Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | ./usr/lib64/python3.6/site-packages/numexpr/__pycache__/necompiler.cpython-36.pyc |
FileSize | 24662 |
MD5 | 0FF51A96F74B636533AC03C99AB862B9 |
SHA-1 | 10323A62EDD2598272FD546A9981711AE3E2C623 |
SHA-256 | 57B0232D49E5A801CEE3C8EFA2558513B09FBBE3FE653C647D0CC6241A733B0E |
SSDEEP | 768:Q84XkYv7+zRzod/koWbaNPCcGM3jShoRiDsb:i0ohdSvM3eoiDU |
TLSH | T1FCB22BA966C11A1BFDD3F2F40981424C172CE37327896A63760D52EE1F0939C6E74BE9 |
hashlookup:parent-total | 1 |
hashlookup:trust | 55 |
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 |
---|---|
MD5 | 85B268104A1971D314DCC83831CA6A70 |
PackageArch | aarch64 |
PackageDescription | The numexpr package evaluates multiple-operator array expressions many times faster than NumPy can. It accepts the expression as a string, analyzes it, rewrites it more efficiently, and compiles it to faster Python code on the fly. It’s the next best thing to writing the expression in C and compiling it with a specialized just-in-time (JIT) compiler, i.e. it does not require a compiler at runtime. This is the version for Python 3. |
PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project |
PackageName | python3-numexpr |
PackageRelease | 3.el8 |
PackageVersion | 2.7.0 |
SHA-1 | 2BE680CC1A57F44493E50E1CA06EA1DDDB49446F |
SHA-256 | C465BBEB82C13A22ACC92B789CB068264E6B35D1B5DD4A8DF7C24C81E66F5C27 |