Result for 4B8E4F7FC89455B15044116C1DAD2D84707BDCC8

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/sbin/ipset
FileSize69224
MD55AB416D197BF598F9FD33727C4CC0014
SHA-14B8E4F7FC89455B15044116C1DAD2D84707BDCC8
SHA-25661AA33900620E276AFAEC0B862C7C2F4CEC18FC0ADEC50FDFBA2343A60270ABA
SSDEEP96:z7ccB+BFMpi0AcT+5UYalyFdAtnvBRs9xUvD9noam:zQcwei0A++5UuYnZ6uv
TLSHT1F2635229F756DCAFE9AC873849DB83A0B332E81693634743724892742E573D40F56AC9
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
MD54028C59F5336FE36D7DC6A59A8ECEA77
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionIP sets are a framework inside the Linux kernel since version 2.4.x, which can be administered by the ipset utility. Depending on the type, currently an IP set may store IP addresses, (TCP/UDP) port numbers or IP addresses with MAC addresses in a way, which ensures lightning speed when matching an entry against a set. If you want to: - store multiple IP addresses or port numbers and match against the collection by iptables at one swoop; - dynamically update iptables rules against IP addresses or ports without performance penalty; - express complex IP address and ports based rulesets with one single iptables rule and benefit from the speed of IP sets then ipset may be the proper tool for you.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameipset
PackageRelease1.fc34
PackageVersion7.11
SHA-126C80767EE146A8D3247DE31F3FD030E0B177037
SHA-2563381367F7142FCA98999F2BF737FF1DCC895AF2E2550FE35538DD03718964C45