Result for 09052442D46B0D2B8E2E8EB1EE0968222404F315

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/packages/ruby2.7-rubygem-mime-types-1/README.rdoc
FileSize66
MD56CF8E30EBD21578C8B15C2E59041412E
SHA-109052442D46B0D2B8E2E8EB1EE0968222404F315
SHA-256246AD99A4B1FC3A6D25908BCB2907A162CD890DB4364E96341D3FE39EFD2E36D
SSDEEP3:gC63cZA2PKEcVJv3oy:d11cVOy
TLSHT1CDA02220C3B328882202000BBC08BE0283800C2E3B003F00302C8832208C30B30CC800
hashlookup:parent-total3
hashlookup:trust65

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Parents (Total: 3)

The searched file hash is included in 3 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5C4452CD40469F8B7F06EE7DD27F99D8A
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25, adding experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for version 1.26. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. As of version 1.15, the data format for the MIME::Type list has changed and the synchronization will no longer happen. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.7-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageRelease1.41
PackageVersion1.25
SHA-12BF61781AC02DDB0900BECA535A81C8CED06A8AD
SHA-256E884EAC2DA599FF0A359BFED3683B30623C3B0F20BFF6A86989A28EFE6537902
Key Value
MD55D9B7B22A490D214AE973DB760200F6F
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25, adding experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for version 1.26. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. As of version 1.15, the data format for the MIME::Type list has changed and the synchronization will no longer happen. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.7-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageRelease1.44
PackageVersion1.25
SHA-12C24600366D51195C7D417902FF82429A40530EB
SHA-25663A5087E431C1858035F052375ABCCA2B42BAA3BE009A904A2EAD52A0E473A90
Key Value
MD5C566EA89F40A614D732C8D4343634504
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25, adding experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for version 1.26. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. As of version 1.15, the data format for the MIME::Type list has changed and the synchronization will no longer happen. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.7-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageRelease1.45
PackageVersion1.25
SHA-12B243CCEF7FB901B6B0A359DD2928A2BBF8249AC
SHA-2567ECC23192AFC009CF15F2AB0F0D7B8037C1A7AA0C7B297A726F58738B3A41DD6