TrID file type file extension defs list. Marco Pontello's Home Page: 7. AML: Abstract Markup. Android Package: 1478.
TrIDNet is an utility designed to identify file types from their binary signatures. While there are similar utilities with hard-coded rules, TrIDNet has no such. TrID - File Identifier. TrID is an utility designed to identify file types from their binary signatures. While there are similar utilities with hard coded logic, TrID has no fixed rules.
Everytime that I come across the photo metadata topic, I stumble upon the very same situation:I don't like metadata neither in documents nor in pictures or media files, I don't need it except for one and only one single exif tag: DateTimeOriginal (i.e. I always want to know when in the past I took that picture), I have a lot of photos and short videos taken with my digital camera, smartphone and the like, I want to reduce their file sizes immediately so I apply resize, optimize and strip metadata, I know there are tons of meta data strippers but there's no app that lets me select any tags to keep, with this in mind I tested QuickImageComment and it does let me select what to erase and what to keep but after comparing it to this Simple and unique comercial tool I find out that there's a big difference in terms of the resulting file size and flexibility and simplicity of use, I always continue to wish there was a Portable freeware that would achieve the same thing but I suppose this is too much of knowledge or too less of interest to freeware Devs since, say 10 years ago. All those CLI complex utilities and all those over-complicated GUIs have never been able to accomplish this single and simple task *shrug*
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Can't execute some binaries in chroot environment (zsh: Not found)
Today I ran into something that has me stumped. A co-worker is working with a specific pre-compiled binary he downloaded (available here). On the Ubuntu 10.04 LTS Server he's working on, attempting to execute this file yields file-not-found, even with permissions set right.
And yet, when I attempt the same thing from OpenSUSE 11.4, it runs just fine. Running file
on it gives me:
Trid File Type
ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked (uses shared libs), for GNU/Linux 2.6.15, stripped
Both the Ubuntu and OpenSUSE boxes are 64-bit installs, and file
returns the same information on both machines.
Which looks just fine to me. And on the opensuse box, LDD even gives me a short list of library files. Hand checking, all of those specified files also exist on the Ubuntu server. Strace output is different though:
Opensuse:
execve('./trid', ['./trid'], [/* 122 vars */]) = 0
Ubuntu (giving full path does not change result):
Sot 32 Package
execve('./trid', ['./trid'], [/* 19 vars */]) = -1 ENOENT (No such file or directory)
What can cause a file like this to not be executable in this way?
marked as duplicate by Gilles, sysadmin1138, enzotib, Michael Mrozek♦Sep 28 '11 at 3:01
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1 Answer
Type
both on the openSuse and Ubuntu system.
I suspect you'll find that the latter is missing a library file.
ShadurShadur