adios 1.13.1-37 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

adios (1.13.1-37) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Fix FTBFS with gcc14 compiler. Closes: #1074801
  * Standards-Version: 4.7.0; no change required
  * Set Debian Science Maint. as maintainer

 -- Alastair McKinstry <email address hidden>  Mon, 12 Aug 2024 19:26:59 +0100

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian Science Team
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Science Team
Architectures:
any all
Section:
science
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Oracular release universe science

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
adios_1.13.1-37.dsc 3.2 KiB 7f97c8b9a1012ed4e33dde4ed149fd8a5cf075610e5062ddb238df09f5bd22d5
adios_1.13.1.orig.tar.xz 1.8 MiB cb75d370345b9bf644a44b6d82f1af2a4d39439b55f608d2ca88701bae2381e0
adios_1.13.1-37.debian.tar.xz 24.3 KiB bf8e12cb9b39060e361fa195b76ae3dd2b12d74796633def4af43df47710f725

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

libadios-bin: ADIOS Adaptable IO system for simulations - binaries

 The Adaptable IO System (ADIOS) provides a simple, flexible way for scientists
 to describe the data in their code that may need to be written, read,
 or processed outside of the running simulation. By providing an external
 to the code XML file describing the various elements, their types, and
 how you wish to process them this run, the routines in the host code
 (either Fortran or C) can transparently change how they process the data.
 .
 This package provides tools for use with ADIOS.

libadios-bin-dbgsym: debug symbols for libadios-bin
libadios-dev: ADIOS Adaptable IO system for simulations

 The Adaptable IO System (ADIOS) provides a simple, flexible way for scientists
 to describe the data in their code that may need to be written, read,
 or processed outside of the running simulation. By providing an external
 to the code XML file describing the various elements, their types, and
 how you wish to process them this run, the routines in the host code
 (either Fortran or C) can transparently change how they process the data.

libadios-examples: Examples for the ADIOS Adaptable IO system

 The Adaptable IO System (ADIOS) provides a simple, flexible way for scientists
 to describe the data in their code that may need to be written, read,
 or processed outside of the running simulation. By providing an external
 to the code XML file describing the various elements, their types, and
 how you wish to process them this run, the routines in the host code
 (either Fortran or C) can transparently change how they process the data.

libadios-mpich-dev: ADIOS Adaptable IO system (MPICH development files)

 The Adaptable IO System (ADIOS) provides a simple, flexible way for scientists
 to describe the data in their code that may need to be written, read,
 or processed outside of the running simulation. By providing an external
 to the code XML file describing the various elements, their types, and
 how you wish to process them this run, the routines in the host code
 (either Fortran or C) can transparently change how they process the data.

libadios-openmpi-dev: ADIOS Adaptable IO system (OpenMPI development files)

 The Adaptable IO System (ADIOS) provides a simple, flexible way for scientists
 to describe the data in their code that may need to be written, read,
 or processed outside of the running simulation. By providing an external
 to the code XML file describing the various elements, their types, and
 how you wish to process them this run, the routines in the host code
 (either Fortran or C) can transparently change how they process the data.

python3-adios: Python3 interface to the ADIOS IO system

 This is a Python3 interface to ADIOS.
 .
 The Adaptable IO System (ADIOS) provides a simple, flexible way for scientists
 to describe the data in their code that may need to be written, read,
 or processed outside of the running simulation. By providing an external
 to the code XML file describing the various elements, their types, and
 how you wish to process them this run, the routines in the host code
 (either Fortran or C) can transparently change how they process the data.

python3-adios-dbgsym: debug symbols for python3-adios