Result for 0E43BC3C11402FC147C25B7D240AD24C805BE5F4

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/gocode/src/sigs.k8s.io/structured-merge-diff/merge/real_test.go
FileSize3346
MD54F8D51C9F3FE01C744F67F8D2D5E6153
SHA-10E43BC3C11402FC147C25B7D240AD24C805BE5F4
SHA-25626DDE8A225DD261630B430DD5842388A48739D2EFCE412CF0E1BC64ADD9972BC
SSDEEP96:K+4s3HFK23HfBsiKCb0/xC+C0xCMNyxCMNF+KKD:j33HxaiK9xvAvLDKD
TLSHT1106194A0DC1E8763079083CB6D1CD8E9E26EC0B14E5652FAF4C9F5A4334C22D10792B6
hashlookup:parent-total4
hashlookup:trust70

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 4)

The searched file hash is included in 4 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5199675B74DD5F7EEA8EDC18975E01ADC
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis package contains code which implements the Kubernetes "apply" operation. This package contains the source code needed for building packages that reference the following Go import paths: – sigs.k8s.io/structured-merge-diff
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamegolang-sigs-k8s-structured-merge-diff-devel
PackageRelease2.fc34
PackageVersion4.0.2
SHA-15B48EC7DC82AB322BC581C7E01F69DAC86B0A77B
SHA-256E9875435CBB429656EAACA3A0F319CBB12BAE46A54C46108F051CD7293FAE490
Key Value
FileSize121920
MD58EA5CEF057336C28C9616EDED71B9E5C
PackageDescriptionimplementation for "server-side apply" (library) What is the apply operation? . It models resources in a control plane as having multiple "managers". Each manager is typically trying to manage only one aspect of a resource. The goal is to make it easy for disparate managers to make the changes they need without messing up the things that other managers are doing. In this system, both humans and machines (aka "controllers") act as managers. . To do this, it explicitly tracks (using the fieldset data structure) which fields each manager is currently managing. . Now, there are two basic mechanisms by which one modifies an object. . PUT/PATCH: This is a write command that says: "Make the object look EXACTLY like X". . APPLY: This is a write command that says: "The fields I manage should now look exactly like this (but I don't care about other fields)". . For PUT/PATCH, it deduces which fields will be managed based on what is changing. For APPLY, the user is explicitly stating which fields they wish to manage (and therefore requesting deletion of any fields that they used to manage but stop mentioning). . Any time a manager begins managing some new field, that field is removed from all other managers. If the manager is using the APPLY command, it calls these conflicts, and will not proceed unless the user passes the "force" option. This prevents accidentally setting fields which some other entity is managing. . PUT/PATCH always "force". They are mostly used by automated systems, which won't do anything productive with a new error type.
PackageMaintainerDebian Go Packaging Team <team+pkg-go@tracker.debian.org>
PackageNamegolang-k8s-sigs-structured-merge-diff-dev
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion4.1.2+ds1-1
SHA-13B9CEF2188175AABC2822A8286ACFAAB1AF7B8BC
SHA-25622F38F870A63BFAED0686C9F37652D420C195231ECDBD97B076567705659FD90
Key Value
FileSize116408
MD555239887437239F513E120E21BDE0454
PackageDescriptionimplementation for "server-side apply" (library) What is the apply operation? . It models resources in a control plane as having multiple "managers". Each manager is typically trying to manage only one aspect of a resource. The goal is to make it easy for disparate managers to make the changes they need without messing up the things that other managers are doing. In this system, both humans and machines (aka "controllers") act as managers. . To do this, it explicitly tracks (using the fieldset data structure) which fields each manager is currently managing. . Now, there are two basic mechanisms by which one modifies an object. . PUT/PATCH: This is a write command that says: "Make the object look EXACTLY like X". . APPLY: This is a write command that says: "The fields I manage should now look exactly like this (but I don't care about other fields)". . For PUT/PATCH, it deduces which fields will be managed based on what is changing. For APPLY, the user is explicitly stating which fields they wish to manage (and therefore requesting deletion of any fields that they used to manage but stop mentioning). . Any time a manager begins managing some new field, that field is removed from all other managers. If the manager is using the APPLY command, it calls these conflicts, and will not proceed unless the user passes the "force" option. This prevents accidentally setting fields which some other entity is managing. . PUT/PATCH always "force". They are mostly used by automated systems, which won't do anything productive with a new error type.
PackageMaintainerDebian Go Packaging Team <team+pkg-go@tracker.debian.org>
PackageNamegolang-k8s-sigs-structured-merge-diff-dev
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion4.0.2+ds1-2
SHA-1C6BA04E321760C2D10F5C3D220FD7573F18600A3
SHA-256871B2DD766A472B69D3F5871578633B1FF72E9A13246BE487C6AFF8C561FB04F
Key Value
FileSize116452
MD5D6082ED60CC1DC4409149F47943926E4
PackageDescriptionimplementation for "server-side apply" (library) What is the apply operation? . It models resources in a control plane as having multiple "managers". Each manager is typically trying to manage only one aspect of a resource. The goal is to make it easy for disparate managers to make the changes they need without messing up the things that other managers are doing. In this system, both humans and machines (aka "controllers") act as managers. . To do this, it explicitly tracks (using the fieldset data structure) which fields each manager is currently managing. . Now, there are two basic mechanisms by which one modifies an object. . PUT/PATCH: This is a write command that says: "Make the object look EXACTLY like X". . APPLY: This is a write command that says: "The fields I manage should now look exactly like this (but I don't care about other fields)". . For PUT/PATCH, it deduces which fields will be managed based on what is changing. For APPLY, the user is explicitly stating which fields they wish to manage (and therefore requesting deletion of any fields that they used to manage but stop mentioning). . Any time a manager begins managing some new field, that field is removed from all other managers. If the manager is using the APPLY command, it calls these conflicts, and will not proceed unless the user passes the "force" option. This prevents accidentally setting fields which some other entity is managing. . PUT/PATCH always "force". They are mostly used by automated systems, which won't do anything productive with a new error type.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamegolang-k8s-sigs-structured-merge-diff-dev
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion4.0.2+ds1-2
SHA-183602751405893F9FB378AEC58AD38528AC0ED7F
SHA-2566C8E8BE703229C5CDCB0E8FF81397F9F55B964C85DAAEA8EF9A75F64AD68569D