faketime 0.9.5-2 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

faketime (0.9.5-2) unstable; urgency=medium


  * avoid accidentally truncating LD_PRELOAD. Thanks, Antonio Terceiro
    (Closes: #743301)
  
 -- Daniel Kahn Gillmor <email address hidden>  Wed, 02 Apr 2014 09:45:49 -0400

Upload details

Uploaded by:
dkg
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
dkg
Architectures:
any
Section:
utils
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section
Trusty release main utils

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
faketime_0.9.5-2.dsc 2.0 KiB dc6d1544725505c045c07262386746d3c79eb0e04d059aeb433d9828a7ddd4ea
faketime_0.9.5.orig.tar.gz 45.0 KiB 5e07678d440d632bef012068ca58825402da5ad25954513e785717cc539c213d
faketime_0.9.5-2.debian.tar.xz 4.5 KiB 03bd763284d1139fce9f061c67ef9cbdacce05a90212993c98cc29f4be4cb537

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

faketime: report faked system time to programs

 The Fake Time Preload Library (FTPL, a.k.a. libfaketime) intercepts
 various system calls which programs use to retrieve the current date
 and time. It can then report faked dates and times (as specified by
 you, the user) to these programs. This means you can modify the
 system time a program sees without having to change the time
 system-wide. FTPL allows you to specify both absolute dates (e.g.,
 2004-01-01) and relative dates (e.g., 10 days ago).

libfaketime: report faked system time to programs

 The Fake Time Preload Library (FTPL, a.k.a. libfaketime) intercepts
 various system calls which programs use to retrieve the current date
 and time. It can then report faked dates and times (as specified by
 you, the user) to these programs. This means you can modify the
 system time a program sees without having to change the time
 system-wide. FTPL allows you to specify both absolute dates (e.g.,
 2004-01-01) and relative dates (e.g., 10 days ago).