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What short name does OAIS use for an information package that is used for archiving?
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== Description == <!-- Describe the what the tool does, focusing on it's digital preservation value. Keep it factual. --> Aaru is a tool designed to manage disc images created from any kind of media (optical, block, etc). It can dump media from CD, DVD and Blu-ray drives (aka optical media), as well as almost any storage device that connects via SCSI, ATA, SATA, USB or FireWire. It can also read and analyze several disk image formats from different manufacturers, for checksumming, comparison (even between different formats), or creating XML metadata for database consumption. Last but not least it can recognize and identify almost all known partition table formats and file systems and show information about them, with support for accessing the files contained in those file systems getting added steadily, with a priority on archaic and uncommon filesystems, being the first software able to read the Lisa filesystem after its original operating system was deprecated. This tool used to be called "DiscImageChef". == User Experiences == <!-- Add hotlinks to user experiences with the tool (eg. blog posts). These should illustrate the effectiveness (or otherwise) of the tool. Use a bullet list. --> *https://www.betaarchive.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=72&t=36078 == Development Activity == <!-- Provide *evidence* of development activity of the tool. For example, RSS feeds for code issues or commits. --> The tool is LGPL for the data portions and GPL for the user interface with all development. All development activity is visible on GitHub: https://github.com/aaru-dps/Aaru === Release Feed === Below the last 3 release feeds: <rss max=3>https://github.com/aaru-dps/Aaru/releases.atom</rss> === Activity Feed === Below the last 5 commits: <rss max=5>https://github.com/aaru-dps/Aaru/commits/devel.atom</rss>