makeself 2.4.5-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

makeself (2.4.5-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * The Akamai Technologies paid volunteer days release.
  * New upstream version.
    - added watch file

 -- Bartosz Fenski <email address hidden>  Fri, 22 Oct 2021 10:54:36 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Bartosz Fenski
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Bartosz Fenski
Architectures:
all
Section:
utils
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Mantic release universe utils
Lunar release universe utils
Jammy release universe utils

Builds

Jammy: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
makeself_2.4.5-1.dsc 1.7 KiB 25166aec1d65a7206ce9dc8f18476497a57f213b85f90ae4b750c5aaf0c592ee
makeself_2.4.5.orig.tar.gz 38.1 KiB 91deafdbfddf130abe67d7546f0c50be6af6711bb1c351b768043bd527bd6e45
makeself_2.4.5-1.debian.tar.xz 3.6 KiB 6c153cadb10b9c7d12830e1101f7d95af45777e8e2b6f85d8df1bf268c4cedf8

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

makeself: utility to generate self-extractable archives

 makeself is a small shell script that generates a self-extractable
 archive from a directory. The resulting file appears as a shell script
 (many of those have a .run suffix), and can be launched as is. The
 archive will then uncompress itself to a temporary directory and an
 optional arbitrary command will be executed (for example an installation
 script). This is pretty similar to archives generated with WinZip
 Self-Extractor in the Windows world. Makeself archives also include
 checksums for integrity self-validation (CRC and/or MD5 checksums).
 .
 The makeself script itself is used only to create the archives from a
 directory of files. The resultant archive is actually a compressed
 (using gzip, bzip2, or compress) TAR archive, with a small shell script
 stub at the beginning. This small stub performs all the steps of
 extracting the files, running the embedded command, and removing the
 temporary files when it's all over. All what the user has to do to
 install the software contained in such an archive is to "run" the
 archive, i.e. sh nice-software.run. It is recommended to use the "run" (which
 was introduced by some Makeself archives released by Loki Software) or
 "sh" suffix for such archives not to confuse the users, since they
 actually are shell scripts (with quite a lot of binary data attached
 to it though!).