Result for 6E997EB7C844B7FFDB1213E70B223606BD4755EB

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/msort
FileSize172504
MD5C79C86BBF8B8EBB6A9D91CDA8330300B
SHA-16E997EB7C844B7FFDB1213E70B223606BD4755EB
SHA-256C029251D4F580907C663FDA333F3A03BB914C4FAA40168B2124033BC90DC630D
SSDEEP3072:gQg5ast2kHxcNTA6fWmxjePEjM9YstmR1YxWOnGj:Dw3xQAhm4PEw9Yl1Yx
TLSHT1DFF3082DED47EC27EF8BE730AC9D0A2BF572126CE351E293701804787A877CB6659581
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
FileSize67412
MD53539C6551DAA4E046477D47AA864943C
PackageDescriptionutility for sorting records in complex ways msort is a program for sorting files in sophisticated ways. It was originally developed for alphabetizing dictionaries of "exotic" languages, for which it has been extensively used, but is useful for many other purposes. msort differs from typical sort utilities in providing greater flexibility in parsing the input into records and identifying key fields and greater control over the sort order. Its main distinctive features are: . o Msort can be used as a command-line program or via a graphical user interface that is helpful not only to those who find a complicated command line difficult to deal with but also to those unfamiliar with the finer points of sorting. o Records need not be single lines of text but may be delimited in a number of ways. o Key fields may be selected by position in the record (counting from the beginning or the end), by character ranges (e.g. the key consists of the fourth through eighth characters), or by matching a regular expression to a tag. o For each key an arbitrary sort order may be specified. Msort also understands locales. o For each key an effectively unlimited number of multigraphs (sequences of characters to be treated as a single unit for purposes of sorting, "collating elements" in Unicode parlance) of effectively unlimited length may be defined. o In addition to the usual lexicographic and numerical comparisons, msort supports hybrid lexicographic-numeric comparison (for things like filenames and section headings, so that, e.g., 2a will precede 10b), random comparison, and ordering by angle, date, time, month name, domain name, email address, ISO8601 date-time, and string length. o Numbers may be in just about any known number system, e.g. Chinese or Devanagari. o For each key a distinct set of characters may be excluded from consideration when sorting in any combination of initial, final, and medial position in the key field. o For each key a distinct set of regular expression substitutions may be defined. These provide the means to make names like McCarthy sort before MacCawley, as if McCarthy were spelled MacCarthy as well as to handle the rare cases in which a single character is treated for purposes of sorting as a sequence, such as German "eszet" sign, which is traditionally sorted as if it were ss. o Lexicographic keys may be reversed, allowing the construction of reverse dictionaries. o Any or all keys may be optional. For optional keys, the user may specify how records missing the key field should compare to records in which the key field is present. o A choice of sorting algorithms with different properties is provided. . msort understands UTF-8 Unicode. Unicode may be used anywhere that text is entered: in the text to be sorted, in sort order and exclusion definitions, as a field or record separator, or as a field tag. Full Unicode case-folding is available.
PackageMaintainerBartosz Fenski <fenio@debian.org>
PackageNamemsort
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion8.53-2.1+b2
SHA-1B92114447C8473EBE035E47A434823480FE643FC
SHA-2569C124FDED6D67ECDB0D3B9303D4977C9DFA3898A9A9973F0C93C0855465C53D9