Result for 2D20186931C0A61457B331067042697B066FB8E5

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/protocols/_speedups.so
FileSize35728
MD5237822F223052D2D48B69BBBF65AD311
SHA-12D20186931C0A61457B331067042697B066FB8E5
SHA-256128E714FB11F1B1E9504157C033B1D0AE85AEEE4A6D57A5A499A49202BC87C0F
SSDEEP768:OTTUfTRt7D7kwnKnp+J1CQxJoYtP6c2VSMQ52G+cV16o4po:dttfo4KnkJoYtn2VSL5XT6o4e
TLSHT1D6F2B7A277FBC8F6E25387F483D5DCB52AA0C304E177E1F0B5046FC9B461B2959242A5
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
FileSize37936
MD54D862D5E7F15A37214B61CD0F2397B52
PackageDescriptionOpen Protocols and Component Adaptation for Python Do you hate having to write lots of if-then logic to test what type something is? Wouldn't it be nice if you could just declare "I want this object to have this behavior" and magically convert whatever value you have, to the type you need? PyProtocols lets you do just that, cleanly, quickly, and robustly -- even with built-in types or other people's classes. . PyProtocols extends the PEP 246 adapt() function with a new "declaration API" that lets you easily define your own protocols and adapters, and declare what adapters should be used to adapt what types, objects, or protocols. In addition to its own Interface type, PyProtocols can also use Twisted and Zope's Interface types too. (Of course, since Twisted and Zope interfaces aren't as flexible, only a subset of the PyProtocols API works with them. Specific limitations are listed in the documentation.)
PackageMaintainerDebian QA Group <packages@qa.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-protocols
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0a.svn20070625-7
SHA-1E3B72D7FC17673A29D2468BCEE3AB7307AE9C02E
SHA-256BE1EF2627FFA7E8C5ED65C57705601AEAA612CA673DE452AD9BAB49F348DD1A2