Result for 197F92E6ED1ADEC8FCB0266386CECEBA3DD91FA8

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/snimpy/_smi.abi3.so
FileSize39040
MD556BC80E8096C7D2E3728727D06162FD7
SHA-1197F92E6ED1ADEC8FCB0266386CECEBA3DD91FA8
SHA-256C4599D6186C0637C005F50D27D7B7966D7A72D095E2A9BF945FDC3798AA667FC
SSDEEP768:t69XTQfTRl+vxq/LNaZsZvJDlG8pTHSXimgA1W+x2XPvRFzNP4GasCy9fAWeY/W0:sctUxq/LNaZsZvJDlG8pTHSXimgA1W+E
TLSHT13D03A812BA40C8B1F6B283F14ACFEF308561681F952A43A73D4E6B5C69737916E5D3C8
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
MD5B68B1BF80ED733DF7E7DEF9BB133B96C
PackageArchi586
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython310-snimpy
PackageRelease1.4
PackageVersion1.0.0
SHA-123700E7502089C631BFB913EA81C21AA5CC226A6
SHA-256D90D9E281454D60F2F5C9ED9EEA8D24F5B523A3C7F6E78B65A44A30887E01E08