Result for 2203420F4254C19D8C0210D4AAD839E930B56330

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/postgresql/11/lib/bitcode/ogr_fdw/ogr_fdw_deparse.bc
FileSize18536
MD5F87AA69ED30DEE5CC1E9F9D8F642FB29
SHA-12203420F4254C19D8C0210D4AAD839E930B56330
SHA-25607B733B7A66CB1912B2DD86563DBE7C5C3E41EC170E2B3CF5AE192BB102E48B2
SSDEEP384:kuaIHBnVBwEcMqZ6Gx0TOfKWhpWrghiBMR/4UTn/yPqbyIxI6LG:TnzZ+ZBfRzWrCK+/4A/OqOp6K
TLSHT151824B2EF22A8123CE40A23E5C7E01D647F5E04DDE2157576079A76CAE70389EE73539
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

Network graph view

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
FileSize83560
MD5AEA8706CD56F52A288D42D8739B9CE8B
PackageDescriptionPostgreSQL foreign data wrapper for OGR OGR is the vector half of the GDAL spatial data access library. It allows access to a large number of GIS data formats using a simple C API for data reading and writing. Since OGR exposes a simple table structure and PostgreSQL foreign data wrappers allow access to table structures, the fit seems pretty perfect. . This implementation currently has the following limitations: * Only non-spatial query restrictions are pushed down to the OGR driver. PostgreSQL foreign data wrappers support delegating portions of the SQL query to the underlying data source, in this case OGR. This implementation currently pushes down only non-spatial query restrictions, and only for the small subset of comparison operators (>, <, <=, >=, =) supported by OGR. * Spatial restrictions are not pushed down. OGR can handle basic bounding box restrictions and even (for some drivers) more explicit intersection restrictions, but those are not passed to the OGR driver yet. * OGR connections every time Rather than pooling OGR connections, each query makes (and disposes of) two new ones, which seems to be the largest performance drag at the moment for restricted (small) queries. * All columns are retrieved every time. PostgreSQL foreign data wrappers don't require all columns all the time, and some efficiencies can be gained by only requesting the columns needed to fulfill a query. This would be a minimal efficiency improvement, but can be removed given some development time, since the OGR API supports returning a subset of columns.
PackageMaintainerDebian GIS Project <pkg-grass-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepostgresql-11-ogr-fdw
PackageSectiondatabase
PackageVersion1.0.7-2
SHA-1AC317094098ED3DC91ECC7926B80377871490AB2
SHA-256DD643136A1D5B2557214FEC851F10C1E478A115D2FF633A8A25EE4424BC8AA48