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  2. Parchive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parchive

    Parchive (a portmanteau of parity archive, and formally known as Parity Volume Set Specification [1] [2]) is an erasure code system that produces par files for checksum verification of data integrity, with the capability to perform data recovery operations that can repair or regenerate corrupted or missing data.

  3. PeaZip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PeaZip

    The program also supports archive conversion, file splitting and joining, secure file deletion, bytewise file comparison, archive encryption, checksum/hash files, find duplicate files, batch renaming, system benchmarking, random passwords/keyfiles generation, view image thumbnails (multi-threaded on the fly thumbnails generation without saving ...

  4. WinRAR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WinRAR

    WinRAR is a trialware file archiver utility, developed by Eugene Roshal of win.rar GmbH. It can create and view archives in RAR or ZIP file formats, [ 6 ] and unpack numerous archive file formats. To enable the user to test the integrity of archives, WinRAR embeds CRC32 or BLAKE2 checksums for each file in each archive.

  5. Simple file verification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_file_verification

    SFV uses a plain text file containing one line for each file and its checksum [1] in the format FILENAME<whitespaces>CHECKSUM. Any line starting with a semicolon ';' is considered to be a comment and is ignored for the purposes of file verification. The delimiter between the filename and checksum is always one or several spaces; tabs are never ...

  6. File verification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_verification

    Several utilities, such as md5deep, can use such checksum files to automatically verify an entire directory of files in one operation. The particular hash algorithm used is often indicated by the file extension of the checksum file. The ".sha1" file extension indicates a checksum file containing 160-bit SHA-1 hashes in sha1sum format.

  7. Checksum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Checksum

    A checksum is a small-sized block of data derived from another block of digital data for the purpose of detecting errors that may have been introduced during its transmission or storage. By themselves, checksums are often used to verify data integrity but are not relied upon to verify data authenticity .

  8. RAR (file format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAR_(file_format)

    UNRARLIB (UniquE RAR File Library) [19] was an obsolete free software unarchiving library called "unrarlib", licensed under the GPLv2-or-later. It could only decompress archives created by RAR versions prior to 2.9; archives created by RAR 2.9 and later use different formats not supported by this library.

  9. Cabinet (file format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabinet_(file_format)

    Other well-known software with CAB archive support includes WinZip, WinRAR or 7-Zip. The aforementioned cabextract is a common tool for Linux systems, [13] but is only capable of extracting archives. The gcab tool however can both extract and create CAB archives. [14] For a full list, see Comparison of file archivers § archive formats.