Result for 30FD30E1B8AF314C895AFB2CBDDEBADDB9CAA8FB

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man1/xine-config.1.gz
FileSize975
MD50EC49330D6EA70B255F591C1D75346ED
SHA-130FD30E1B8AF314C895AFB2CBDDEBADDB9CAA8FB
SHA-256E3DCEC140A941385380B89D355398F6F9DDF77569F8EAEEA113CAFBB4A4FEEC0
SSDEEP24:Xkvy+zlScs5V8ADsuOy2Ux3ttchfypLrgHMp7Tp5f1OE3Smor68W/pUon:XWHBmV82x2UxttSe/pXCZRKp/
TLSHT14411084A8ACE913F463080D848A2FD3FEC91ADC5606039A00153E618772861FB08EE1C
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
FileSize106050
MD50E1DA586528FADC6F0027CBC552E928E
PackageDescriptionthe xine video player library, development packages This contains development files (headers, documentation and the like) for the xine library (libxine). . Libxine provides the complete infrastructure for a video/media player. It supports MPEG 1/2 and some AVI and Quicktime videos out of the box, so you can use it to play DVDs, (S)VCDs and most video files out there. It supports network streams, subtitles and even mp3 files. It's extensible to your heart's content via plugins for audio_out, video_out, input media, demuxers (stream types), audio/video and subtitle codecs. Building a GUI (or text based) frontend around this should be quite easy. The xine-ui package provides one for your convenience, so you can just start watching your VCDs ;-)
PackageMaintainerSiggi Langauf <siggi@debian.org>
PackageNamelibxine-dev
PackageSectionlibdevel
PackageVersion1.0-1ubuntu2
SHA-1983FE87A259F27924D3B3AB4C8FAB1C8BFCF2074
SHA-25635F16F3DC624D8612D4EBA7FB95707379EB3ED9E52EA346AC932EE83C1A2F2F0