Result for 01AA0EA52E13F6F8D6E4F0F268881A80DF9BCE35

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/linuxdoc-tools/rtf/guide.rtf.gz
FileSize1225
MD5B1F37A23A667CB34FFB562FA0EBF869D
SHA-101AA0EA52E13F6F8D6E4F0F268881A80DF9BCE35
SHA-2566EF9AB7027E967D40F0BB21E21A20507C5BF6970A53CA0229A83F23721FFBF3F
SSDEEP24:XuEcbDCpNkc6SBBHs+08ly83EG+qGciLzZQhqa3QTYKfz9rMBK:X+by96SBBi8ly8jkcCZQEaAThiK
TLSHT10721EACDC7B1623012C63E564FE6CC444FF718881858E5F45131F71A662D6736C66549
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

Network graph view

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
FileSize301222
MD5DF1F6D6452A4F3BBF4E989FF68F2CD72
PackageDescriptionconvert LinuxDoc SGML source into other formats LinuxDoc sgml is a highly configurable text format for writing documentation, something like html only it's simpler and can be converted to various other formats, including html for websites. You write a LinuxDoc document using any text editor such as vim. Then you use linuxdoc-tools to convert it to html, rtf, plain-text (install linuxdoc-tools-text), info (install linuxdoc-tools-info), latex, dvi or postscript (install linuxdoc-tools-latex). The sgmltools-lite package can convert LinuxDoc to DocBook format. . LinuxDoc can automatically create a table of contents. It's easier to write and read than docbook since it allows one to omit most closing tags while paragraphs are separated by just blank lines.
PackageMaintainerTaketoshi Sano <sano@debian.org>
PackageNamelinuxdoc-tools
PackageSectiontext
PackageVersion0.9.21-0.9
SHA-1778BC338D45C3F276819A31AB19601F325635AB8
SHA-2562815103269D58D5EA780165FBDD29A83FFB173B482973268248F57CE25F2CC9B