Result for 086B7926ACBF134BD8EB9A877F9B631CB051FD91

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib64/python2.3/site-packages/duplicity/backends/giobackend.pyc
FileSize8931
MD57424979EB366D0EFC07B7D4F518829BA
SHA-1086B7926ACBF134BD8EB9A877F9B631CB051FD91
SHA-256D7F3B72F915C6F6269E8DB811E12619A2522236D089D9367F8B74C281ABE5191
SSDEEP192:pNy/H4UDQcZLWm0yJT3FW+v2N77BmbBP2Wr3P1lkjFfXjFrLD:pM/YUDQ4Wm0g3k+uN77BmbBPRr3P1cF9
TLSHT1740263C0C2E90A57EFB62478B174430BAE64E6A791463B205A70B07F3D5D3370EB759A
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
MD5D62C6236ADA1BF79A30E790899D4BFEE
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionDuplicity incrementally backs up files and directory by encrypting tar-format volumes with GnuPG and uploading them to a remote (or local) file server. In theory many protocols for connecting to a file server could be supported; so far ssh/scp, local file access, rsync, ftp, HSI, WebDAV and Amazon S3 have been written. Because duplicity uses librsync, the incremental archives are space efficient and only record the parts of files that have changed since the last backup. Currently duplicity supports deleted files, full unix permissions, directories, symbolic links, fifos, device files, but not hard links.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameduplicity
PackageRelease2.el4
PackageVersion0.6.14
SHA-1AE8C1311D7FB170BF5AB0D7665771DB28C58213F
SHA-256C270484C985AF8AF09E38E2A2C0F2F80E3FFFD217550DED401B739FBFA48A755