Result for 459EE33F40EE8FE074B6B70165F8CAB64FF1B75C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/packages/perl-File-pushd/examples/example.pl
FileSize564
MD59B2B79989F8B5B27CAC64558C1CEE0A6
SHA-1459EE33F40EE8FE074B6B70165F8CAB64FF1B75C
SHA-256A61625FBC6C2A90269CBC45029E4DFD4B348FC599251467A63744FB5A42BE6B2
SSDEEP6:ZZq8jSBVfKQZF3Iodd6ua7MFgT2ozC3DCM7UjBmB7D7Tugxzev2VRYFVuIevX0jx:3qDyQZF3ff7rFLDwgx8CRowZ4O97S7v
TLSHT122F04610665681E40897C8BCB882EC06130501C345C8F25C3F9CC6D18F37992CFB616D
hashlookup:parent-total30
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 30)

The searched file hash is included in 30 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD50DE44B6C9E74F73B4219D0A1E7D0CE05
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleaselp152.19.1
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-10968D15B1935D0F300E2994550A3CE493BD89FB6
SHA-2566FDE8B8C868FF84946AABD079AB2013095346DC81F011B5E181CE0673227C805
Key Value
MD5C6F21A643B328E8F7DD82F2B6034E957
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageRelease19.2
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-10E1ED8AEE1B3558F6473480D43EA501305817EBE
SHA-256E11DB28CD41419CFB699A51D13DD658FAF3A6C235E35A5362D9B9F8EAF376EDD
Key Value
MD574C86B272BC2415B7991081CE35E030B
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from the File::Temp manpage. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered.
PackageMaintainerumeabot <umeabot>
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageRelease2.mga7
PackageVersion1.16.0
SHA-117C45A0E8C4CE759BB4C9EB9C77788FDD9D78262
SHA-2568459C77AC4E6EEDE8D6D4BDEBC0A60C00A1B7D9706803216B0C0DA380199F0EC
Key Value
MD5F420EE7671BD37F8222396AB10F908DB
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageRelease20.11
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-11CAA23436689A6AAE111EFED50C319D3A5B17BF9
SHA-2568F1ACA29E354875072BE811375EF8AA08E4107BF41F9B93A64A4DF9EA7E6AB5B
Key Value
MD5441E76A2D476E5271A39A6122EE9DA10
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleaselp150.18.1
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-1290C02402B73AF7DA0A1CF8E2790DE8C11D5CFC9
SHA-256DC919CFCD5810A59B415A8B94F26128E48991F4A3445D401480326D75D45DA04
Key Value
MD5C3FF8C45F3F48E8C1A799CD60E3EBF38
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageRelease2.25
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-1311EF46B3B09FBDE3E79E124F4BAF8824E863026
SHA-256DDB28B940834731463694C0BB3695527D9C8ACD480FA94F19416B1A58AA469FC
Key Value
MD5989EA72DE93BE91B7F80438D6A12AC32
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleaselp152.1.1
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-13E63043815A3BF3A431FC0FBB469E7789E2ADC9C
SHA-2562052D21C1D6C314F7CB8DF1F03E3CE9288CA733D47E86C31B73D7145D9BA1526
Key Value
MD5F79DA770AB6F6AB3FAC6CBC54318AEAD
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageRelease1.14
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-145C40ACBF7394267676502D7852C8CE61D5EA32E
SHA-2569F6F021583F8C808B0544215F3C60207B7C61C546B914E66B6DF88AEE46E200E
Key Value
MD50ED3B12CCF89C2FEDD93D5F37A721024
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleasebp156.3.1
PackageVersion1.014
SHA-14A9D5C3FB48A1C0443AACEF6519401BBDF76BCC9
SHA-256A1C1CA94D8CFFEC34691CFB555B2C0CA3F0BA8F9E4D4AD73C4918CF8C9103F82
Key Value
MD56B34863EE4F8931B7D2AEF6F9FDBB202
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from the File::Temp manpage. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered.
PackageMaintainerumeabot <umeabot>
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageRelease4.mga9
PackageVersion1.16.0
SHA-14B15F37E3A3A0704F528B1A4D66B78DDFEE00084
SHA-2564769E410DE25432BD8D95D99D0DCD50D750716E52ABBC8DFFC5007BF1F8027A1