Result for 3CD53AC4AB22985CFF1DB6FE6E6992E3AA8589C7

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/backports.functools_lru_cache-1.2.1-py2.7-nspkg.pth
FileSize316
MD581C9D39C81EE3FDD4B78248C894BDCB9
SHA-13CD53AC4AB22985CFF1DB6FE6E6992E3AA8589C7
SHA-256E7902B0EC4515E54ECE954DDE4036B9136570DE6F219E8EF5893F3BBE87FB9D2
SSDEEP6:kjtJwvDRjL2QNESDcZSFIEourcjWz/rDZo/VASSD0DViFN4R1YtM8lN6sVxwiOO:k3gDRGQNEhZ0xourgWz/AvfV5Rp8loun
TLSHT130E07DDA2073A39F44B342ACCAF016A04F4D0D6423417E20B0CD07D47A02D54819E3A8
hashlookup:parent-total12
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 12)

The searched file hash is included in 12 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5162008329E647B913A943E8B1FC33B55
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc21
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-1E0D12AF7B34372C590AFFC82605F12C76FD3A7B9
SHA-256E7709D878B74A70C2784FB43DA60278BFF5385DE86746F5B1A6A2307064E3CA1
Key Value
MD53A4982766B6319D19C87A751B334E35A
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe ancient ConfigParser module available in the standard library 2.x has seen a major update in Python 3.2. This package is a backport of those changes so that they can be used directly in Python 2.6 - 3.5.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-configparser
PackageRelease1.el6
PackageVersion3.5.0b2
SHA-196BC4D229578DDDE3579CC74C2BFA5412F549C9C
SHA-2566AAAE947AE893D28BF82EB18740ABD9B4708216F61D3214B2E425C858153631E
Key Value
MD5B71A76F827CC0EEFCF3868F31369529A
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc21
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-19A7DE6C564DC53B620F5F5C981CE556696381A60
SHA-256E0B845E722FB30C8127F4AC10E6E9CE30821F047476AA684F8CA3B8802B83404
Key Value
MD588884CAEAD1BE42FA8D3917918556453
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc22
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-153710B6ACAECA400A6707A1BCBE19CBFBC2168F4
SHA-256CBC0E1942B91CAC3E1FCC95EBD660EF713D437C60DFDF6FF153B086FD7876161
Key Value
MD590B3BA947FEFDA00A34E39371860E28A
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc21
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-163C14D7896CEA6A0E873A9CDEC025F206301E77B
SHA-25673E6CEDD7E88E1F1AA0C83636C46D8C0FED9821D71078EC7C12DFE7D9902F733
Key Value
MD508BEE4504046B90F68F04070E12E4C63
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionA backport of functools.lru_cache from Python 3.3 as published at ActiveState.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython2-backports-functools_lru_cache
PackageRelease4.el7
PackageVersion1.2.1
SHA-15A6E7E516A4D17ADEDEBAF36EB099BF5E48FC609
SHA-25634CA94050B0052B350BACCD37C19204F65ADE13C3060D7002844F9BF474FF0D0
Key Value
MD5A7F896864EF4CDEC890286EFB26AE720
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc22
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-1406E6424CAADCC839D0CB927E1ABEF14D3288CFE
SHA-256E241DA541B838C65783EFA9FF62A0B6DF4452CA088EB7521DFE807227F269979
Key Value
MD561BD4E9D184C6E17679C3C22353FC255
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe ancient ConfigParser module available in the standard library 2.x has seen a major update in Python 3.2. This package is a backport of those changes so that they can be used directly in Python 2.6 - 3.5.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-configparser
PackageRelease1.el7
PackageVersion3.5.0b2
SHA-13599C27E7E9C92AE727477EB3363668FC3322E14
SHA-256D037196E3528CA9823B055BEC996662F317095601B77B6999C1247D9F036B0C3
Key Value
MD508B6E225214F06742E5EDCA76461FDE7
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc22
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-164938307FBACCC6F6F9234499E37E8B255AF9E01
SHA-2567F5B7F818B801D86AC84F34A3C09694655C9A6F5301D591F975383F886F820E7
Key Value
MD5E534C79840D59C06C25A78BA412C7B98
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc22
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-1F8DEBB1CE2F606BD936E344883E1408DB6C3079B
SHA-2565BB495EFE95BDAFCAF14E22CDBE0898E820464792CF9400566D3F5328568E28C
Key Value
MD596869692F504F67328670246608F0B37
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc22
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-169BF68530E28A1EC65D27AEC55DC557734CCA442
SHA-256A6A0E003E85D2EDC9E2C54406F371FEFB64CEBA5912D4DDD789A86F92FC15103
Key Value
MD56AADF79A982C5257C04A8FAA075FAD7C
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Secure Sockets layer is only actually secure if you check the hostname in the certificate returned by the server to which you are connecting, and verify that it matches to hostname that you are trying to reach. But the matching logic, defined in RFC2818, can be a bit tricky to implement on your own. So the ssl package in the Standard Library of Python 3.2 now includes a match_hostname() function for performing this check instead of requiring every application to implement the check separately. This backport brings match_hostname() to users of earlier versions of Python. The actual code inside comes verbatim from Python 3.2.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython-backports-ssl_match_hostname
PackageRelease4.fc22
PackageVersion3.4.0.2
SHA-1FF36A738D5BFFA0B6F9C8855050B1D6417B26CB2
SHA-256E81DEC5D16558FBDB145094A09826D085A7DEC9CA6EC8C6D5CE9A249F7A5C2F7