Result for 0CF5A8244A5F770467C1CA81BBB418D9EAD2A4C9

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib64/libjinglep2pclient.so.1.0.0
FileSize188136
MD55B1976B4458482D6B93B544338195699
SHA-10CF5A8244A5F770467C1CA81BBB418D9EAD2A4C9
SHA-256402DA4ACFC82623B6A7312C3ABE142A994DE64537F90D9C9694AF7330C8E9CC3
SSDEEP3072:+0xI8Mf/drXiD1nSnSlynoF0DzQHSzYcry7DABylfticmp/xKorIA:+0xzQZnY0D80/ry7EByZI/PKoEA
TLSHT1AF043A17BB799D52EA46BA3448838378F7E1D94036B3022D9658947D8EE234C3F47ED8
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
MD51D0CF52F8EB0C58E09F5DE3D480B88CB
PackageArchsparc64
PackageDescriptionLibjingle is Google Talk's implementation of Jingle and Jingle-Audio (proposed extensions to XMPP) to interoperate with Google Talk's peer-to-peer and voice calling capabilities. In addition, it is a P2P (peer-to-peer) and RTC (real-time communication) stack that builds on XMPP. If you don't need any P2P or RTC, you can use any XMPP stack. If you do, then you might want to use libjingle. In fact, you can even use libjingle on top of another XMPP stack.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamelibjingle
PackageRelease2.fc17
PackageVersion0.6.0
SHA-1368D75AB7485071983E4728364B9474DFA4FCB42
SHA-25603CFC4195F016AF4464B9EB988CF4EB19D8F5FD5E85C0D7475D96EE7070BBA01