Result for 188F37A290438C1CE295D5D9DA58EC3CED6B8C50

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/Random123-doc/examples/ut_M128.cpp
FileSize4485
MD52CC9B574843E09C040DF3FC4CB6BD542
SHA-1188F37A290438C1CE295D5D9DA58EC3CED6B8C50
SHA-2567C04D7FE528E3C64649C6978F56B05CC169FD2EEC4E5A114664A2739885D1FCF
SSDEEP96:X0YrYH0FrYHKrN3B53hpYTdBteG1TTs4PRS/kI+EHaNaoaLaGx:EYrU0FrUKrN3r3LahrTo4ZEHaNaoaLak
TLSHT1E49174DE616B095683E7577B237B2150E005C427F611D680386FB3E06F8B629A0BF1B5
hashlookup:parent-total3
hashlookup:trust65

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Parents (Total: 3)

The searched file hash is included in 3 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5FC508ACFD7C1175D14091DEFC79A3AF8
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDocumentation for Random123 Random123 is a library of "counter-based" random number generators (CBRNGs), in which the Nth random number can be obtained by applying a stateless mixing function to N instead of the conventional approach of using N iterations of a stateful transformation. CBRNGs were originally developed for use in MD applications on Anton, but they are ideal for a wide range of applications on modern multi-core CPUs, GPUs, clusters, and special-purpose hardware. Three families of non-cryptographic CBRNGs are described in a paper presented at the SC11 conference: ARS (based on the Advanced Encryption System (AES)), Threefry (based on the Threefish encryption function), and Philox (based on integer multiplication). They all satisfy rigorous statistical testing (passing BigCrush in TestU01), vectorize and parallelize well (each generator can produce at least 264 independent streams), have long periods (the period of each stream is at least 2128), require little or no memory or state, and have excellent performance (a few clock cycles per byte of random output). The Random123 library can be used with CPU (C and C++) and GPU (CUDA and OpenCL) applications.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameRandom123-doc
PackageRelease3.fc23
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-1462B91A25CFA1336651E70CEE01F967A6262C51B
SHA-25649D284618DCBCF3A52BB5CC3869180FE92416A52C03130EF9DD3A46507ECE3AF
Key Value
MD531457C2C6C739136E9B0BC10F618A1B3
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDocumentation for Random123 Random123 is a library of "counter-based" random number generators (CBRNGs), in which the Nth random number can be obtained by applying a stateless mixing function to N instead of the conventional approach of using N iterations of a stateful transformation. CBRNGs were originally developed for use in MD applications on Anton, but they are ideal for a wide range of applications on modern multi-core CPUs, GPUs, clusters, and special-purpose hardware. Three families of non-cryptographic CBRNGs are described in a paper presented at the SC11 conference: ARS (based on the Advanced Encryption System (AES)), Threefry (based on the Threefish encryption function), and Philox (based on integer multiplication). They all satisfy rigorous statistical testing (passing BigCrush in TestU01), vectorize and parallelize well (each generator can produce at least 264 independent streams), have long periods (the period of each stream is at least 2128), require little or no memory or state, and have excellent performance (a few clock cycles per byte of random output). The Random123 library can be used with CPU (C and C++) and GPU (CUDA and OpenCL) applications.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameRandom123-doc
PackageRelease3.fc23
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-1E70DF4DBBA91C2B139FF7AAB9EFBE8F0A525C0F9
SHA-2561F9137A07A282D868FF64808E1CBDA5D6B2489F9E472C081D0437E3CC133A801
Key Value
MD552B50AD090D59BD26D964C93C92FDA74
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionDocumentation for Random123 Random123 is a library of "counter-based" random number generators (CBRNGs), in which the Nth random number can be obtained by applying a stateless mixing function to N instead of the conventional approach of using N iterations of a stateful transformation. CBRNGs were originally developed for use in MD applications on Anton, but they are ideal for a wide range of applications on modern multi-core CPUs, GPUs, clusters, and special-purpose hardware. Three families of non-cryptographic CBRNGs are described in a paper presented at the SC11 conference: ARS (based on the Advanced Encryption System (AES)), Threefry (based on the Threefish encryption function), and Philox (based on integer multiplication). They all satisfy rigorous statistical testing (passing BigCrush in TestU01), vectorize and parallelize well (each generator can produce at least 264 independent streams), have long periods (the period of each stream is at least 2128), require little or no memory or state, and have excellent performance (a few clock cycles per byte of random output). The Random123 library can be used with CPU (C and C++) and GPU (CUDA and OpenCL) applications.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameRandom123-doc
PackageRelease3.fc23
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-164A74308ABBC54741749FF0341787B3783A1C6EC
SHA-25647B0164DDBDB6568D9EE9620DF651C4943B3A5E1758A63F7B1E6A7A920C8E978