Result for 0B11A7ED5F53D6079D5014366E161F575D36B280

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/pmix/mca_psec_none.so
FileSize15460
MD536AB6EF79760CFB2FEE5B4AF38C20F92
SHA-10B11A7ED5F53D6079D5014366E161F575D36B280
SHA-256729313AE1D0F55DA9A22BB25776677DD3BE68EECB89774A27ACCBA5B5A2D8F91
SSDEEP96:AbTBWBP1wgfzX3QJLrTKbRecmuy5G0JPpaLvQXRGFAgagQb6rzR44YXC29XVf/YU:MT8Mg7X3QZTKbAcm/GgRarQhGFcGzz2
TLSHT18162F603FB83C4B3D5E65E7845AB8F6446B2C51156E28B933B14779628B27C41E22B30
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
MD5100B04E1A2D1823058BCD5BB371A923A
PackageArchi686
PackageDescriptionThe Process Management Interface (PMI) has been used for quite some time as a means of exchanging wireup information needed for interprocess communication. Two versions (PMI-1 and PMI-2) have been released as part of the MPICH effort. While PMI-2 demonstrates better scaling properties than its PMI-1 predecessor, attaining rapid launch and wireup of the roughly 1M processes executing across 100k nodes expected for exascale operations remains challenging. PMI Exascale (PMIx) represents an attempt to resolve these questions by providing an extended version of the PMI standard specifically designed to support clusters up to and including exascale sizes. The overall objective of the project is not to branch the existing pseudo-standard definitions - in fact, PMIx fully supports both of the existing PMI-1 and PMI-2 APIs - but rather to (a) augment and extend those APIs to eliminate some current restrictions that impact scalability, and (b) provide a reference implementation of the PMI-server that demonstrates the desired level of scalability.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepmix
PackageRelease0.1.rc1.fc33
PackageVersion3.1.6
SHA-1A7B0C64645A1FF53262A7038FFF9D76D73C5D970
SHA-256E3E9B6F42C727B72EE82C8CA8C372EF80E4639F2444FA351D92F45F0E7CA129C