Result for 0631F9F2AE841BCA369425F8B2F74059ADD68675

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/valgrind/getoff-amd64-linux
FileSize10488
MD55A7DA8EA15771F0F6F178292ECD7B15D
SHA-10631F9F2AE841BCA369425F8B2F74059ADD68675
SHA-256E653C1CDE09D59F6AC571962EE3CFC46197F195BECBC73E780A2605079524809
SSDEEP96:RkT8B+B31Q7hkivKd/VMrHlLl+CMRDoiVv8cXHGc:RkQwZvGKlVMTl8CWoi
TLSHT1D522840BE2528A3FC469637885D7863532B17854A723472B365CF5781E133980BBA7EF
hashlookup:parent-total2
hashlookup:trust60

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Parents (Total: 2)

The searched file hash is included in 2 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD53F64B3A04210B0E62D730C0F32397B33
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionValgrind checks all memory operations in an application, like read, write, malloc, new, free, and delete. Valgrind can find uses of uninitialized memory, access to already freed memory, overflows, illegal stack operations, memory leaks, and any illegal new/malloc/free/delete commands. Another program in the package is "cachegrind," a profiler based on the valgrind engine. To use valgrind you should compile your application with "-g -O0" compiler options. Afterwards you can use it with: valgrind --tool=memcheck --sloppy-malloc=yes --leak-check=yes --db-attach=yes my_application, for example. More valgrind options can be listed via "valgrind --help". There is also complete documentation in the /usr/share/doc/packages/valgrind/ directory. A debugged application runs slower and needs much more memory, but is usually still usable. Valgrind is still in development, but it has been successfully used to optimize several KDE applications.
PackageNamevalgrind
PackageRelease293.d_t.2
PackageVersion3.18.1
SHA-10BE3E17E547AAE942B5ABE2F7E129CB40E59DE0E
SHA-25675E4A25173881C3A1EA2F0912C435D9953FF9072C59F3881702C0FE9B6A5BFDE
Key Value
MD5C9CF7FAE2E3F3E4C1565DF54DC6BFF5D
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionValgrind checks all memory operations in an application, like read, write, malloc, new, free, and delete. Valgrind can find uses of uninitialized memory, access to already freed memory, overflows, illegal stack operations, memory leaks, and any illegal new/malloc/free/delete commands. Another program in the package is "cachegrind," a profiler based on the valgrind engine. To use valgrind you should compile your application with "-g -O0" compiler options. Afterwards you can use it with: valgrind --tool=memcheck --sloppy-malloc=yes --leak-check=yes --db-attach=yes my_application, for example. More valgrind options can be listed via "valgrind --help". There is also complete documentation in the /usr/share/doc/packages/valgrind/ directory. A debugged application runs slower and needs much more memory, but is usually still usable. Valgrind is still in development, but it has been successfully used to optimize several KDE applications.
PackageNamevalgrind
PackageRelease293.d_t.2
PackageVersion3.18.1
SHA-1502A32353919F92FE61B5C9EA1F69F84ACFA8868
SHA-25609B3D8DD98170218F8F15122A9649D34CE9637D58150183F606D2FB22FCE2F92