Result for 039A031EA1C2EBF883B9119BA2C4A87A3F6A6BA4

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/java/javapackages-bootstrap/junit-vintage-engine.jar
FileSize53782
MD526A27462DADA8FCF91270CD21DBC6157
SHA-1039A031EA1C2EBF883B9119BA2C4A87A3F6A6BA4
SHA-2563A309962AFA3CDD4708D717E1DB16DDC48A91BE98C38F9DFC01FECD6A7A32290
SSDEEP1536:NzXY34+oQISM+S5AV+4UdYTTqOGssEv5uIQjYZL3:NXU0l+WZ4UdmqOjV5LD
TLSHT144339E35B8C59433E5667F34D1AFD91A762F10DE9CCCA00B6CFA5641E5BAC41B603AE0
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
MD5F0FFDC948E8C867B19C2C1F4EC26C092
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
PackageRelease1.mga9
PackageVersion1.5.0^20220105.git9f283b7
SHA-16C37170FCA95E94B37ECDA547F16E0D6985F2811
SHA-256F27C28FDFE20A088AB04194D07AF3DCE5308776A7972C6EBCD7A3B6EDCD40DE2