os-prober 1.50ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
os-prober (1.50ubuntu1) precise; urgency=low * Resynchronise with Debian. Remaining changes: - Mount btrfs subvolume @ when present to access a btrfs formatted rootfs. os-prober (1.50) unstable; urgency=low [ Joey Hess ] * Clarify license version is GPL-2+, for all code written by Joey Hess, Colin Watson, Christian Perrier, Otavio Salvador and Joshua Kwan. The license had just been "GNU GPL"; other contributors to os-prober are encouraged to clarify which GPL versions apply to their code. [ Otavio Salvador ] * Add support to detect BSD systems. Thanks to Gavrilin Andrey <email address hidden> for the patch (refs: #659208). [ Joey Hess ] * Avoid false positives in MS-DOS detection by also looking for autoexec.bat. Closes: #663540 [ Colin Watson ] * When using grub-mount, pass the GRUB filesystem type to individual tests rather than "fuseblk". Adjust a number of tests to handle GRUB filesystem names as well as OS names (closes: #663540, #663600). -- Colin Watson <email address hidden> Thu, 15 Mar 2012 15:13:49 +0000
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Colin Watson
- Uploaded to:
- Precise
- Original maintainer:
- Ubuntu Developers
- Architectures:
- any
- Section:
- debian-installer
- Urgency:
- Low Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section |
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Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
os-prober_1.50ubuntu1.tar.gz | 25.0 KiB | c406426be960cf5d5c675523a9eddc481d489b8611602b50d1d1d9886db747b0 |
os-prober_1.50ubuntu1.dsc | 1.8 KiB | 03237d6b97a50885c209ff2b8e11f9640bed3282d647a6ea2301513e3513b39f |
Available diffs
- diff from 1.49ubuntu1 to 1.50ubuntu1 (2.9 KiB)
Binary packages built by this source
- os-prober: utility to detect other OSes on a set of drives
This package detects other OSes available on a system and outputs the
results in a generic machine-readable format.
- os-prober-udeb: utility to detect other OSes on a set of drives
This package is to be used by boot loader installers to detect other OSes
available on a system, in a generic format, which it can then adapt to its
own configuration format.