Result for 13B9A251EA7FFADC688D61A41FD11FA5473F3D85

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/xine/README.solaris.gz
FileSize2006
MD5E581AD57953CC1EDE0B6FCFBEA8D7CED
SHA-113B9A251EA7FFADC688D61A41FD11FA5473F3D85
SHA-256026CCDFBADDC8EB50BACAFEFE89461300594B131B1A61A6B1AD83B9B39FA691E
SSDEEP48:XRb0Icr3xhnNyHmvjvPAIyaZYkxSbRLGcBnM6hW:NgXnNyHmL3ZdSNrBn30
TLSHT1534118176D00CCCF0E6CFF989FE3DAA868869221184C1B05AAF00DD1346413B2A9C9E0
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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Parents (Total: 1)

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
FileSize106760
MD5F9138C09B93D40619963BA2E12F4E780
PackageDescriptionthe xine video player library, development packages This contains development files (headers, documentation and the like) for the xine library (libxine). . Libxine provides the complete infrastructure for a video/media player. It supports MPEG 1/2 and some AVI and Quicktime videos out of the box, so you can use it to play DVDs, (S)VCDs and most video files out there. It supports network streams, subtitles and even mp3 files. It's extensible to your heart's content via plugins for audio_out, video_out, input media, demuxers (stream types), audio/video and subtitle codecs. Building a GUI (or text based) frontend around this should be quite easy. The xine-ui package provides one for your convenience, so you can just start watching your VCDs ;-)
PackageMaintainerSiggi Langauf <siggi@debian.org>
PackageNamelibxine-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.0-1ubuntu3.4
SHA-120CE57A6389100B161D0E5706867DAE5BAB33EBC
SHA-256AB8DDAD61EE519F84D6D601D07C8E73B8856B4676A65AFA117C7E70CBECC183F