Result for 123C32A46F178A3F3DAD2DAF77478474B7062866

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/java/pki/pki-tks-9.0.7.jar
FileSize1867
MD5BAFF74A3140F04C8CED155763A02EDF3
SHA-1123C32A46F178A3F3DAD2DAF77478474B7062866
SHA-256F653ABFFCAF3F11CC10A8851E25792BC535FDFD2C11D700FC58E0616CB560817
SSDEEP24:R7ipMLMih4rNfyrhBucLpVRd882BKnv/wUQRONpYYjqK9tGvLvJhIrZag0ZEr3Y6:+Ahgsdccdx8fY+KtfMJverirFJLm
TLSHT19A31BB7383AEB81CE51690BB4105A0D6FCB8A3ADC48B289C398D50BC539F95B4B79744
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
MD5B1F606802B47B1A7CBB4033F279180E6
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionCertificate System (CS) is an enterprise software system designed to manage enterprise Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) deployments. The Token Key Service (TKS) is an optional PKI subsystem that manages the master key(s) and the transport key(s) required to generate and distribute keys for hardware tokens. TKS provides the security between tokens and an instance of Token Processing System (TPS), where the security relies upon the relationship between the master key and the token keys. A TPS communicates with a TKS over SSL using client authentication. TKS helps establish a secure channel (signed and encrypted) between the token and the TPS, provides proof of presence of the security token during enrollment, and supports key changeover when the master key changes on the TKS. Tokens with older keys will get new token keys. Because of the sensitivity of the data that TKS manages, TKS should be set up behind the firewall with restricted access. For deployment purposes, a TKS requires the following components from the PKI Core package: * pki-setup * pki-native-tools * pki-util * pki-java-tools * pki-common * pki-selinux and can also make use of the following optional components from the PKI Core package: * pki-util-javadoc * pki-java-tools-javadoc * pki-common-javadoc * pki-silent Additionally, Certificate System requires ONE AND ONLY ONE of the following "Mutually-Exclusive" PKI Theme packages: * dogtag-pki-theme (Dogtag Certificate System deployments) * redhat-pki-theme (Red Hat Certificate System deployments)
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepki-tks
PackageRelease1.fc16
PackageVersion9.0.7
SHA-16237F492B95A047A45FFD93C87E6549B0D031757
SHA-256D947A5541B4FDA13ABDD6355C6C8C2947379BB65C53382E648F711437E912086
Key Value
MD5DF23E1B78DADEEB84B0637C8D817EA2E
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionCertificate System (CS) is an enterprise software system designed to manage enterprise Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) deployments. The Token Key Service (TKS) is an optional PKI subsystem that manages the master key(s) and the transport key(s) required to generate and distribute keys for hardware tokens. TKS provides the security between tokens and an instance of Token Processing System (TPS), where the security relies upon the relationship between the master key and the token keys. A TPS communicates with a TKS over SSL using client authentication. TKS helps establish a secure channel (signed and encrypted) between the token and the TPS, provides proof of presence of the security token during enrollment, and supports key changeover when the master key changes on the TKS. Tokens with older keys will get new token keys. Because of the sensitivity of the data that TKS manages, TKS should be set up behind the firewall with restricted access. For deployment purposes, a TKS requires the following components from the PKI Core package: * pki-setup * pki-native-tools * pki-util * pki-java-tools * pki-common * pki-selinux and can also make use of the following optional components from the PKI Core package: * pki-util-javadoc * pki-java-tools-javadoc * pki-common-javadoc * pki-silent Additionally, Certificate System requires ONE AND ONLY ONE of the following "Mutually-Exclusive" PKI Theme packages: * dogtag-pki-theme (Dogtag Certificate System deployments) * redhat-pki-theme (Red Hat Certificate System deployments)
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepki-tks
PackageRelease1.fc16
PackageVersion9.0.7
SHA-1B8547E6271FF974927781222AAC34BB5D1E5AE83
SHA-256B92744E1C37A7AF83F9DC06D4D427A45FA71114FCAC29CC67637C9E894E66D38
Key Value
MD5ADA2CAEC81F3CF4A1950B8BAF35509FB
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionCertificate System (CS) is an enterprise software system designed to manage enterprise Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) deployments. The Token Key Service (TKS) is an optional PKI subsystem that manages the master key(s) and the transport key(s) required to generate and distribute keys for hardware tokens. TKS provides the security between tokens and an instance of Token Processing System (TPS), where the security relies upon the relationship between the master key and the token keys. A TPS communicates with a TKS over SSL using client authentication. TKS helps establish a secure channel (signed and encrypted) between the token and the TPS, provides proof of presence of the security token during enrollment, and supports key changeover when the master key changes on the TKS. Tokens with older keys will get new token keys. Because of the sensitivity of the data that TKS manages, TKS should be set up behind the firewall with restricted access. For deployment purposes, a TKS requires the following components from the PKI Core package: * pki-setup * pki-native-tools * pki-util * pki-java-tools * pki-common * pki-selinux and can also make use of the following optional components from the PKI Core package: * pki-util-javadoc * pki-java-tools-javadoc * pki-common-javadoc * pki-silent Additionally, Certificate System requires ONE AND ONLY ONE of the following "Mutually-Exclusive" PKI Theme packages: * dogtag-pki-theme (Dogtag Certificate System deployments) * redhat-pki-theme (Red Hat Certificate System deployments)
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepki-tks
PackageRelease1.fc15
PackageVersion9.0.2
SHA-1E7CF8A1EDD4704457DC88C9429908073817D4497
SHA-2563BEBC36B56864BD628653A6B747A48448C3EB09C88C3D58E725C4964A982745D
Key Value
MD52AFA401AF298A05F12A03C3ABAB842C2
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionCertificate System (CS) is an enterprise software system designed to manage enterprise Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) deployments. The Token Key Service (TKS) is an optional PKI subsystem that manages the master key(s) and the transport key(s) required to generate and distribute keys for hardware tokens. TKS provides the security between tokens and an instance of Token Processing System (TPS), where the security relies upon the relationship between the master key and the token keys. A TPS communicates with a TKS over SSL using client authentication. TKS helps establish a secure channel (signed and encrypted) between the token and the TPS, provides proof of presence of the security token during enrollment, and supports key changeover when the master key changes on the TKS. Tokens with older keys will get new token keys. Because of the sensitivity of the data that TKS manages, TKS should be set up behind the firewall with restricted access. For deployment purposes, a TKS requires the following components from the PKI Core package: * pki-setup * pki-native-tools * pki-util * pki-java-tools * pki-common * pki-selinux and can also make use of the following optional components from the PKI Core package: * pki-util-javadoc * pki-java-tools-javadoc * pki-common-javadoc * pki-silent Additionally, Certificate System requires ONE AND ONLY ONE of the following "Mutually-Exclusive" PKI Theme packages: * dogtag-pki-theme (Dogtag Certificate System deployments) * redhat-pki-theme (Red Hat Certificate System deployments)
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepki-tks
PackageRelease1.fc15
PackageVersion9.0.2
SHA-1CF4960A54E4620808D38EECE87102D813CE26C9D
SHA-25641EF2AEA784B148A87402BF4D5B9FDC112821D3AD20FE61EB4EE0D6CDBE6FA03