Result for 40BC2DFADF16AADA848A4C2EE168DD98B50E3111

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib64/python3.10/site-packages/snimpy/__pycache__/smi_build.cpython-310.opt-1.pyc
FileSize4629
MD5F6A51CC50F87FBFBD91321B520FA1134
SHA-140BC2DFADF16AADA848A4C2EE168DD98B50E3111
SHA-256B73DAEA642EE4775030C55AD8ACD8B82EB5864DDB45548CC30F9B072D1C29F31
SSDEEP96:/4g7k89kx9Mlfpz6MTSpJnUqAppscY06wlhmM+Q2fOU5I0RoXZgZ6pfOin0P:/431x9MlfJ6MTSpJnUqAppscY06wXP+D
TLSHT117A11D9359C724CB722442379F5169CEAC8F00A3F750F4A1394F26B20F696C916B93E9
hashlookup:parent-total3
hashlookup:trust65

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Parents (Total: 3)

The searched file hash is included in 3 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5D750827B10231CC474DB0588BE5C5A4A
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageNamepython310-snimpy
PackageRelease10.25
PackageVersion1.0.0
SHA-17D13678E059F30EBB5D982405AD44DBDEE1462BC
SHA-256CC9551B2B1BEE4F32C3B5A3F7F31BC70AEB4D4CBFDB009AB36E03BE98B8A76DA
Key Value
MD54BCD63ED2936C45B11A3B843063FB53E
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamepython310-snimpy
PackageRelease1.4
PackageVersion1.0.0
SHA-140179DB2C7F819FCA91F9B9B60561D08B4C9F9DB
SHA-2560EF1D4AC3BE7D747757CC8AD03B2A2A56DBEF817012F69E9BDDEB7F78F7954AD
Key Value
MD5501FB82AE4DB9D984467D210329EF1FF
PackageArchs390x
PackageDescriptionSnimpy is a Python-based tool providing a simple interface to build SNMP query. You can either use Snimpy interactively through its console (derived from Python own console or from IPython_ if available) or write Snimpy scripts which are just Python scripts with some global variables available. Snimpy is aimed at being the more Pythonic possible. You should forget that you are doing SNMP requests. Snimpy will rely on MIB to hide SNMP details. Here are some "features": * MIB parser based on libsmi (through CFFI) * SNMP requests are handled by PySNMP (SNMPv1, SNMPv2 and SNMPv3 support) * scalars are just attributes of your session object * columns are like a Python dictionary and made available as an attribute * getting an attribute is like issuing a GET method * setting an attribute is like issuing a SET method * iterating over a table is like using GETNEXT * when something goes wrong, you get an exception
PackageNamepython310-snimpy
PackageRelease10.16
PackageVersion1.0.0
SHA-1596188A8D8A04A6E2F0CC5781DDED4CC7F75E807
SHA-2563FD8DB7D79B0B171C7ADFFD99136AA01145CB8A251A471AB52C82C338086550A