Result for 6391CC474DF0478A3F9CCEFC26EECABB8733CE94

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/searchd
FileSize3659024
MD52182E400246F08E28FA43BB4BF5A4C2E
SHA-16391CC474DF0478A3F9CCEFC26EECABB8733CE94
SHA-2564A6DBAF93D13D305936ED207EFB26C94F5705937C056F1BCC708E23CA1B2D9F8
SSDEEP98304:fRL+ZKlAQHK8wzMKIMHI9uU1+72IM8cCq9:AZuHKTsb+E9
TLSHT100065C5D3D309EA4CCB91076A93DC58F3BB2F171084E058EDF86F26B5CAE41A9946B31
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
MD5BD7B64529DB1DB169F1A3844DBB1380A
PackageArchs390
PackageDescriptionSphinx is a full-text search engine, distributed under GPL version 2. Commercial licensing (e.g. for embedded use) is also available upon request. Generally, it's a standalone search engine, meant to provide fast, size-efficient and relevant full-text search functions to other applications. Sphinx was specially designed to integrate well with SQL databases and scripting languages. Currently built-in data source drivers support fetching data either via direct connection to MySQL, or PostgreSQL, or from a pipe in a custom XML format. Adding new drivers (e.g. to natively support some other DBMSes) is designed to be as easy as possible. Search API is natively ported to PHP, Python, Perl, Ruby, Java, and also available as a pluggable MySQL storage engine. API is very lightweight so porting it to new language is known to take a few hours. As for the name, Sphinx is an acronym which is officially decoded as SQL Phrase Index. Yes, I know about CMU's Sphinx project.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamesphinx
PackageRelease1.fc22
PackageVersion2.2.7
SHA-1E1F0EB528A250D679D245D1566F0E60695D441CD
SHA-2565ACF932955E338B21535E88C1AAD0D9044E26FC8C06E9A0E727A5A753B345B70