Result for 2993C6AE5509A17B4754CD0EF4C94E18C3E4E730

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/sbin/ipset
FileSize15672
MD5B9B9E5E5368424BD8BD7391F3997650F
SHA-12993C6AE5509A17B4754CD0EF4C94E18C3E4E730
SHA-256304B6ADDC183745FA2D183E3FF4E280E12F92DD504A89FE523937266CA61F66A
SSDEEP96:RvIGeT7OB+Bjp/QRzDWYMkc0sEKlF5M2ZmDW7OHNjelvc9FeiYC:RteWwL/QRz9Mkc0sEF2AWyHNqlvU
TLSHT17362951AB3D18E3ECCFC573844CB8735A2B5A404A2B293375B64753A2DC33945677C9A
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
MD5385F951F050AA6E2B98FBE8AA52F2E90
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionIP sets are a framework inside the Linux kernel since version 2.4.x, which can be administered by the ipset utility. Depending on the type, currently an IP set may store IP addresses, (TCP/UDP) port numbers or IP addresses with MAC addresses in a way, which ensures lightning speed when matching an entry against a set. If you want to: - store multiple IP addresses or port numbers and match against the collection by iptables at one swoop; - dynamically update iptables rules against IP addresses or ports without performance penalty; - express complex IP address and ports based rulesets with one single iptables rule and benefit from the speed of IP sets then ipset may be the proper tool for you.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameipset
PackageRelease2.fc33
PackageVersion7.6
SHA-13A10A1EA51398B523A9DD281E57161F0522EC7E6
SHA-2564CE381CF2C13167C194C1F652C7BC0677A3D3D769C76E80C1BF61B45FBE23371