Result for 4CCF79F7C2BE82A5B8ACA891D291FB5B9B5C78DC

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/rangen
FileSize67504
MD55F59EB2B7A7ECDD5AA96A0F7168B9962
SHA-14CCF79F7C2BE82A5B8ACA891D291FB5B9B5C78DC
SHA-256A56AA976030933BB9970F4D63AA4AC3FC6069545091D031FEABDF17F3A83B850
SSDEEP192:1pboWJk2IZyU1OPhYpKQeq/N/cX7sVNUVwqptXBS2:fdk2IZyU1OPhYppN/cX7sVNUVwqp1J
TLSHT19A63610233199B9BCA68953D835F1F2073713D4A03618313912493372FD7B2ACE67E56
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
FileSize128812
MD5F42857C8AD1FCA5FCCEFA7AFA253BCBE
PackageDescriptionmanage nucleotide sequencing read data To facilitate the multiple phases of the dazzler assembler, all the read data is organized into what is effectively a database of the reads and their meta-information. The design goals for this data base are as follows: * The database stores the source Pacbio read information in such a way that it can re-create the original input data, thus permitting a user to remove the (effectively redundant) source files. This avoids duplicating the same data, once in the source file and once in the database. * The data base can be built up incrementally, that is new sequence data can be added to the data base over time. * The data base flexibly allows one to store any meta-data desired for reads. This is accomplished with the concept of *tracks* that implementors can add as they need them. * The data is held in a compressed form equivalent to the .dexta and .dexqv files of the data extraction module. Both the .fasta and .quiva information for each read is held in the data base and can be recreated from it. The .quiva information can be added separately and later on if desired. * To facilitate job parallel, cluster operation of the phases of the assembler, the database has a concept of a *current partitioning* in which all the reads that are over a given length and optionally unique to a well, are divided up into *blocks* containing roughly a given number of bases, except possibly the last block which may have a short count. Often programs can be run on blocks or pairs of blocks and each such job is reasonably well balanced as the blocks are all the same size. One must be careful about changing the partition during an assembly as doing so can void the structural validity of any interim block-based results.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamedazzdb
PackageSectionscience
PackageVersion1.0+20161112-2
SHA-1249607B992403647FDE6E4A47AD4E40BC9B2617B
SHA-2568629978E8EC6D36F1EDBA0BE3E6367BB4E55115F40B29B84E0BA8006C724FF24