Key | Value |
---|---|
CRC32 | 04402D45 |
FileName | hell.rb |
FileSize | 178 |
MD5 | 889762DD256F6AB4866498A16DAB9F8A |
OpSystemCode | {'MfgCode': '1006', 'OpSystemCode': '362', 'OpSystemName': 'TBD', 'OpSystemVersion': 'none'} |
ProductCode | {'ApplicationType': 'Operating System', 'Language': 'Multilanguage', 'MfgCode': '2529', 'OpSystemCode': '913', 'ProductCode': '185406', 'ProductName': 'Linux Mint Xfce (Sonya)', 'ProductVersion': '18.2'} |
RDS:package_id | 222721 |
SHA-1 | 4C571072869D53B564D346D12968FD18DB8D1291 |
SHA-256 | BC2D64572FA51E2E5804BC35D45AC267B980040C6A88EA368F6E00E7E4FFE43D |
SHA-512 | 3F439ECEAF23BE0F6353B9A69F0D74AEC37F118CDBA7E0E84D7E9B92334807B5E5BD81404C60E3CCD2858B2E20FE601EFB18BBB132669661C733C0E86D205E63 |
SSDEEP | 3:72N+EJOJvezBdFySFtd4WFiJB6RzRM9KBdfvvF/7mrzxKBdfvFFNPEXMAhFuFEvA:7XEJOJvKdFy2td4CiP6zRmKXf3FCrzxo |
SpecialCode | |
TLSH | T110C08C0BFAF300738382AA82C8ECC872D58CF127C3000A70B1D830483F10268ADF162D |
db | nsrl_modern_rds |
insert-timestamp | 1727040616.7093844 |
mimetype | text/x-ruby |
source | RDS.db |
tar:gname | bin |
tar:uname | root |
hashlookup:parent-total | 193 |
hashlookup:trust | 100 |
The searched file hash is included in 193 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | https://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD/6.1/packages//mips64//ruby-2.3.3.tgz |
MD5 | B46FB1DE41A7325E58690CEF7A0311D9 |
SHA-1 | 02231AF790DBC3B171A75054342F6914A157C8FF |
SHA-256 | CF3B1D81C3E6D44D2CB0208FC3763F27207F65FF05D382640D774BB056B1547D |
SSDEEP | 196608:TWe+IpdvwLUXuamGi8/dnOZcJv7ebXfSp+fPa7:TWDIpd4LUXuam/ciIv7ebXfO+fPE |
TLSH | T171763341A4A4B1D19005D8376229B723633137D67EFAB9C76C1B3FA4A3D295CFD28D84 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | D6B68261E5211BD553035A2FA27A0BA2 |
PackageArch | x86_64 |
PackageDescription | minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking. "I had a class with Jim Weirich on testing last week and we were allowed to choose our testing frameworks. Kirk Haines and I were paired up and we cracked open the code for a few test frameworks... I MUST say that minitest is *very* readable / understandable compared to the 'other two' options we looked at. Nicely done and thank you for helping us keep our mental sanity." -- Wayne E. Seguin minitest/unit is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework. It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and readable. minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto minitest/unit and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec expectations. minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential one! minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub) object framework. minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P minitest/unit is meant to have a clean implementation for language implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case discovery. "Again, I can't praise enough the idea of a testing/specing framework that I can actually read in full in one sitting!" -- Piotr Szotkowski Comparing to rspec: rspec is a testing DSL. minitest is ruby. -- Adam Hawkins, "Bow Before MiniTest" minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like: classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like extract-method refactorings still apply. |
PackageName | ruby2.7-rubygem-minitest-5_3_3 |
PackageRelease | lp151.1.6 |
PackageVersion | 5.3.3 |
SHA-1 | 02E848812A695748DCF6678A42726FB20D7A326D |
SHA-256 | CDC4E7E22887A6CD44A5416E94DEF150F101F5678BE25CCBC0CF75BBB8F78D20 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 8D8338024035FAA7FDB3884BB1FCFA49 |
PackageArch | x86_64 |
PackageDescription | minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking. "I had a class with Jim Weirich on testing last week and we were allowed to choose our testing frameworks. Kirk Haines and I were paired up and we cracked open the code for a few test frameworks... I MUST say that minitest is *very* readable / understandable compared to the 'other two' options we looked at. Nicely done and thank you for helping us keep our mental sanity." -- Wayne E. Seguin minitest/unit is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework. It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and readable. minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto minitest/unit and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec expectations. minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential one! minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub) object framework. minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P minitest/unit is meant to have a clean implementation for language implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case discovery. "Again, I can't praise enough the idea of a testing/specing framework that I can actually read in full in one sitting!" -- Piotr Szotkowski Comparing to rspec: rspec is a testing DSL. minitest is ruby. -- Adam Hawkins, "Bow Before MiniTest" minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like: classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like extract-method refactorings still apply. |
PackageName | ruby2.5-rubygem-minitest-5_3_3 |
PackageRelease | 1.2 |
PackageVersion | 5.3.5 |
SHA-1 | 03E8B0CF03A036706C93D0ED1C3F98126214E249 |
SHA-256 | B57BE5832A52BCB488CC8F3D947A20AEF1D0990060278E9B120C85AF65A8CE6A |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | 68879A0C62EF5426347CF616A5F5C555 |
PackageArch | noarch |
PackageDescription | minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking. minitest/unit is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework. It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and readable. minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto minitest/unit and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec expectations. minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential one! minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub) object framework. minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P minitest/unit is meant to have a clean implementation for language implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case discovery. minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like: classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like extract-method refactorings still apply. |
PackageMaintainer | Fedora Project |
PackageName | rubygem-minitest |
PackageRelease | 101.fc24 |
PackageVersion | 5.8.4 |
SHA-1 | 0647A2E02119274C1663E0CDF4EB1C2951C5FE81 |
SHA-256 | 6B4337ED61EA60EE02F054D27C02B37890A621E9790C3DE5E23FDA85FA0D98B3 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | CFB3B87B317982109F84EBF164A73AC5 |
PackageArch | x86_64 |
PackageDescription | minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking. "I had a class with Jim Weirich on testing last week and we were allowed to choose our testing frameworks. Kirk Haines and I were paired up and we cracked open the code for a few test frameworks... I MUST say that minitest is *very* readable / understandable compared to the 'other two' options we looked at. Nicely done and thank you for helping us keep our mental sanity." -- Wayne E. Seguin minitest/unit is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework. It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and readable. minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto minitest/unit and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec expectations. minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential one! minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub) object framework. minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P minitest/unit is meant to have a clean implementation for language implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case discovery. "Again, I can't praise enough the idea of a testing/specing framework that I can actually read in full in one sitting!" -- Piotr Szotkowski Comparing to rspec: rspec is a testing DSL. minitest is ruby. -- Adam Hawkins, "Bow Before MiniTest" minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like: classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like extract-method refactorings still apply. |
PackageName | ruby2.7-rubygem-minitest-5_3_3 |
PackageRelease | lp153.1.13 |
PackageVersion | 5.3.5 |
SHA-1 | 079A0FBDB6198A7152809EC4F8809264E1E457D3 |
SHA-256 | CFE160E48B0F02A53FBAF83729512E1DC3C5B7574C0B35AC90DE9734BFB57CE2 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | A0DB97BAF62D81AAA8B44228F379C64E |
PackageArch | x86_64 |
PackageDescription | minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking. "I had a class with Jim Weirich on testing last week and we were allowed to choose our testing frameworks. Kirk Haines and I were paired up and we cracked open the code for a few test frameworks... I MUST say that minitest is *very* readable / understandable compared to the 'other two' options we looked at. Nicely done and thank you for helping us keep our mental sanity." -- Wayne E. Seguin minitest/unit is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework. It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and readable. minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto minitest/unit and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec expectations. minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential one! minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub) object framework. minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P minitest/unit is meant to have a clean implementation for language implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case discovery. "Again, I can't praise enough the idea of a testing/specing framework that I can actually read in full in one sitting!" -- Piotr Szotkowski Comparing to rspec: rspec is a testing DSL. minitest is ruby. -- Adam Hawkins, "Bow Before MiniTest" minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like: classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like extract-method refactorings still apply. |
PackageName | ruby3.1-rubygem-minitest-5_3_3 |
PackageRelease | 1.63 |
PackageVersion | 5.3.3 |
SHA-1 | 07E2DF512D88F9636966D34B22318A387F50BCF3 |
SHA-256 | C763FDF79AEEDE3CE852FD3EFE19A1D4BCE5D72AF7325B888A12A180619F6340 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | BA15758037A746A58E59F643251E22D9 |
PackageArch | i586 |
PackageDescription | minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking. "I had a class with Jim Weirich on testing last week and we were allowed to choose our testing frameworks. Kirk Haines and I were paired up and we cracked open the code for a few test frameworks... I MUST say that minitest is *very* readable / understandable compared to the 'other two' options we looked at. Nicely done and thank you for helping us keep our mental sanity." -- Wayne E. Seguin minitest/unit is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework. It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and readable. minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto minitest/unit and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec expectations. minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential one! minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub) object framework. minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P minitest/unit is meant to have a clean implementation for language implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case discovery. "Again, I can't praise enough the idea of a testing/specing framework that I can actually read in full in one sitting!" -- Piotr Szotkowski Comparing to rspec: rspec is a testing DSL. minitest is ruby. -- Adam Hawkins, "Bow Before MiniTest" minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like: classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like extract-method refactorings still apply. |
PackageName | ruby3.1-rubygem-minitest-5_3_3 |
PackageRelease | 1.63 |
PackageVersion | 5.3.5 |
SHA-1 | 09C5385FDF0ED4A8197E65EDC8FAAEDE2FE60069 |
SHA-256 | 3E9C8064DC3EF9B022CF6CFBE980E1BDBBC2FB5A3CE0D115C808EAC411868BAB |
Key | Value |
---|---|
MD5 | BDFBB99F749E481275684B1847DAED0A |
PackageArch | x86_64 |
PackageDescription | minitest provides a complete suite of testing facilities supporting TDD, BDD, mocking, and benchmarking. "I had a class with Jim Weirich on testing last week and we were allowed to choose our testing frameworks. Kirk Haines and I were paired up and we cracked open the code for a few test frameworks... I MUST say that minitest is *very* readable / understandable compared to the 'other two' options we looked at. Nicely done and thank you for helping us keep our mental sanity." -- Wayne E. Seguin minitest/unit is a small and incredibly fast unit testing framework. It provides a rich set of assertions to make your tests clean and readable. minitest/spec is a functionally complete spec engine. It hooks onto minitest/unit and seamlessly bridges test assertions over to spec expectations. minitest/benchmark is an awesome way to assert the performance of your algorithms in a repeatable manner. Now you can assert that your newb co-worker doesn't replace your linear algorithm with an exponential one! minitest/mock by Steven Baker, is a beautifully tiny mock (and stub) object framework. minitest/pride shows pride in testing and adds coloring to your test output. I guess it is an example of how to write IO pipes too. :P minitest/unit is meant to have a clean implementation for language implementors that need a minimal set of methods to bootstrap a working test suite. For example, there is no magic involved for test-case discovery. "Again, I can't praise enough the idea of a testing/specing framework that I can actually read in full in one sitting!" -- Piotr Szotkowski Comparing to rspec: rspec is a testing DSL. minitest is ruby. -- Adam Hawkins, "Bow Before MiniTest" minitest doesn't reinvent anything that ruby already provides, like: classes, modules, inheritance, methods. This means you only have to learn ruby to use minitest and all of your regular OO practices like extract-method refactorings still apply. |
PackageName | ruby2.6-rubygem-minitest-5_3_3 |
PackageRelease | lp151.1.6 |
PackageVersion | 5.3.5 |
SHA-1 | 0AEBED713FB3C67D3A1056CB3CBF715356E189D2 |
SHA-256 | B500B49CAAC169B29AE2A86EB3C6F37ED6C4A68DFF1DBF17F147A3D008B1F00B |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | https://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD/6.1/packages//arm//ruby-2.3.3.tgz |
MD5 | DCC69C1531BB6C9E815B0C905B0C770B |
SHA-1 | 0B3235A2976B64BE5E9F2160F86385F5907D7F50 |
SHA-256 | 770F4187AE58711640D8548B2DCAD5BD18A881E074FF39381695FE66717F8B0F |
SSDEEP | 196608:7eT4oiMUaYYBIZKeQWHod3+wTPTwvlsFcX7ebXfSp+fPa0:R3ireBoE8PilsFcX7ebXfO+fPP |
TLSH | T12376339D0AFEDC41F090B61B9622B9124D04369F88A2ED91F42054F953B21BD7A7BDF3 |
Key | Value |
---|---|
FileName | https://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD/6.3/packages//mips64el//ruby-2.3.6p0.tgz |
MD5 | 7847F4888A4943CA66408446AB228921 |
SHA-1 | 0E120A6A89E561339620B0D1EFBC399383D60461 |
SHA-256 | 22DBD19A739A856A18287DDF76A47F1F983F2DDD7F67D6466199162FCB1452B7 |
SSDEEP | 196608:DUNbrvMfvwLqYVk5MKiUwxAqYcOTtXsAADKSp+fPaB:bQLqTMKjwxFYBtXtADKO+fPy |
TLSH | T15D763311459EE72CE2BCB09AF87F4931B57C925DCCBB98C9B14928A90F26DF08917874 |