Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/astor/__pycache__/file_util.cpython-310.pyc |
FileSize | 3499 |
MD5 | DB67CE0672A90DC8A4136C7300749520 |
SHA-1 | 433C5EEF93E1B9B5686F4887EF397D777DC47D49 |
SHA-256 | 677054B4E16B373C869BBB2C2301384099C1A5BD8165449A35DA06DD92705D77 |
SSDEEP | 96:CnWlC0mtsBhyHql3ZopW8LkIsIJEtUe/r3:9lC0mtahyHG3ZVxr3 |
TLSH | T1777195930ACEACF6FF96F6BA010B91685228D177534721593C2E82CE1F1525893F2B94 |
tar:gname | root |
tar:uname | root |
hashlookup:parent-total | 10 |
hashlookup:trust | 100 |
The searched file hash is included in 10 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/latest-stable//community//armhf//py3-astor-0.8.1-r2.apk |
MD5 | 48F2279247B5561C69B0407D562AAE75 |
SHA-1 | BC698CF1E6F7FA1966108036F966F6432B4ED76D |
SHA-256 | CC2F3DEEC18A3F68481D8B0BAD2E8AD73D70A9E0885E1F9A82CC454508D3D90B |
SSDEEP | 1536:OVV/rzqGMA+z3Ala6TMNwODQIQB4TyCSN:oNzqG8clrTMtm4TbSN |
TLSH | T16E3302AF390B1B77F403B11B115565EA508A32EF95CE44CC8A981F1A6A7F550CC24EAF |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/latest-stable//community//armv7//py3-astor-0.8.1-r2.apk |
MD5 | 1101FF17F9661547CEFBD7DF35E96C15 |
SHA-1 | 908C5474BC5040E56895F7ED9306E238CD204D07 |
SHA-256 | 3B72C7DFB6F659ECD6B5E504850A4940AFC439E8F3A5D60220FF2B6F0CA526D4 |
SSDEEP | 1536:RCbYKLa1A1eepwdyjBrjOtvAG9nIQB4TyCSf:C721ceeWdylaVAG9Im4TbSf |
TLSH | T1D033025F243EB10F328E2643134E6C1F00C53B5AA6B4B8A5E6705D693719928DC39F0F |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 985C93B1C84513245AA29FB5520C6B08 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: - Round-trip an AST back to Python: - Modified AST doesn't need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work. - Easy to read generated code as, well, code - Can round-trip two different source trees to compare for functional differences, using the astor.rtrip tool (for example, after PEP8 edits). - Dump pretty-printing of AST - Harder to read than round-tripped code, but more accurate to figure out what is going on. - Easier to read than dump from built-in AST module - Non-recursive treewalk - Sometimes you want a recursive treewalk (and astor supports that, starting at any node on the tree), but sometimes you don't need to do that. astor doesn't require you to explicitly visit sub-nodes unless you want to: - You can add code that executes before a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes after a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes and keeps the node's children from being visited (and optionally visit them yourself via a recursive call) - Write functions to access the tree based on object names and/or attribute names - Enjoy easy access to parent node(s) for tree rewriting |
PackageMaintainer | https://bugs.opensuse.org |
PackageName | python310-astor |
PackageRelease | 6.3 |
PackageVersion | 0.8.1 |
SHA-1 | 389C93757BA088C648A4C011A3FC0DAE07FD5420 |
SHA-256 | 74A84BB2B759F0C4DA18D6EE36006E75092CF5C2DCCBC79144986F2FD85041B1 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/latest-stable//community//x86//py3-astor-0.8.1-r2.apk |
MD5 | BC359A88C4D185E599A99FA57281AC7F |
SHA-1 | EB80DF109721A1C0A7C94C7A4ECC844BED5DB3F3 |
SHA-256 | A6DF2FA9FF899A01DC8923EB896B00410946FD9D10846A14EA8429A6894CCC2F |
SSDEEP | 1536:2VV/rzqGMA+z3Ala6TMNwODQIQB4TyCSN:ANzqG8clrTMtm4TbSN |
TLSH | T14E3302DF390A1B77F403B01B115171AA508E26DF94CE54CC9A982F1A6ABF550CC24EAF |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/latest-stable//community//x86_64//py3-astor-0.8.1-r2.apk |
MD5 | 28B545AD406EE19803B35E2F0DF74E77 |
SHA-1 | BD27B0C3E07CB2A302E4AF1F81646049172A6FD3 |
SHA-256 | 302B4C4FFB11AC6D139F1D71321F013FF16AD429E0534EA965C18403A8519CC1 |
SSDEEP | 1536:/CbYKLa1A1eepwdyjBrjOtvAG9nIQB4TyCSf:0721ceeWdylaVAG9Im4TbSf |
TLSH | T1C633F15F643AB10F364E3643138EA80E40853B49A5B4F8A9E6705D693B1D928DC36F0F |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/latest-stable//community//s390x//py3-astor-0.8.1-r2.apk |
MD5 | A35C964DF0E18DE1738831DA41E440F3 |
SHA-1 | 0D6358CF804063230A499E4680C3418E0DDC0719 |
SHA-256 | 023FBDF2D95B461E778526196DBB733267F5C48CEED3276A20C25FA96DA34DD8 |
SSDEEP | 768:YW0ESMj8VG6UCP+lGPMAaJDGh43AIWC0w6anAr3TtWwIwRhwOsDURNPIQB4TECbO:W/rzqGMA+z3Ala6TMNwODQIQB4TECSB |
TLSH | T1A83302AF351A1B77B503B01B125172BA508A26EFA4CD44C88AA41F1B5BBE550CD24FBF |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 3549FA9995C46AB35B2EA053126B9D91 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: - Round-trip an AST back to Python: - Modified AST doesn't need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work. - Easy to read generated code as, well, code - Can round-trip two different source trees to compare for functional differences, using the astor.rtrip tool (for example, after PEP8 edits). - Dump pretty-printing of AST - Harder to read than round-tripped code, but more accurate to figure out what is going on. - Easier to read than dump from built-in AST module - Non-recursive treewalk - Sometimes you want a recursive treewalk (and astor supports that, starting at any node on the tree), but sometimes you don't need to do that. astor doesn't require you to explicitly visit sub-nodes unless you want to: - You can add code that executes before a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes after a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes and keeps the node's children from being visited (and optionally visit them yourself via a recursive call) - Write functions to access the tree based on object names and/or attribute names - Enjoy easy access to parent node(s) for tree rewriting |
PackageName | python310-astor |
PackageRelease | 29.4 |
PackageVersion | 0.8.1 |
SHA-1 | 12130070484E404670FF1F0413BFBA5310D1F4D3 |
SHA-256 | 944EBD25770BCE765536566B4FBF3088075D96F07D9F8641F212EBD72AAF249A |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 9377BDA15F78238CF4783B20FEF5BC1C |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: - Round-trip an AST back to Python: - Modified AST doesn't need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work. - Easy to read generated code as, well, code - Can round-trip two different source trees to compare for functional differences, using the astor.rtrip tool (for example, after PEP8 edits). - Dump pretty-printing of AST - Harder to read than round-tripped code, but more accurate to figure out what is going on. - Easier to read than dump from built-in AST module - Non-recursive treewalk - Sometimes you want a recursive treewalk (and astor supports that, starting at any node on the tree), but sometimes you don't need to do that. astor doesn't require you to explicitly visit sub-nodes unless you want to: - You can add code that executes before a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes after a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes and keeps the node's children from being visited (and optionally visit them yourself via a recursive call) - Write functions to access the tree based on object names and/or attribute names - Enjoy easy access to parent node(s) for tree rewriting |
PackageName | python310-astor |
PackageRelease | 29.4 |
PackageVersion | 0.8.1 |
SHA-1 | C0867341D309D6E5A65AA58EDC2F8468E737BDE0 |
SHA-256 | D66C5DDA4E89296A08234876FFCD04FC7DB62E87B7B12841A1B2583E93D890A4 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 89C3C7D589B10078BB770FA0581CC662 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: - Round-trip an AST back to Python: - Modified AST doesn't need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work. - Easy to read generated code as, well, code - Can round-trip two different source trees to compare for functional differences, using the astor.rtrip tool (for example, after PEP8 edits). - Dump pretty-printing of AST - Harder to read than round-tripped code, but more accurate to figure out what is going on. - Easier to read than dump from built-in AST module - Non-recursive treewalk - Sometimes you want a recursive treewalk (and astor supports that, starting at any node on the tree), but sometimes you don't need to do that. astor doesn't require you to explicitly visit sub-nodes unless you want to: - You can add code that executes before a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes after a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes and keeps the node's children from being visited (and optionally visit them yourself via a recursive call) - Write functions to access the tree based on object names and/or attribute names - Enjoy easy access to parent node(s) for tree rewriting |
PackageName | python310-astor |
PackageRelease | 29.5 |
PackageVersion | 0.8.1 |
SHA-1 | 7806B7DF9C695FBE27E923B8BE73AD3692B7216A |
SHA-256 | 2080EF5B744C09AB069CA41E8D298C343E662638FD20BE9F56294194AD8A5ADA |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | ED589EF4BDAADC4EAB8495E2085D9A70 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | astor is designed to allow easy manipulation of Python source via the AST. There are some other similar libraries, but astor focuses on the following areas: - Round-trip an AST back to Python: - Modified AST doesn't need linenumbers, ctx, etc. or otherwise be directly compileable for the round-trip to work. - Easy to read generated code as, well, code - Can round-trip two different source trees to compare for functional differences, using the astor.rtrip tool (for example, after PEP8 edits). - Dump pretty-printing of AST - Harder to read than round-tripped code, but more accurate to figure out what is going on. - Easier to read than dump from built-in AST module - Non-recursive treewalk - Sometimes you want a recursive treewalk (and astor supports that, starting at any node on the tree), but sometimes you don't need to do that. astor doesn't require you to explicitly visit sub-nodes unless you want to: - You can add code that executes before a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes after a node's children are visited, and/or - You can add code that executes and keeps the node's children from being visited (and optionally visit them yourself via a recursive call) - Write functions to access the tree based on object names and/or attribute names - Enjoy easy access to parent node(s) for tree rewriting |
PackageName | python310-astor |
PackageRelease | 29.4 |
PackageVersion | 0.8.1 |
SHA-1 | DFEDACB94B634C4291052E34BF35E798E64289EC |
SHA-256 | 0A0910AF6EFAD3CCA5B170F62E34CD8C82FD42B12C2AA57DF35F8D931D3E79FD |