sash 3.7-13 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

sash (3.7-13) unstable; urgency=low


  * Update to debhelper compat version 9, which adds hardening.
  * Update to newer Standards-Version, add Built-Using field.

 -- Tollef Fog Heen <email address hidden>  Sun, 29 Sep 2013 16:11:22 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Tollef Fog Heen
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Tollef Fog Heen
Architectures:
any
Section:
shells
Urgency:
Low Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Trusty release universe shells

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
sash_3.7-13.dsc 1.7 KiB e9de434f5cd300d94d6714c78ba6eb88bf0e10a0f0d97dfbf89e05481b9eb536
sash_3.7.orig.tar.gz 49.2 KiB 352726adb9736ba5a9b459d5c8a7d7c3b2c36cc99363adccc25a8a991d719c7f
sash_3.7-13.debian.tar.gz 17.8 KiB 852f990c72ce999d393682571864012d873a0a16ae0e19ff8140d44e63565c82

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

sash: Stand-alone shell

 sash serves as an interactive substitute for /bin/sh, for use when
 /bin/sh is unusable. It's statically linked, and includes many standard
 utilities as builtins (type "help" at the prompt for a reference list).
 If you've installed sash before rendering your system unbootable, and
 you have some knowledge of how your system is supposed to work, you might
 be able to repair your system using init=/bin/sash at the boot prompt.
 .
 Some people also prefer to have sash available as the shell for a
 root account (perhaps an under an alternate name such as sashroot)
 Configuration support is included for people who want this.
 .
 Note: sash is not intended to serve as /bin/sh, and has few of the
 interactive features present in bash or ksh. It's designed to be simple
 and robust, for people who need to do emergency repair work on a system.
 .
 Also note: sash doesn't include a built-in fsck -- fsck is too big
 and complicated. If you need fsck, you'll have to get at least one
 partition or disk working well enough to run fsck. More generally,
 sash is but one tool of many (backups, backup recovery tools, emergency
 boot disks or partitions, spare parts, testing of disaster plans,
 etc.) to help you recover a damaged system.