schroot 1.6.8-1ubuntu1.1 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
schroot (1.6.8-1ubuntu1.1) trusty; urgency=medium [ Andy Whitcroft ] * overlayfs: handle v3.18 backwards compatible v1 mode workdir requirement. (LP: #1398523) -- Chris J Arges <email address hidden> Wed, 14 Oct 2015 12:01:41 -0500
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Chris J Arges
- Uploaded to:
- Trusty
- Original maintainer:
- Ubuntu Developers
- Architectures:
- any all
- Section:
- admin
- Urgency:
- Medium Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Trusty | updates | main | admin |
Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
schroot_1.6.8.orig.tar.xz | 776.5 KiB | 76ace27c068d0c469022bd473978cd156653a011e66dc2279c5a58649bed8311 |
schroot_1.6.8-1ubuntu1.1.debian.tar.gz | 31.6 KiB | a79b23c372695d7a75b9768a8607f0f5b39cdf15b778e3dc3e98271d20a44612 |
schroot_1.6.8-1ubuntu1.1.dsc | 2.1 KiB | ac6768ce480ab51b6d557e6798879f2720029dcfcbd07150d37013732439ebb7 |
Available diffs
Binary packages built by this source
- dchroot: Execute commands in a chroot environment
dchroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. A typical installation might provide 'stable',
'testing' and 'unstable' chroots. Users can move between chroots as
necessary.
.
NOTE: the schroot package provides a better implementation of
dchroot. In particular:
* dchroot quoting issues are not present. dchroot runs commands in
the chroot with -c option of the user's default shell; when
multiple command options are used, the options are concatenated
together, separated by spaces. This concatenation breaks shell
quoting.
* schroot implements fine-grained access controls based on users
and groups, either of which may be granted the ability to gain
root access to the chroot if required.
Using schroot will avoid these issues, as well as provide additional
functionality dchroot does not possess.
- dchroot-dbgsym: debug symbols for package dchroot
dchroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. A typical installation might provide 'stable',
'testing' and 'unstable' chroots. Users can move between chroots as
necessary.
.
NOTE: the schroot package provides a better implementation of
dchroot. In particular:
* dchroot quoting issues are not present. dchroot runs commands in
the chroot with -c option of the user's default shell; when
multiple command options are used, the options are concatenated
together, separated by spaces. This concatenation breaks shell
quoting.
* schroot implements fine-grained access controls based on users
and groups, either of which may be granted the ability to gain
root access to the chroot if required.
Using schroot will avoid these issues, as well as provide additional
functionality dchroot does not possess.
- dchroot-dsa: Execute commands in a chroot environment
dchroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. A typical installation might provide 'stable',
'testing' and 'unstable' chroots. Users can move between chroots as
necessary.
.
This package provides a dchroot-dsa binary which is compatible with
the command-line options and configuration file format used by the
dchroot-dsa dchroot maintained by the Debian System Administrators
used on machines administered for the Debian Project.
.
NOTE: the schroot package provides a better implementation of
dchroot-dsa. In particular:
* dchroot-dsa only allows the specification of a single command with
an absolute path, and no options may be used with the command;
schroot allows the use of relative and absolute paths with no
limit on the number of options.
* dchroot-dsa only allows one chroot to be used at once; schroot will
allow the use of as many chroots as desired.
* dchroot-dsa allows access to be restricted to named users; schroot
implements finer-grained access controls based on users and groups,
either of which may be granted the ability to gain root access to
the chroot if required.
Using schroot will avoid these issues, as well as provide significant
additional functionality dchroot-dsa does not possess.
- dchroot-dsa-dbgsym: debug symbols for package dchroot-dsa
dchroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. A typical installation might provide 'stable',
'testing' and 'unstable' chroots. Users can move between chroots as
necessary.
.
This package provides a dchroot-dsa binary which is compatible with
the command-line options and configuration file format used by the
dchroot-dsa dchroot maintained by the Debian System Administrators
used on machines administered for the Debian Project.
.
NOTE: the schroot package provides a better implementation of
dchroot-dsa. In particular:
* dchroot-dsa only allows the specification of a single command with
an absolute path, and no options may be used with the command;
schroot allows the use of relative and absolute paths with no
limit on the number of options.
* dchroot-dsa only allows one chroot to be used at once; schroot will
allow the use of as many chroots as desired.
* dchroot-dsa allows access to be restricted to named users; schroot
implements finer-grained access controls based on users and groups,
either of which may be granted the ability to gain root access to
the chroot if required.
Using schroot will avoid these issues, as well as provide significant
additional functionality dchroot-dsa does not possess.
- libsbuild-dev: development files for the Debian source builder
sbuild provides facilities to manage and access chroots, as part of
schroot.
.
schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and
access permissions given to each, including root access for normal
users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can
switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for
authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for
security.
.
This package contains the header files and static library needed to
develop applications which make use of sbuild. Once the API and ABI
are stable, a shared library will replace the static library.
- libsbuild-dev-dbgsym: debug symbols for package libsbuild-dev
sbuild provides facilities to manage and access chroots, as part of
schroot.
.
schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and
access permissions given to each, including root access for normal
users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can
switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for
authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for
security.
.
This package contains the header files and static library needed to
develop applications which make use of sbuild. Once the API and ABI
are stable, a shared library will replace the static library.
- libsbuild-doc: development documentation for the Debian source builder
sbuild provides facilities to manage and access chroots, as part of
schroot.
.
schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and
access permissions given to each, including root access for normal
users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can
switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for
authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for
security.
.
This package contains the API documentation needed to develop
applications which make use of sbuild.
- schroot: Execute commands in a chroot environment
schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and
access permissions given to each, including root access for normal
users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can
switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for
authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for
security.
.
Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal
directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions,
persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional
compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported.
.
schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run
inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example,
running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries
from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix.
.
schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with
all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types
such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots.
.
schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly
more functionality.
- schroot-common: common files for schroot
schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and
access permissions given to each, including root access for normal
users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can
switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for
authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for
security.
.
This package provides translations for localisation of schroot
programs.
- schroot-dbg: schroot, dchroot and dchroot-dsa debugging symbols
sbuild provides facilities to manage and access chroots, as part of
schroot.
.
schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and
access permissions given to each, including root access for normal
users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can
switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for
authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for
security.
.
This package contains debugging symbols for the schroot, dchroot
and dchroot-dsa packages.
- schroot-dbgsym: debug symbols for package schroot
schroot allows users to execute commands or interactive shells in
different chroots. Any number of named chroots may be created, and
access permissions given to each, including root access for normal
users, on a per-user or per-group basis. Additionally, schroot can
switch to a different user in the chroot, using PAM for
authentication and authorisation. All operations are logged for
security.
.
Several different types of chroot are supported, including normal
directories in the filesystem, and also block devices. Sessions,
persistent chroots created on the fly from files (tar with optional
compression) and Btrfs and LVM snapshots are also supported.
.
schroot supports kernel personalities, allowing the programs run
inside the chroot to have a different personality. For example,
running 32-bit chroots on 64-bit systems, or even running binaries
from alternative operating systems such as SVR4 or Xenix.
.
schroot also integrates with sbuild, to allow building packages with
all supported chroot types, including session-managed chroot types
such as Btrfs and LVM snapshots.
.
schroot shares most of its options with dchroot, but offers vastly
more functionality.