Result for 6D27CB119B40E1006919E323346735DCEB5AB06D

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/searchd
FileSize3646644
MD5B468F5C5EF597CD176DE0363D09B775F
SHA-16D27CB119B40E1006919E323346735DCEB5AB06D
SHA-256C29F9C006C036FF79AE657B84154F4B64477AB2465511168308C196BAA5A5583
SSDEEP98304:nRLfgqDDBUc7lKJaz9f97UgfgS9468cCMge:pguUPStge
TLSHT1A9F55C5D3D309EF4CCB91176A93DC58F3BA2F171084E058EDF86F26B5CAE41A9942B21
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
MD5650891EC588908D58245F33701BC425A
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
PackageRelease2.fc21
PackageVersion2.2.5
SHA-1836B11EBCBACB1E3EE42E82248271C1F89CA9183
SHA-256E2B114424504D0979D41EB68DFC083E8C0BDA07740D25FBED39822F16B8BA683