Result for 144E77B0EB40816CEB22C01F7D0731D6743ECE91

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/YAML::Tiny.3pm.gz
FileSize7631
MD5B170A4BD8AFD99DBABFA3158E1FD4E46
SHA-1144E77B0EB40816CEB22C01F7D0731D6743ECE91
SHA-2563208CF147831ABEF55D8E23C384F11F663EF07F1BC4331978B5BB66E80EB71C3
SSDEEP192:OelHqC81zNQOde2RP1h6ZofU8EXcEPkwxICLrv1:OU8HQn2Rv6Z6ocGkmfh
TLSHT10EF1AF27D4F3ADE2CC25057C229789125C86A9564EEDF7773AE7AC2BC01910A07D828D
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
MD5F0BD52A96272119FB58284DF7772C3F0
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescription*YAML::Tiny* is a perl class for reading and writing YAML-style files, written with as little code as possible, reducing load time and memory overhead. Most of the time it is accepted that Perl applications use a lot of memory and modules. The *::Tiny* family of modules is specifically intended to provide an ultralight and zero-dependency alternative to many more-thorough standard modules. This module is primarily for reading human-written files (like simple config files) and generating very simple human-readable files. Note that I said *human-readable* and not *geek-readable*. The sort of files that your average manager or secretary should be able to look at and make sense of. YAML::Tiny does not generate comments, it won't necessarily preserve the order of your hashes, and it will normalise if reading in and writing out again. It only supports a very basic subset of the full YAML specification. Usage is targeted at files like Perl's META.yml, for which a small and easily-embeddable module is extremely attractive. Features will only be added if they are human readable, and can be written in a few lines of code. Please don't be offended if your request is refused. Someone has to draw the line, and for YAML::Tiny that someone is me. If you need something with more power move up to YAML (7 megabytes of memory overhead) or YAML::XS (6 megabytes memory overhead and requires a C compiler). To restate, YAML::Tiny does *not* preserve your comments, whitespace, or the order of your YAML data. But it should round-trip from Perl structure to file and back again just fine.
PackageNameperl-YAML-Tiny
PackageRelease1.6
PackageVersion1.73
SHA-14CEB5E0227683B297C557E63A0E45F2210792316
SHA-256FF62108BF14357DCF940F42F55D36C9B5FAAE1C0FEC9DBAAD46F4311A7E7E19F