Result for 08FFEC9E13CCCA8A2B2B4C22C14BE57DDAA43AB4

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/snimpy/main.pyo
FileSize4494
MD59051994C25C66D223071D11B2C946061
SHA-108FFEC9E13CCCA8A2B2B4C22C14BE57DDAA43AB4
SHA-25651D9247428E669D9FED588C620BF94B7CF17BD37D13A950052B17248FED6B342
SSDEEP96:OT+/uY3T+ojvZkA80y4hGip+YOYo9Yt/uJPf2GzaIk/azWQqU:m+FljvjrGiYYOYoOt/utbkSzWQqU
TLSHT11A9197C287E9AA63E9A80479B1F1001B0E21F1F77641674233BCD4759DDA376C5277C9
hashlookup:parent-total6
hashlookup:trust80

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 6)

The searched file hash is included in 6 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD59FC0A733CA2DD91023640654BFC696F8
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageNamepython2-snimpy
PackageReleaselp151.6.1
PackageVersion0.8.14
SHA-1AE27C7C8252153D2CEF26C6BD30F8287631D57B4
SHA-2565EE091623585CDF8F30B21B4D55F7CCAAD9CE3956978930239AB37FD33D844B3
Key Value
MD59CDE4CD329FD0065E3EF1A136FB60E9D
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageNamepython2-snimpy
PackageReleaselp151.3.1
PackageVersion0.8.14
SHA-11A153C3468B0BECB4BA158754B9A9B78DE907C4E
SHA-2560974DF5815266BC77747EB1A0E0AA26BA3FA2F991A97092C60F8DF1CEA214F77
Key Value
MD57617E040272DE77EB7B73D9DEC1A73EF
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageNamepython2-snimpy
PackageRelease8.1
PackageVersion0.8.14
SHA-1A3BF5B717A6E12863644802B9D61D4EA4F9FE691
SHA-2563779FE994CF0C9CEFE27B7F7F4222C79C92B891BF321E1C93113EEFEDB742745
Key Value
MD5891D790257EE540301E9F50245B03DCE
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython2-snimpy
PackageReleasebp153.1.16
PackageVersion0.8.13
SHA-1C7784F5E9A21E0B87A3811631F7B0B3C564F8A93
SHA-25665E147E9BEFC08006AC34326821BA01D35FE2302289E3BCB9FE2CCA8D11F5412
Key Value
MD5243813CC4C97D38546D15C64740F7C3E
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython2-snimpy
PackageReleaselp152.1.3
PackageVersion0.8.13
SHA-1845929F4723AEBFF9F1F70E66838023D90A4B349
SHA-2568B37F3608F1723DB51CFB970920566198FEF890AF9C1133F9E345BFE5D80D95E
Key Value
MD58AB2ED7187BFBE3D24E620E74F0B9A52
PackageArchs390x
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython2-snimpy
PackageReleasebp153.1.16
PackageVersion0.8.13
SHA-10BB70B6E866F1C676B247FA348C102326B4E8D71
SHA-256FFFCCC69EB525EDA74A3C601DA7166D34EAB584CC7AE43EBC6CFC7F919451483