Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | ./usr/bin/pgloader |
FileSize | 23738596 |
MD5 | 542DE1C7A5AB9DF6EB8C293C27104F3F |
SHA-1 | 0421FA982C803212936412AE1FA5F876AE892340 |
SHA-256 | 246767B041AA82C89A3D76A9CF46EA1CB3AA0875EA0A681740D1A8CC9D18AF5C |
SSDEEP | 393216:jQJBwGAqaj8RwE1qT4Gztc4Gk0Ta9oLtncFE7j8BKBdWCQOcqsW4D4rJFvpHy8KI:9lqaj8RwZ0Gu4x0TaOqFOBXdQOcncrdh |
TLSH | T1F937238EB64B7A97C89DA23BC0850CE173726510F3D7F317DD5AA2997206340BE19E1B |
hashlookup:parent-total | 1 |
hashlookup:trust | 55 |
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 |
---|---|
FileSize | 25384248 |
MD5 | DDE843EF59BCCB16E62417D1538AC7D0 |
PackageDescription | extract, transform and load data into PostgreSQL pgloader imports data from different kind of sources and COPY it into PostgreSQL. . The command language is described in the manual page and allows one to describe where to find the data source, its format, and to describe data processing and transformation. . Supported source formats include CSV, fixed width flat files, dBase3 files (DBF), and SQLite and MySQL databases. In most of those formats, pgloader is able to auto-discover the schema and create the tables and the indexes in PostgreSQL. In the MySQL case it's possible to edit CASTing rules from the pgloader command directly. |
PackageMaintainer | Dimitri Fontaine <dim@tapoueh.org> |
PackageName | pgloader |
PackageSection | database |
PackageVersion | 3.6.1-1 |
SHA-1 | 10536811698B4B8FF82AFF69550DBB4894815861 |
SHA-256 | 64222CA410AAA39F4A0F80A61A4F52FE868C681BD161020A8701B377C0F16877 |