Result for 08A7467B8D6BEE1E7C78AC9307D26BB33620C393

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man1/ms_print.1.gz
FileSize907
MD5E73C9A465C36B2BA29B8D2B0788C348F
SHA-108A7467B8D6BEE1E7C78AC9307D26BB33620C393
SHA-256B9C7A561C7ABDBD29B9F73B21CCE01B4937DDB0562398EE5E75F289002780D46
SSDEEP24:XErKtvb2mfoFwTt1rIf1cGfA6/f8o/1l+/:XQKtvCh2Tt1E1ff/f8O1lo
TLSHT14011B76666B38018CCF95CB41208515067130E9565F398AC7DA878A5055041C50BC2B2
hashlookup:parent-total5
hashlookup:trust75

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Parents (Total: 5)

The searched file hash is included in 5 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5B23A307ACBCA729DA38AC25CFD196540
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
PackageRelease286.d_t.1
PackageVersion3.16.1
SHA-1249B0110F9814DE1A6AE995304ABBEBF2E52BC0A
SHA-256800433CA1B25B563D28B20185C128E2B912D9D15FC7BDC303056A140A15EFA29
Key Value
MD5E58E87ED7C5D72D7FEE05AA071171997
PackageArchs390x
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
PackageRelease286.d_t.1
PackageVersion3.16.1
SHA-15283BAB81461F9EB63621775FB8D03673181F8F8
SHA-256A897DC0BB1763DD0C2303C6C363FE0B532F4DF8954619317367DBFE2A2AD7E73
Key Value
MD50ECDC0D6328DA878A4519927DC5AEF63
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
PackageRelease286.d_t.1
PackageVersion3.16.1
SHA-1EA2CBECCD25C0AAB0F1BE4FB11AE6DCD0169C837
SHA-25682622E4E6CED60F609DA879F4F0358EFA4387B926513C3912D0BA0AEFE820077
Key Value
MD5B3146E24E5F900C4AC3E9A8A8426C570
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
PackageRelease288.d_t.1
PackageVersion3.16.1
SHA-1BAC988B9BD91AE58736B90C89541D2C283BF4B8F
SHA-2567B74FB067297AC2F6BC7DA1F98EC7C770F53E10A372BA0D268C95CA1104857D7
Key Value
MD5B319EF7630457B3CB8FB79C4D9E3C7E6
PackageArchs390x
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
PackageRelease286.d_t.1
PackageVersion3.16.1
SHA-162373897F23DE8155DBAAF3B7FDCCE98C33750CF
SHA-256FD3395F858630753F5108628BA12B517011968452015CC491619EE03382521F3