Result for 1FC6AC61B240EC0274E3F1B648FD7174FFF188BB

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/erlang-p1-pkix/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize728
MD5DFA4BA1E21B422A943339CC4E1D1E160
SHA-11FC6AC61B240EC0274E3F1B648FD7174FFF188BB
SHA-256AB71300AF99486C7E636D6E0F8AC0CB49A3D2B4EAEDB79C6E0EF3EF4C9D476BF
SSDEEP12:X/2n/1uJz6t8QBI2WeMYxpi+h18ShiH1/VFq0ZgIz+UYT0PobGHyp:X/s1uJmtK2ZZNqq4bhzLYy2z
TLSHT183016563671F74A15E4550BA08470B08E142B4668B2E075D2A26A40B0AA0DB156E266E
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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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
FileSize175776
MD55F7260CC6014C03F28B41E71259CE31F
PackageDescriptionPKIX certificates management library for Erlang The idea of the library is to simplify certificates configuration in Erlang programs. Typically an Erlang program which needs certificates (for HTTPS/ MQTT/XMPP/etc) provides a bunch of options such as certfile, chainfile, privkey, etc. The situation becomes even more complicated when a server supports so called virtual domains because a program is typically required to match a virtual domain with its certificate. If a user has plenty of virtual domains it's quickly becoming a nightmare for them to configure all this. The complexity also leads to errors: a single configuration mistake and a program generates obscure log messages, unreadable Erlang tracebacks or, even worse, just silently ignores the errors. Fortunately, the large part of certificates configuration can be automated, reducing a user configuration to something as simple as: . certfiles: - /etc/letsencrypt/live/*/*.pem . The purpose of this library is to do this dirty job under the hood.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameerlang-p1-pkix
PackageSectionlibs
PackageVersion1.0.7-3
SHA-127C790F747E8E288874223A32595908A72B890BA
SHA-256FB9C5B781F6F249650260BB33048784290513F8A35A845B93A71C722C4E6D587