Result for 2013E9288D421D95502DB66601D4BCE75120C700

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/packages/ruby2.6-rubygem-mime-types-1/History.rdoc
FileSize69
MD527670690D894956B0EE1BAD5B35C62EC
SHA-12013E9288D421D95502DB66601D4BCE75120C700
SHA-2567002B5FE9D40A76B404A6F7F0653FBB5C71BFCC79C81AF6D32446E39E9A3F1D4
SSDEEP3:gC63cZA21+rKEcVJutkGn:dzm1cVotkGn
TLSHT154A002A1C3B320A46A82C053EC19FE0377940D1F7B1E7F0476ED593A505871B738A992
hashlookup:parent-total7
hashlookup:trust85

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Parents (Total: 7)

The searched file hash is included in 7 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD53955F603B52A450CC4922D518205708B
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25.1, fixing an issue with priority comparison for mime-types 1.x. The current release is 2.0, which only supports Ruby 1.9 or later. Release 1.25.1 contains all features of 1.25, including the experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for any later version. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageRelease14.3
PackageVersion1.25.1
SHA-18D0391A364E561E6F01A5D200CC7E084F3F1AAD2
SHA-2567C61C4032BE63DB3CFC2DD51887A61453E19EAF58DBED46F2C99C7CB64D316E0
Key Value
MD56A82CFD18CAAD0F9A700C9A364BD6905
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25.1, fixing an issue with priority comparison for mime-types 1.x. The current release is 2.0, which only supports Ruby 1.9 or later. Release 1.25.1 contains all features of 1.25, including the experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for any later version. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageRelease14.3
PackageVersion1.25.1
SHA-1B19594D1E4DDD30AFA58958CF48EEA723B286FF0
SHA-2565A115FDCF749BC24B5B4C6D1223013824EE389FB917D0FEB20DEE245FBFB27E1
Key Value
MD596B07E69CAC83D62D7EFBA98B071347E
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25.1, fixing an issue with priority comparison for mime-types 1.x. The current release is 2.0, which only supports Ruby 1.9 or later. Release 1.25.1 contains all features of 1.25, including the experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for any later version. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageReleaselp154.14.2
PackageVersion1.25.1
SHA-1111FF501BAC6C20455A8BBFD15543B5FD85CFC8A
SHA-25669BC22AFACB2C6355ACF94537BF899636369202782DC52B35E34DE919C8DA83D
Key Value
MD50567B3F18A4447D6FD24BA6045E38B0A
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25.1, fixing an issue with priority comparison for mime-types 1.x. The current release is 2.0, which only supports Ruby 1.9 or later. Release 1.25.1 contains all features of 1.25, including the experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for any later version. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageRelease14.2
PackageVersion1.25.1
SHA-14CCCCCC5501A583D63D666A7F94E25E201826CB1
SHA-256C0C937DFC2E177764FB664D32CA1C42DE078E9C4925F23B2D8116546442D25B8
Key Value
MD5E3C5431A665ABFCBA2289B1B9980FF37
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25.1, fixing an issue with priority comparison for mime-types 1.x. The current release is 2.0, which only supports Ruby 1.9 or later. Release 1.25.1 contains all features of 1.25, including the experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for any later version. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageReleaselp153.14.4
PackageVersion1.25.1
SHA-19B9A24DBABEAB4EF0E365A8A688885AA21073804
SHA-2565CC5E580E7E7C78C82FEC1BB95000C0FA207763E7D7DB2EB68C1EC98402655BA
Key Value
MD55F91E90B1ACDA49C208CCFDBD3383257
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25.1, fixing an issue with priority comparison for mime-types 1.x. The current release is 2.0, which only supports Ruby 1.9 or later. Release 1.25.1 contains all features of 1.25, including the experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for any later version. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageReleaselp151.14.2
PackageVersion1.25.1
SHA-13805321E2959C5576302C5F615CDF3130C3EB081
SHA-256262C0D0A89A03E99477396F831D479320FD2856566C645A40A75EC2BBE037E32
Key Value
MD55EF3E8670127481B5AF202A801BE497B
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionThis library allows for the identification of a file's likely MIME content type. This is release 1.25.1, fixing an issue with priority comparison for mime-types 1.x. The current release is 2.0, which only supports Ruby 1.9 or later. Release 1.25.1 contains all features of 1.25, including the experimental caching and lazy loading functionality. The caching and lazy loading features were initially implemented by Greg Brockman (gdb). As these features are experimental, they are disabled by default and must be enabled through the use of environment variables. The cache is invalidated on a per-version basis; the cache for version 1.25 will not be reused for any later version. To use lazy loading, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+ to any value other than 'false'. When using lazy loading, the initial startup of MIME::Types is around 12–25× faster than normal startup (on my system, normal startup is about 90 ms; lazy startup is about 4 ms). This isn't generally useful, however, as the MIME::Types database has not been loaded. Lazy startup and load is just *slightly* faster—around 1 ms. The real advantage comes from using the cache. To enable the cache, set the environment variable +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_CACHE+ to a filename where MIME::Types will have read-write access. The first time a new version of MIME::Types is run using this file, it will be created, taking a little longer than normal. Subsequent loads using the same cache file will be approximately 3½× faster (25 ms) than normal loads. This can be combined with +RUBY_MIME_TYPES_LAZY_LOAD+, but this is *not* recommended in a multithreaded or multiprocess environment where all threads or processes will be using the same cache file. As the caching interface is still experimental, the only values cached are the default MIME::Types database, not any custom MIME::Types added by users. MIME types are used in MIME-compliant communications, as in e-mail or HTTP traffic, to indicate the type of content which is transmitted. MIME::Types provides the ability for detailed information about MIME entities (provided as a set of MIME::Type objects) to be determined and used programmatically. There are many types defined by RFCs and vendors, so the list is long but not complete; don't hesitate to ask to add additional information. This library follows the IANA collection of MIME types (see below for reference). MIME::Types for Ruby was originally based on MIME::Types for Perl by Mark Overmeer, copyright 2001 - 2009. MIME::Types is built to conform to the MIME types of RFCs 2045 and 2231. It tracks the {IANA registry}[http://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/] ({ftp}[ftp://ftp.iana.org/assignments/media-types]) with some unofficial types added from the {LTSW collection}[http://www.ltsw.se/knbase/internet/mime.htp] and added by the users of MIME::Types.
PackageNameruby2.6-rubygem-mime-types-1
PackageReleaselp152.14.2
PackageVersion1.25.1
SHA-1302C4A48290A307A8C76A1CA819C2E96F16B1871
SHA-256177AD768C1C2A7AA166BC7FEF2E24347D92649291D02529103F992D7BBDE9401