| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| FileName | ./usr/share/man/man3/Specio::Library::Builtins.3pm.xz |
| FileSize | 2440 |
| MD5 | 9FC804FBB73E4F4D3712EED448AF927D |
| SHA-1 | 1253B75ACFE84B2A978F2213D04B76BCFC0A5AE5 |
| SHA-256 | 959DDF9009476944911E9CE53EE931ADAB771569265F83088C7B5AA4DE27D07F |
| SSDEEP | 48:TNCDFM3ENY1KZ5+A1r8pPjKONdWyUf/8COM5nx0YZXN4+A2ugpI4U:TNCDtY11Yu7KOWyu8UdXX/u0U |
| TLSH | T120513B17EA80BFC716B9CE69C8E590B562E5CD0B8F309B254CA9180FA1A6F139565F02 |
| 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 | C791BFA012D8AC5D79E1C6D09DEC9065 |
| PackageArch | noarch |
| PackageDescription | The 'Specio' distribution provides classes for representing type constraints and coercion, along with syntax sugar for declaring them. Note that this is not a proper type system for Perl. Nothing in this distribution will magically make the Perl interpreter start checking a value's type on assignment to a variable. In fact, there's no built-in way to apply a type to a variable at all. Instead, you can explicitly check a value against a type, and optionally coerce values to that type. |
| PackageMaintainer | tv <tv> |
| PackageName | perl-Specio |
| PackageRelease | 1.mga8 |
| PackageVersion | 0.460.0 |
| SHA-1 | B8481C5C806701366DDB0FE28C802A1C1C515C5E |
| SHA-256 | 511F8F78814CAD84631726EC6FE6253849C1A363054C203442136C9423E00C27 |