Result for 375E7A7392EA770A7A51D436741A50C246D17FF3

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/sbin/ebtables-legacy
FileSize16072
MD5242957F576F106F20A4E9596426A0E92
SHA-1375E7A7392EA770A7A51D436741A50C246D17FF3
SHA-256CD77F900163343B7ED07153C52D9A6B58ADC2C9E04EC14C9CC4E8553ABDF87B4
SSDEEP96:R8IHmTgB+B5DWMZx36upDYnLpjD0U0H7u8ydzvc9TgfeCW9:RLm8wrZZx3Jxk9jD+bu8yZvkgo
TLSHT14B72964BF3A3CE3ECDBC077888A7863527BDD004926243232661B2351EC37549F6B996
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
MD53549E7A5989BDF3025FCC73C78AD9B29
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionEthernet bridge tables is a firewalling tool to transparently filter network traffic passing a bridge. The filtering possibilities are limited to link layer filtering and some basic filtering on higher network layers. This tool is the userspace control for the bridge and ebtables kernel components (built by default in Fedora kernels). The ebtables tool can be used together with the other Linux filtering tools, like iptables. There are no known incompatibility issues. Note that it is considered legacy upstream since nftables provides the same functionality in a much newer code-base. To aid in migration, there is ebtables-nft utility, a drop-in replacement for the legacy one which uses nftables internally. It is provided by iptables-nft package.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameebtables-legacy
PackageRelease9.fc34
PackageVersion2.0.11
SHA-16761B8623F009186EB1A2702D95C7E74A276491E
SHA-256C100F39E82903784363779933917412D7F77B29535B570F0B056F14532CFA79E