Result for 00A6FA1EA2458FC05EC4A7EB48FD1CF7FA90AA6F

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/java/javapackages-bootstrap/junit-platform-engine.jar
FileSize419295
MD5FF6B8E268209238813581D5CB58C5E1D
SHA-100A6FA1EA2458FC05EC4A7EB48FD1CF7FA90AA6F
SHA-256FD944B2A23E59B631C07BEA04E9065D15D8B5B070A65397148F82DF43A83F8E6
SSDEEP6144:LTSfrFVgu+konpzMGKsXT/KN+d3tpuaaVmtgKwPXn66guBCtUQbCZGQk/:LTorFVT4lD/+m3tsaE6pPjqECGQk/
TLSHT1A0949F3961E5B932E2B38333D1CB4952953C85CEFD87B03E28682681D73DC95DA13BA5
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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Parents (Total: 1)

The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD51499E3100AC2046C926D26DD29CD9222
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionIn a nutshell, Java Packages Bootstrap (JPB) is a standalone build of all Java software packages that are required for Java Packages Tools (JPT) to work. In order to achieve reliable and reproducible builds of Java packages while meeting Fedora policy that requires everything to be built from source, without using prebuilt binary artifacts, it is necessary to build the packages in a well-defined, acyclic order. Dependency cycles between packages are the biggest obstacle to achieving this goal and JPT is the biggest offender -- it requires more than a hundred of Java packages, all of which in turn build-require JPT. JPB comes with a solution to this problem -- it builds everything that JPT needs to work, without reliance on any Java software other than OpenJDK. JPT can depend on JPB for everything, without depending on any other Java packages. For example, JPB contains embedded version of XMvn, removing dependency of JPT on XMvn, allowing JPT to be used before one builds XMvn package.
PackageMaintainerneoclust <neoclust>
PackageNamejavapackages-bootstrap
PackageRelease3.mga9
PackageVersion1.7.1
SHA-13E450B63EFA60C3062825629761012DAF3365FAC
SHA-2569CE85FB6A287A979D70D5D245056A4D156E79EF2F5F15BE99791F1B8C3B4FF11