Artifact filespooler_1.2.3-1+b5_amd64

Metadata
deb_control_files:
- control
- md5sums
deb_fields:
  Architecture: amd64
  Built-Using: rustc (= 1.81.0+dfsg1-2)
  Depends: libc6 (>= 2.39), libgcc-s1 (>= 4.2)
  Description: |-
    Sequential, distributed, POSIX-style job queue processing
     Filespooler is a Unix-style tool that facilitates local or remote command
     execution, complete with stdin capture, with easy integration with various
     tools.  Here's a brief Filespooler feature list:
     .
      - It can easily use tools such as S3, Dropbox, Syncthing, NNCP, ssh, UUCP, USB
       drives, CDs, etc. as transport.
     .
       - Translation: you can use basically anything that is a filesystem as a
         transport
     .
      - It can use arbitrary decoder command pipelines (eg, zcat, stdcat, gpg, age,
       etc) to pre-process stored packets.
     .
      - It can send and receive packets by pipes.
     .
      - Its storage format is simple on-disk files with locking.
     .
      - It supports one-to-one and one-to-many configurations.
     .
      - Locking is unnecessary when writing new jobs to the queue, and many arbitrary
       tools (eg, Syncthing, Dropbox, etc) can safely write directly to the queue
       without any assistance.
     .
      - Queue processing is strictly ordered based on the order on the creation
       machine, even if job files are delivered out of order to the destination.
     .
      - stdin can be piped into the job creation tool, and piped to a later executor
       at process time on a remote machine.
     .
      - The file format is lightweight; less than 100 bytes overhead unless large
       extra parameters are given.
     .
      - The queue format is lightweight; having 1000 different queues on a Raspberry
       Pi would be easy.
     .
      - Processing is stream-based throughout; arbitrarily-large packets are fine and
       sizes in the TB range are no problem.
     .
      - The Filespooler command, fspl, is extremely lightweight, consuming less than
       10MB of RAM on x86_64.
     .
      - Filespooler has extensive documentation.
     .
     Filespooler consists of a command-line tool (fspl) for interacting with queues.
     It also consists of a Rust library that is used by fspl.  main.rs for fspl is
     just a few lines long.
  Homepage: https://www.complete.org/filespooler/
  Installed-Size: '1650'
  Maintainer: Debian Rust Maintainers <pkg-rust-maintainers@alioth-lists.debian.net>
  Multi-Arch: allowed
  Package: filespooler
  Priority: optional
  Section: utils
  Source: rust-filespooler (1.2.3-1)
  Version: 1.2.3-1+b5
  X-Cargo-Built-Using: rust-anstyle (= 1.0.8-1), rust-anyhow (= 1.0.86-1), rust-bitflags
    (= 2.6.0-1), rust-byteorder (= 1.5.0-1), rust-bytes (= 1.7.2-1), rust-cfg-if (=
    1.0.0-1), rust-chrono (= 0.4.38-2), rust-clap-builder (= 4.5.15-2), rust-clap
    (= 4.5.16-1), rust-clap-lex (= 0.7.2-2), rust-crc32fast (= 1.4.2-1), rust-fastrand
    (= 2.1.1-1), rust-fd-lock (= 3.0.13-1), rust-getrandom (= 0.2.12-1), rust-iana-time-zone
    (= 0.1.60-1), rust-lazy-static (= 1.4.0-2), rust-libc (= 0.2.159-1), rust-linux-raw-sys
    (= 0.4.14-1), rust-num-traits (= 0.2.19-2), rust-once-cell (= 1.20.2-1), rust-pin-project-lite
    (= 0.2.13-1), rust-rmp (= 0.8.14-1), rust-rmp-serde (= 1.3.0-1), rust-rustix (=
    0.38.37-1), rust-serde (= 1.0.210-2), rust-sharded-slab (= 0.1.4-2), rust-tempfile
    (= 3.13.0-1), rust-terminal-size (= 0.3.0-2), rust-thread-local (= 1.1.4-1), rust-tracing-core
    (= 0.1.32-1), rust-tracing (= 0.1.40-1), rust-tracing-subscriber (= 0.3.18-4),
    rust-uuid (= 1.10.0-1), rust-wait-timeout (= 0.2.0-1), rustc (= 1.81.0+dfsg1-2)
srcpkg_name: rust-filespooler
srcpkg_version: 1.2.3-1

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built-using Source package rust-filespooler_1.2.3-1

binary package System mirror trixie from https://deb.debian.org/debian - 5 hours, 46 minutes ago 0 minutes
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