Result for 5A8AC7817844EE170A3C90C3DB11A8421C4B7BCA

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/nautilus-sendto-trac-0.4/COPYING
FileSize18072
MD59450224A11928F85794C948D3539A882
SHA-15A8AC7817844EE170A3C90C3DB11A8421C4B7BCA
SHA-256B90ED8150A6D371C84B7DBAA680CD0E9893EF7C2558765E1E00930513EFCFE3B
SSDEEP384:QhUwi5rpL676yV12rPd34ZomzM2FR+dWF7jUI:QmFWixMFzMdm7jUI
TLSHT19E82A42E770443F205C202A16A4F68DFA32AD5B9723E1155386DC15E236FE35C3BFA99
hashlookup:parent-total32
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 32)

The searched file hash is included in 32 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD57962A74EF90F9735FA133723E291EF5A
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionOut of memory killing has historically happened inside kernel space. On a memory overcommitted linux system, malloc(2) and friends usually never fail. However, if an application dereferences the returned pointer and the system has run out of physical memory, the linux kernel is forced take extreme measures, up to and including killing processes. This is sometimes a slow and painful process because the kernel can spend an unbounded amount of time swapping in and out pages and evicting the page cache. Furthermore, configuring policy is not very flexible while being somewhat complicated. oomd aims to solve this problem in userspace. oomd leverages PSI and cgroupv2 to monitor a system holistically. oomd then takes corrective action in userspace before an OOM occurs in kernel space. Corrective action is configured via a flexible plugin system, in which custom code can be written. By default, this involves killing offending processes. This enables an unparalleled level of flexibility where each workload can have custom protection rules. Furthermore, time spent livedlocked in kernelspace is minimized.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameoomd
PackageRelease2.fc33
PackageVersion0.4.0
SHA-10583ACD232F49704DA5D6362335EF635D21E032C
SHA-256F37929394B1C93D55018C5040FC3E494B69016845A4604E70B978BBB276DEFE5
Key Value
MD541C27F9831CEEAD1668D7C76A482F3DD
PackageArchs390x
PackageDescriptionNautilus-Sendto-Trac is a plug-in for Nautilus, the file manager for the Gnome desktop environment, that allows the sending of files and directories to a Trac instance as ticket attachments.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamenautilus-sendto-trac
PackageRelease2.fc17
PackageVersion0.4
SHA-1079819F3BADCA4A574E8BACE924661B41CA79312
SHA-25600300A2FAB21856F03CE0D5CD942AC5FB419DEA769CD016A96E9FDF9B4B35528
Key Value
MD5D47126105764F7FBE4353E5D99F17B34
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionOut of memory killing has historically happened inside kernel space. On a memory overcommitted linux system, malloc(2) and friends usually never fail. However, if an application dereferences the returned pointer and the system has run out of physical memory, the linux kernel is forced take extreme measures, up to and including killing processes. This is sometimes a slow and painful process because the kernel can spend an unbounded amount of time swapping in and out pages and evicting the page cache. Furthermore, configuring policy is not very flexible while being somewhat complicated. oomd aims to solve this problem in userspace. oomd leverages PSI and cgroupv2 to monitor a system holistically. oomd then takes corrective action in userspace before an OOM occurs in kernel space. Corrective action is configured via a flexible plugin system, in which custom code can be written. By default, this involves killing offending processes. This enables an unparalleled level of flexibility where each workload can have custom protection rules. Furthermore, time spent livedlocked in kernelspace is minimized.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameoomd
PackageRelease1.fc32
PackageVersion0.3.2
SHA-1098414B90DDD13B9B4AA3C8D84511925AC8DEBDB
SHA-256A56F883598906BA9C77C6B46027C1102434CEDB4DB73F18F7B120E3BC9702DC4
Key Value
MD53604995BADD1D575C5377BAC6123A91C
PackageArchs390
PackageDescriptionNautilus-Sendto-Trac is a plug-in for Nautilus, the file manager for the Gnome desktop environment, that allows the sending of files and directories to a Trac instance as ticket attachments.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamenautilus-sendto-trac
PackageRelease2.fc17
PackageVersion0.4
SHA-10D9503D469FE1E0B02057ACB11A8050A9214F18A
SHA-2562C33A7C96A7B152C7C660DFE9CD57FF54E66760059E6F80C2E670C41A0361CA1
Key Value
MD5D01AB913F3ECC23BCD2DB0E62C147C3A
PackageArchppc64
PackageDescriptionNautilus-Sendto-Trac is a plug-in for Nautilus, the file manager for the Gnome desktop environment, that allows the sending of files and directories to a Trac instance as ticket attachments.
PackageMaintainerKoji
PackageNamenautilus-sendto-trac
PackageRelease4.fc15
PackageVersion0.3.1
SHA-115A9D148951740C1DEF4A8191DD4D550B2CB8ED3
SHA-256FBA3F39365544CB9B0C1FD90AA4F02C128D513D11A644775BFE466E37D3205E7
Key Value
MD59F3D2C9CF15FD7F314CD3FBEF48D4D4E
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionNautilus-Sendto-Trac is a plug-in for Nautilus, the file manager for the Gnome desktop environment, that allows the sending of files and directories to a Trac instance as ticket attachments.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamenautilus-sendto-trac
PackageRelease4.fc15
PackageVersion0.3.1
SHA-1282AA320A13512E58CFA3098DFC2AAA92716DC02
SHA-256C3942CB4CD450D48FC81B58B1C13B2249F11DF79B85174BEA006EFE745ADAEEA
Key Value
MD521981F599AE6CDB2448F0C7C6DF4F73A
PackageArchs390
PackageDescriptionNautilus-Sendto-Trac is a plug-in for Nautilus, the file manager for the Gnome desktop environment, that allows the sending of files and directories to a Trac instance as ticket attachments.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamenautilus-sendto-trac
PackageRelease2.fc17
PackageVersion0.4
SHA-129BEADE42EAC3085F9C0BCE4743B9FB78027F015
SHA-25676823861E87BBC0676BABD21B67A72D3BA28E3C077A031468582351B49D76A49
Key Value
MD57382473E6DC775B052C297C62CCBB598
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionOut of memory killing has historically happened inside kernel space. On a memory overcommitted linux system, malloc(2) and friends usually never fail. However, if an application dereferences the returned pointer and the system has run out of physical memory, the linux kernel is forced take extreme measures, up to and including killing processes. This is sometimes a slow and painful process because the kernel can spend an unbounded amount of time swapping in and out pages and evicting the page cache. Furthermore, configuring policy is not very flexible while being somewhat complicated. oomd aims to solve this problem in userspace. oomd leverages PSI and cgroupv2 to monitor a system holistically. oomd then takes corrective action in userspace before an OOM occurs in kernel space. Corrective action is configured via a flexible plugin system, in which custom code can be written. By default, this involves killing offending processes. This enables an unparalleled level of flexibility where each workload can have custom protection rules. Furthermore, time spent livedlocked in kernelspace is minimized.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameoomd
PackageRelease1.fc32
PackageVersion0.3.2
SHA-12DBB3A63827BB2584A2EF30A2A4BB25476BCCDDB
SHA-25639AC9C1719E71D60840C9295246DE5766BAD5124F2DF1435D7BC8473BE3573B7
Key Value
MD5D454DA404FE22643E450D5BF27E86F85
PackageArchppc
PackageDescriptionNautilus-Sendto-Trac is a plug-in for Nautilus, the file manager for the Gnome desktop environment, that allows the sending of files and directories to a Trac instance as ticket attachments.
PackageMaintainerKoji
PackageNamenautilus-sendto-trac
PackageRelease1.fc15
PackageVersion0.4
SHA-12DEAA436E7FAA869A459951949BA3FE402A91570
SHA-256206C6B2A6DDDCB3A32A30836B82423322808D42FF307405F35E01847C3BFD0C8
Key Value
MD509D0C557C7B28132790CF8386DFAA387
PackageArchaarch64
PackageDescriptionOut of memory killing has historically happened inside kernel space. On a memory overcommitted linux system, malloc(2) and friends usually never fail. However, if an application dereferences the returned pointer and the system has run out of physical memory, the linux kernel is forced take extreme measures, up to and including killing processes. This is sometimes a slow and painful process because the kernel can spend an unbounded amount of time swapping in and out pages and evicting the page cache. Furthermore, configuring policy is not very flexible while being somewhat complicated. oomd aims to solve this problem in userspace. oomd leverages PSI and cgroupv2 to monitor a system holistically. oomd then takes corrective action in userspace before an OOM occurs in kernel space. Corrective action is configured via a flexible plugin system, in which custom code can be written. By default, this involves killing offending processes. This enables an unparalleled level of flexibility where each workload can have custom protection rules. Furthermore, time spent livedlocked in kernelspace is minimized.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameoomd
PackageRelease2.fc33
PackageVersion0.4.0
SHA-1364ABD84FFDA5EC084FC49639BB81D947AFED472
SHA-256C8D6465F3D786F2B43446FABACE85B64F420B251F6FF4CE44FD5046C0D015CF8