How to Install and Uninstall libboost-chrono-dev Package on Kali Linux
Last updated: November 26,2024
1. Install "libboost-chrono-dev" package
Here is a brief guide to show you how to install libboost-chrono-dev on Kali Linux
$
sudo apt update
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$
sudo apt install
libboost-chrono-dev
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2. Uninstall "libboost-chrono-dev" package
Learn how to uninstall libboost-chrono-dev on Kali Linux:
$
sudo apt remove
libboost-chrono-dev
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$
sudo apt autoclean && sudo apt autoremove
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3. Information about the libboost-chrono-dev package on Kali Linux
Package: libboost-chrono-dev
Source: boost-defaults (1.83.0.2)
Version: 1.83.0.2+b2
Installed-Size: 11
Maintainer: Debian Boost Team
Architecture: amd64
Depends: libboost-chrono1.83-dev
Size: 4224
SHA256: 94d7d028e5713f50f18c477ba915daf14377e5da8429a67a2a81fbccf6e2be0c
SHA1: 71b7e2b7d7745f1b107ea9eca2b607f580f6b414
MD5sum: 204f54915ce287cd12071bc1eb1d66f6
Description: C++ representation of time duration, time point, and clocks (default version)
This package forms part of the Boost C++ Libraries collection.
.
The Boost.Chrono library provides:
.
* A means to represent time durations: managed by the generic
duration class . Examples of time durations include days, minutes,
seconds and nanoseconds, which can be represented with a fixed number
of clock ticks per unit. All of these units of time duration are
united with a generic interface by the duration facility.
* A type for representing points in time: time_point. A time_point
represents an epoch plus or minus a duration. The library leaves
epochs unspecified. A time_point is associated with a clock.
* Several clocks, some of which may not be available on a
particular platform: system_clock, steady_clock and
high_resolution_clock. A clock is a pairing of a time_point and
duration, and a function which returns a time_point representing now.
.
To make the timing facilities more generally useful, Boost.Chrono
provides a number of clocks that are thin wrappers around the
operating system's time APIs, thereby allowing the extraction of wall
clock time, user CPU time, system CPU time spent by the process:
.
* process_real_cpu_clock, captures wall clock CPU time spent by the
current process.
* process_user_cpu_clock, captures user-CPU time
spent by the current process.
* process_system_cpu_clock, captures
system-CPU time spent by the current process.
* A tuple-like class
process_cpu_clock, that captures real, user-CPU, and system-CPU
process times together.
* A thread_clock thread steady clock giving
the time spent by the current thread (when supported by a platform).
.
Lastly, Boost.Chrono includes typeof registration for duration and
time_point to permit using emulated auto with C++03 compilers.
.
This package is a dependency package, which depends on Debian's default
Boost version (currently 1.83).
Description-md5:
Multi-Arch: same
Homepage: http://www.boost.org/libs/chrono/
Tag: devel::library, role::devel-lib
Section: libdevel
Priority: optional
Filename: pool/main/b/boost-defaults/libboost-chrono-dev_1.83.0.2+b2_amd64.deb
Source: boost-defaults (1.83.0.2)
Version: 1.83.0.2+b2
Installed-Size: 11
Maintainer: Debian Boost Team
Architecture: amd64
Depends: libboost-chrono1.83-dev
Size: 4224
SHA256: 94d7d028e5713f50f18c477ba915daf14377e5da8429a67a2a81fbccf6e2be0c
SHA1: 71b7e2b7d7745f1b107ea9eca2b607f580f6b414
MD5sum: 204f54915ce287cd12071bc1eb1d66f6
Description: C++ representation of time duration, time point, and clocks (default version)
This package forms part of the Boost C++ Libraries collection.
.
The Boost.Chrono library provides:
.
* A means to represent time durations: managed by the generic
duration class . Examples of time durations include days, minutes,
seconds and nanoseconds, which can be represented with a fixed number
of clock ticks per unit. All of these units of time duration are
united with a generic interface by the duration facility.
* A type for representing points in time: time_point. A time_point
represents an epoch plus or minus a duration. The library leaves
epochs unspecified. A time_point is associated with a clock.
* Several clocks, some of which may not be available on a
particular platform: system_clock, steady_clock and
high_resolution_clock. A clock is a pairing of a time_point and
duration, and a function which returns a time_point representing now.
.
To make the timing facilities more generally useful, Boost.Chrono
provides a number of clocks that are thin wrappers around the
operating system's time APIs, thereby allowing the extraction of wall
clock time, user CPU time, system CPU time spent by the process:
.
* process_real_cpu_clock, captures wall clock CPU time spent by the
current process.
* process_user_cpu_clock, captures user-CPU time
spent by the current process.
* process_system_cpu_clock, captures
system-CPU time spent by the current process.
* A tuple-like class
process_cpu_clock, that captures real, user-CPU, and system-CPU
process times together.
* A thread_clock thread steady clock giving
the time spent by the current thread (when supported by a platform).
.
Lastly, Boost.Chrono includes typeof registration for duration and
time_point to permit using emulated auto with C++03 compilers.
.
This package is a dependency package, which depends on Debian's default
Boost version (currently 1.83).
Description-md5:
Multi-Arch: same
Homepage: http://www.boost.org/libs/chrono/
Tag: devel::library, role::devel-lib
Section: libdevel
Priority: optional
Filename: pool/main/b/boost-defaults/libboost-chrono-dev_1.83.0.2+b2_amd64.deb