Result for 455F22F542A812CC1013E0156CB9FA7178DC3FE5

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/trustme/__pycache__/_version.cpython-38.pyc
FileSize164
MD567E21BCDB02C7C24C6217705D70347B8
SHA-1455F22F542A812CC1013E0156CB9FA7178DC3FE5
SHA-25630D6A35AB044843936CC7DA4B0C03FD905FCFEFB92D183A87120811E281108CE
SSDEEP3:Ut1XtuletxbkCoOtt/lPlJhG9YAKWMmoWrzwPK4yLe8ITit:c3qetGCoOr/G9YvLor8PKFy8I6
TLSHT1C7C02B000D0181B3F5CAFF3B9120433C73F1D8D0A31D05013318A2A81D453540833C0C
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
MD56B6B70BAF881A30E6BA72E60AB67AB41
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionYou wrote a cool network client or server. It encrypts connections using TLS. Your test suite needs to make TLS connections to itself. Uh oh. Your test suite probably doesn’t have a valid TLS certificate. Now what? trustme is a tiny Python package that does one thing: it gives you a fake certificate authority (CA) that you can use to generate fake TLS certs to use in your tests. Well, technically they’re real certs, they’re just signed by your CA, which nobody trusts. But you can trust it. Trust me.
PackageMaintainerguillomovitch <guillomovitch>
PackageNamepython3-trustme
PackageRelease1.mga8
PackageVersion0.6.0
SHA-17C17A8F6087EDE7BE037D7084B0AAFBC99BB2E3A
SHA-256E5FA349CD762342789A2E911E0F02E970E7226E2A907E3916473109329B7C1D3