sleuthkit 4.6.7-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

sleuthkit (4.6.7-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * Team upload
  * New upstream version 4.6.7
  * Update symbols file

 -- Hilko Bengen <email address hidden>  Mon, 16 Sep 2019 14:29:59 +0200

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Debian Security Tools
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Security Tools
Architectures:
any
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
sleuthkit_4.6.7-1.dsc 2.0 KiB 3ad42edbbeadc6da394023e01ed597bf1c87928a92fe10b090b551e723fb8212
sleuthkit_4.6.7.orig.tar.gz 8.9 MiB 7f6305160109d681dd6fe00b7a19f1c43af35d2eb265d3abbdc2749611707687
sleuthkit_4.6.7-1.debian.tar.xz 36.6 KiB 5add5f9afb2f0ef46ea2b3c9d5b65f68b23cb74f55e839fc65b637187e3df468

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

libtsk-dev: library for forensics analysis (development files)

 The Sleuth Kit, also known as TSK, is a collection of UNIX-based command
 line file and volume system forensic analysis tools. The filesystem tools
 allow you to examine filesystems of a suspect computer in a non-intrusive
 fashion. Because the tools do not rely on the operating system to process the
 filesystems, deleted and hidden content is shown.
 .
 The volume system (media management) tools allow you to examine the layout of
 disks and other media. You can also recover deleted files, get information
 stored in slack spaces, examine filesystems journal, see partitions layout on
 disks or images etc. But is very important clarify that the TSK acts over the
 current filesystem only.
 .
 The Sleuth Kit supports DOS partitions, BSD partitions (disk labels), Mac
 partitions, Sun slices (Volume Table of Contents), and GPT disks. With these
 tools, you can identify where partitions are located and extract them so that
 they can be analyzed with filesystem analysis tools.
 .
 Currently, TSK supports several filesystems, as NTFS, FAT, exFAT, HFS+, Ext3,
 Ext4, UFS and YAFFS2.
 .
 This package contains header files and static version of the library.

libtsk13: library for forensics analysis on volume and filesystem data

 The Sleuth Kit, also known as TSK, is a collection of UNIX-based command
 line file and volume system forensic analysis tools. The filesystem tools
 allow you to examine filesystems of a suspect computer in a non-intrusive
 fashion. Because the tools do not rely on the operating system to process the
 filesystems, deleted and hidden content is shown.
 .
 The volume system (media management) tools allow you to examine the layout of
 disks and other media. You can also recover deleted files, get information
 stored in slack spaces, examine filesystems journal, see partitions layout on
 disks or images etc. But is very important clarify that the TSK acts over the
 current filesystem only.
 .
 The Sleuth Kit supports DOS partitions, BSD partitions (disk labels), Mac
 partitions, Sun slices (Volume Table of Contents), and GPT disks. With these
 tools, you can identify where partitions are located and extract them so that
 they can be analyzed with filesystem analysis tools.
 .
 Currently, TSK supports several filesystems, as NTFS, FAT, exFAT, HFS+, Ext3,
 Ext4, UFS and YAFFS2.
 .
 This package contains the library which can be used to implement all of the
 functionality of the command line tools into an application that needs to
 analyze data from a disk image.

libtsk13-dbgsym: debug symbols for libtsk13
sleuthkit: tools for forensics analysis on volume and filesystem data

 The Sleuth Kit, also known as TSK, is a collection of UNIX-based command
 line file and volume system forensic analysis tools. The filesystem tools
 allow you to examine filesystems of a suspect computer in a non-intrusive
 fashion. Because the tools do not rely on the operating system to process the
 filesystems, deleted and hidden content is shown.
 .
 The volume system (media management) tools allow you to examine the layout of
 disks and other media. You can also recover deleted files, get information
 stored in slack spaces, examine filesystems journal, see partitions layout on
 disks or images etc. But is very important clarify that the TSK acts over the
 current filesystem only.
 .
 The Sleuth Kit supports DOS partitions, BSD partitions (disk labels), Mac
 partitions, Sun slices (Volume Table of Contents), and GPT disks. With these
 tools, you can identify where partitions are located and extract them so that
 they can be analyzed with filesystem analysis tools.
 .
 Currently, TSK supports several filesystems, as NTFS, FAT, exFAT, HFS+, Ext3,
 Ext4, UFS and YAFFS2.
 .
 This package contains the set of command line tools in The Sleuth Kit.

sleuthkit-dbgsym: debug symbols for sleuthkit