Result for 1070F5CE6B7C4EBB8808A931D6440BCC6B2E006E

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib64/ruby/gems/3.1.0/cache/puma-1.6.3.gem
FileSize59904
MD517E4A1E2350F60494DE1122BB86E080E
SHA-11070F5CE6B7C4EBB8808A931D6440BCC6B2E006E
SHA-256310C6BE9A2D890EF27DC5955ED26C706D43FEDF454EE058C40ADA463CC8BBC74
SSDEEP768:Dv9Rm5xUU8A3Xfkh4R2/t7YO2Ro5E3imgEOhdNDplRVD5j1YMgormnSe2:7GxUE3Xc02/5Y/3bQt1TVD5l
TLSHT16843F10C460C6EF4FEE46EB00896BE6B47AC7F82E1B7C06B1BA34185135C34726D2569
hashlookup:parent-total40
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 40)

The searched file hash is included in 40 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5768D163FA79990FDD1326B3FC8E4FC22
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-puma-1_6
PackageRelease3.36
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-10423BF61E2BEE582CEF203F5A7E6145E19D812EC
SHA-2568815FA04611B2DC8B0563863C119B2BA363E85A80EF79C77DE86D8BA803B5380
Key Value
MD52E97EE59A027C6773F45A2E157B20752
PackageArchi586
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNameruby3.1-rubygem-puma-1_6
PackageRelease3.303
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-10D2820E9298B6E228DD0FB0AF85B353B8A6C0E23
SHA-256BC29663469102CFD9BA5E4C10B6E65092295C5FF57E2358E677EA3ABF199555D
Key Value
MD5B835C2E3729A9D8223ACB09A4A0FD1F3
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-puma-1_6
PackageReleaselp153.3.22
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-111B8567316A9A47E3E91ED85F7C9AA110232F8D9
SHA-25679424A1374CB35C508B9A8551B2AB3E56770648EDB664289D9479E2585ED8EC7
Key Value
MD514AA25526A3C3046F6ED8CCD3E3160A2
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNamerubygem-puma-1_6
PackageReleaselp154.3.3
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-1129D4F899985F214E7E290D5DE062EB1AD226DA8
SHA-256FDFE549909C08DC6417F331F281ED8875BC91595A1E0977DF0CC7115DC1E2D6D
Key Value
MD52AC30E791552B9C5D4E0DF49616AB66C
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNamerubygem-puma-1_6
PackageReleaselp153.3.21
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-120C9296C2B8BBBCBEEFE90DF145515BC89865FB3
SHA-2562EB78ED685F2ABA85833532349D0972A1414F0AEFADB91CCBF67D50797F3CDC8
Key Value
MD5D062165E23B4BBD3F3F93F1F521CB79E
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNameruby3.1-rubygem-puma-1_6
PackageRelease3.303
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-12208B80BC41B5DEE1E83D3AE3FD4CEAD252F8A12
SHA-256C687318FCD55BB07F1FCA05FFE018850A952AA4062A16F57E956EAB52DCDE05B
Key Value
MD54C2511C51724F6C69B1F7E2052211215
PackageArchi586
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNamerubygem-puma-1_6
PackageRelease3.303
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-12364CA387521AF9B224457CFF1AC22B6A0A729E7
SHA-2569BBC5031DB4602E64A015C67F4276F236D3F9CAAC0EE97EC342D64C9D1B6FD50
Key Value
MD552FF4B6C4F95BEB130605DDE7AD92D28
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNameruby2.7-rubygem-puma-1_6
PackageReleaselp154.3.3
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-1297894D58C84D376B1DC3D39AF5A43C9CC64D0F9
SHA-2562433BC9BA83A7E46EEB9C21CC6A39A42E80D247FB33F733DB5E54B398D5E123D
Key Value
MD5CC18580DB7CF6A6B7A96F9D802E8077A
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-puma-1_6
PackageRelease3.50
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-12D01DBD3964A4B8037550F0E13A1F1DD437FB998
SHA-25662D0CFBC0EC2B5114EF8E90B6F8B3EBD8466B78B679190B0343BADE954612496
Key Value
MD51F1B95A76DB924373674F8E8771AD725
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionPuma is a simple, fast, and highly concurrent HTTP 1.1 server for Ruby web applications. It can be used with any application that supports Rack, and is considered the replacement for Webrick and Mongrel. It was designed to be the go-to server for [Rubinius](http://rubini.us), but also works well with JRuby and MRI. Puma is intended for use in both development and production environments. Under the hood, Puma processes requests using a C-optimized Ragel extension (inherited from Mongrel) that provides fast, accurate HTTP 1.1 protocol parsing in a portable way. Puma then serves the request in a thread from an internal thread pool (which you can control). This allows Puma to provide real concurrency for your web application! With Rubinius 2.0, Puma will utilize all cores on your CPU with real threads, meaning you won't have to spawn multiple processes to increase throughput. You can expect to see a similar benefit from JRuby. On MRI, there is a Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) that ensures only one thread can be run at a time. But if you're doing a lot of blocking IO (such as HTTP calls to external APIs like Twitter), Puma still improves MRI's throughput by allowing blocking IO to be run concurrently (EventMachine-based servers such as Thin turn off this ability, requiring you to use special libraries). Your mileage may vary. In order to get the best throughput, it is highly recommended that you use a Ruby implementation with real threads like [Rubinius](http://rubini.us) or [JRuby](http://jruby.org).
PackageNamerubygem-puma-1_6
PackageRelease3.4
PackageVersion1.6.3
SHA-12D96797FC75FEBF6A5D6B5B5450278522DCC432C
SHA-256951015B3B535484E720EA6CD7E1E67E3F743F612C40549FD4B03C5110537CEA7