Result for 1013B612154FEC28D79F39B8294E87E0D1FA4619

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/fudge/tests/test_import_all.pyc
FileSize598
MD535948627CDFD3871DC74D32B91929FC7
SHA-11013B612154FEC28D79F39B8294E87E0D1FA4619
SHA-25694B754C04D2F8ED22F6DE9AD3C49C7522F847FB2F0FD13F3616CD5137598B9AB
SSDEEP12:Oswfb/t/AZJSs9OL04PptXFEXrwoxT6k54kMuYfxBjso76E/Ac2uYfxBjlGl:O5fTtgJSs9a04P/F+MNkVe/j/7H/At/i
TLSHT188F04690E7778987E574083F96B506179E7CCAF38B163F826334C17E26E82102C2B490
hashlookup:parent-total2
hashlookup:trust60

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 2)

The searched file hash is included in 2 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD55B8785CBEEF93AF07A9448E5816373BA
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionComplete documentation is available at http://farmdev.com/projects/fudge/ Fudge is a Python module for using fake objects (mocks and stubs) to test real ones. In readable Python code, you declare what methods are available on your fake and how they should be called. Then you inject that into your application and start testing. This declarative approach means you don't have to record and playback actions and you don't have to inspect your fakes after running code. If the fake object was used incorrectly then you'll see an informative exception message with a traceback that points to the culprit. Here is a quick preview of how you can test code that sends email without actually sending email:: @fudge.patch('smtplib.SMTP') def test_mailer(FakeSMTP): (FakeSMTP.expects_call() .expects('connect') .expects('sendmail').with_arg_count(3)) send_mail()
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython2-fudge
PackageReleaselp150.2.3
PackageVersion1.1.0
SHA-160DC069A7E153DB3A9A044E2B44D3BFC28881AAF
SHA-2563BF09D5211E6497B12EA7F1A764E47AE156FA6706799D8897E1C715D063D6597
Key Value
MD5F5B77D1E78BC753A82C6DBD848B9E46B
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionComplete documentation is available at http://farmdev.com/projects/fudge/ Fudge is a Python module for using fake objects (mocks and stubs) to test real ones. In readable Python code, you declare what methods are available on your fake and how they should be called. Then you inject that into your application and start testing. This declarative approach means you don't have to record and playback actions and you don't have to inspect your fakes after running code. If the fake object was used incorrectly then you'll see an informative exception message with a traceback that points to the culprit. Here is a quick preview of how you can test code that sends email without actually sending email:: @fudge.patch('smtplib.SMTP') def test_mailer(FakeSMTP): (FakeSMTP.expects_call() .expects('connect') .expects('sendmail').with_arg_count(3)) send_mail()
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython2-fudge
PackageReleaselp151.3.3
PackageVersion1.1.0
SHA-118C8621522567E66C64891038C9AF50C1E61A076
SHA-256D83F07C4246563D3C12989FD6105B47E079349DC5071D4CC8027A6A50E695344