given package is in use in eachdistribution or in each release of a distribution.License: GNU General Public License (GPL)Changes:
This is the first big update in three years. Allmodules are now working except for Gentoo (sincetheir search interface was taken down) and Fedora.These remain disabled for now.Image

Image

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ARCHPATH(1)						      General Commands Manual						       ARCHPATH(1)

NAME
archpath - output arch (tla/Bazaar) archive names, with support for branches SYNOPSIS
archpath archpath branch archpath branch--version DESCRIPTION
archpath is intended to be run in an arch (tla or Bazaar) working copy. In its simplest usage, archpath with no parameters outputs the package name (archive/category--branch--version) associated with the working copy. If a parameter is given, it may either be a branch--version, in which case archpath will output a corresponding package name in the current archive and category, or a plain branch name (without '--"), in which case archpath will output a corresponding package name in the current archive and category and with the same version as the current working copy. This is useful for branching. For example, if you're using Bazaar and you want to create a branch for a new feature, you might use a com- mand like this: baz branch $(archpath) $(archpath new-feature) Or if you want to tag your current code onto a 'releases' branch as version 1.0, you might use a command like this: baz branch $(archpath) $(archpath releases--1.0) That's much easier than using 'baz tree-version' to look up the package name and manually modifying the result. AUTHOR
archpath was written by Colin Watson <cjwatson@debian.org>. Like archpath, this manual page is released under the GNU General Public License, version 2 or later. DEBIAN
Debian Utilities ARCHPATH(1)
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