Result for 5DE4EB89E1B4BCBFD133EA22DC3D3629ED885AC2

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/info/cpio.info.gz
FileSize6781
MD538F06F376F8ED1BB61EDD054F708D99B
SHA-15DE4EB89E1B4BCBFD133EA22DC3D3629ED885AC2
SHA-256C696397F27398D327088EF7B5D6573ACEDDCFF8A957CA5F4C28654E7E364770B
SSDEEP192:G5lOAHIH5yp6FjzKdTXnjeZamOxEm+c7Uu8Xso82Oqv:GrOAOaGidzbFx5Zjo82Oqv
TLSHT1B8E1AFFD66462D24A31E10AA6A2577D54E4B0118C3C3CB861693E81DE256DBFD43F8E1
hashlookup:parent-total3
hashlookup:trust65

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Parents (Total: 3)

The searched file hash is included in 3 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5422CD68CD42E0635EF041194A7E964E5
PackageArchsparcv9
PackageDescriptionGNU cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive. Archives are files which contain a collection of other files plus information about them, such as their file name, owner, timestamps, and access permissions. The archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe. GNU cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar and POSIX.1 tar. By default, cpio creates binary format archives, so that they are compatible with older cpio programs. When it is extracting files from archives, cpio automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can read archives created on machines with a different byte-order. Install cpio if you need a program to manage file archives.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamecpio
PackageRelease8.fc9
PackageVersion2.9
SHA-12E3AB6B72C7A3A50F8ED90633C0D1370097BBB38
SHA-256CCEBEEE47B1D5E4135B36A476D6861A8D6A03B5E0B138B5B6351A4CA632C17CD
Key Value
MD5C35A00E0CE92A71F77D90F36DF4FB8F9
PackageArchia64
PackageDescriptionGNU cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive. Archives are files which contain a collection of other files plus information about them, such as their file name, owner, timestamps, and access permissions. The archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe. GNU cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar and POSIX.1 tar. By default, cpio creates binary format archives, so that they are compatible with older cpio programs. When it is extracting files from archives, cpio automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can read archives created on machines with a different byte-order. Install cpio if you need a program to manage file archives.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamecpio
PackageRelease7.fc9
PackageVersion2.9
SHA-158534FC47DB8ED0B1EEDE6302CA216221C3766AD
SHA-256D1103FF2958146DE2BDA0C1CA0E536D3235224E4B9697D4B071430A764973B67
Key Value
MD5874B183E3DD3444993EEB91AC049CB44
PackageArchsparc64
PackageDescriptionGNU cpio copies files into or out of a cpio or tar archive. Archives are files which contain a collection of other files plus information about them, such as their file name, owner, timestamps, and access permissions. The archive can be another file on the disk, a magnetic tape, or a pipe. GNU cpio supports the following archive formats: binary, old ASCII, new ASCII, crc, HPUX binary, HPUX old ASCII, old tar and POSIX.1 tar. By default, cpio creates binary format archives, so that they are compatible with older cpio programs. When it is extracting files from archives, cpio automatically recognizes which kind of archive it is reading and can read archives created on machines with a different byte-order. Install cpio if you need a program to manage file archives.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamecpio
PackageRelease8.fc9
PackageVersion2.9
SHA-13EEE8242F32F2D8A6B756CF7B6D5A3ADD3C05FC8
SHA-256845E0420AC2E6CBF6D47E9D270A776DF407F9AF99FBDB5E1FDABC2F040E04AD3