dtrx 8.2.0-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

dtrx (8.2.0-1) unstable; urgency=low

  * New upstream release.
  * Drop all the patches related to password-protected archives; they're
    all upstream now and included in this release.
  * Add Recommends for lhasa, lrzip, and zstd. The latter is newly supported,
    while the former two have been supported for a while. I did Recommends
    instead of Depends because I don't think the formats are common, but
    feel free to convince me otherwise!

 -- Andres Salomon <email address hidden>  Sun, 29 Aug 2021 00:53:48 -0400

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Andres Salomon
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Andres Salomon
Architectures:
all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Builds

Jammy: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
dtrx_8.2.0-1.dsc 2.0 KiB 49e7807c38bb45cc0950f3b66554202335a70ac2145d2799b491fb0cc9c3a3a2
dtrx_8.2.0.orig.tar.gz 54.1 KiB 8ffdc5d1469bd71039fea4d0d12e09d562c6223c048a5c21d7c1491d6c166b56
dtrx_8.2.0-1.debian.tar.xz 5.2 KiB 83012bb9a37f40a9babed8e20b1dae1135dd6e63bf657c42ff1ae0cfc89ad7b3

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

dtrx: intelligently extract multiple archive types

 dtrx is basically the same as tar -zxf or tar -xjf except you don't have
 to remember the flags for each file. But there's more to it than that.
 You know those really annoying files that don't put everything in a
 dedicated directory, and have the permissions all wrong? dtrx takes care
 of all those problems for you, too. dtrx is simple and powerful. Just
 use the same command for all your archive files, and they'll never
 frustrate you again.