Result for 2952E57FDDDDAF7AE4C199DD27A72862B165A963

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib64/ocaml/stublibs/dllancient.so
FileSize68416
MD5281DEF65DAC45841A243BA576FE2550A
SHA-12952E57FDDDDAF7AE4C199DD27A72862B165A963
SHA-256B2F31B32661214AA3573139DFB8EE7FE455FC6F1465599F70D24A314C8DE2AFC
SSDEEP384:dDXqYFBAj8OC9f2UKpxS0YQfAE2BJPQvAcllNQDnyNWH5PDAu58jZ:duYmjtC9+ZxS0YQfATBPylYyNWZPDpW
TLSHT1506362E2BE1C394BD5AB6B7120A03BF4D53D7856476C520BEB0B072E45A3B845E0EDC6
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
MD58C86E8E57AB2171F2609D8AC36C6DCC7
PackageArchppc64
PackageDescriptionAncient is an OCaml module that allows you to use in-memory data structures which are larger than available memory and so are kept in swap. If you try this in normal OCaml code, you'll find that the machine quickly descends into thrashing as the garbage collector repeatedly iterates over swapped memory structures. This module lets you break that limitation. Of course the module doesn't work by magic. If your program tries to access these large structures, they still need to be swapped back in, but it is suitable for large, sparsely accessed structures. Secondly, this module allows you to share those structures between processes. In this mode, the structures are backed by a disk file, and any process that has read/write access to that disk file can map that file in and see the structures. Developers should read the README.txt file included with the ocaml-ancient-devel package carefully.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameocaml-ancient
PackageRelease11.fc19
PackageVersion0.9.0
SHA-15DF716A5794233936C514CC5D50C9B07A5AE0C61
SHA-256D431B1EFDBA01B51BCE0B0B2E43008DB13D9263FB540C123167A6F0475F7E005