Result for 7682F6E806DADB5F8F115E5836C6CC62D23EF617

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/Data::Dumper.3pmc.gz
FileSize8876
MD56726AF9B53416706932CD76AAF0CEB02
SHA-17682F6E806DADB5F8F115E5836C6CC62D23EF617
SHA-256E356E4B46A5D2C1553217C6148D5BF2E6723627C45E186EAEA6ADD7E9FF900C6
SSDEEP192:8Yc7ZXZctYz+JCxTE4z2inla+pu5GUR53mnaTKfNZaQUQZb:fcFePAndwRhmnaOVcRQZb
TLSHT16C02AF8FF6AF9366A443AA007B54C2A4C51068B33C6811921E3A5F14970FF5FB2BE551
hashlookup:parent-total9
hashlookup:trust95

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Parents (Total: 9)

The searched file hash is included in 9 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD512C0D06616678F7690564E97273753C5
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageReleaselp153.1.1
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-18C2F5C0B705F21C284CF616BC80D8AD603914D2C
SHA-256006D371EC7CF89F88E303C402872335AAA4AEBDCF99B5C1CE3A07C45B1CD8DEC
Key Value
MD52B08736C893A3F91CF1CD05A70D9CB1C
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageReleaselp150.1.1
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-1F8C2B96B1C24417B28F7B28E700D33C4B0EBDCCA
SHA-2565A6ED7D039F1D304ED7F0B48B2AFAEFFE1DEC46B70892B4355F960E386041A5F
Key Value
MD57A4EE2EF1CF5382CB456A4803E48A935
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageReleaselp152.1.1
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-1FDFEB27F8A8B0DA6A9D0AD0998D2BC8B1343D520
SHA-256F0E2BE9C53B2DB8CB8CE3A54F92DE6964AFE07ECB21BC06953977143B569F223
Key Value
MD5047CC515FBA213CDDDABF46AC17D0226
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageRelease1.1
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-11CA1CEB276F11AB7783D069604641434F916EDB6
SHA-256CEDA74502B239C7FAF5A091EFBB348998F57F0480F3108336FE1036A98D9FAFB
Key Value
MD5038A17A199D4D110813747EC1B480E87
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageRelease1.1
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-10021A9D3ADB09D5DA321C38BBE6F276732588F8E
SHA-25653D576AFD8B8F39EBBA807E9D089C7D1006BB529DEAAF145FA081F006B1EF4F6
Key Value
MD50C2AF0212F56B35BA8E8D804A6DF677B
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageRelease1.3
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-1AB461E26716C9468E9863FC9659D8329C2AF3E5B
SHA-2560A2900B5CF7F804927439D47F98E8C8D01C7C90D0B1CA42FB8F64FDD0C0BD402
Key Value
MD5368A2A4AD60783F37FC80CC662A59BE3
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageRelease1.3
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-11F59651EF148C02854CD4D92B421185FCDEE496C
SHA-256C528E3EEFDA771C72CC9C20103A6AD46EE765921BF558DCD71BB75865E905271
Key Value
MD52B64A24D493C976049AD37E693B3C7B0
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageReleaselp151.1.1
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-1E8690DE80C31EBDB33CC410C031CF5147301E741
SHA-25608721BE9E3C62CE88F6CD49E298A51C6F69DBF0499740DF7D0651443E0764EE9
Key Value
MD578A95F4A58E944D61C8EAB5275DE8553
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionGiven a list of scalars or reference variables, writes out their contents in perl syntax. The references can also be objects. The content of each variable is output in a single Perl statement. Handles self-referential structures correctly. The return value can be 'eval'ed to get back an identical copy of the original reference structure. (Please do consider the security implications of eval'ing code from untrusted sources!) Any references that are the same as one of those passed in will be named '$VAR'_n_ (where _n_ is a numeric suffix), and other duplicate references to substructures within '$VAR'_n_ will be appropriately labeled using arrow notation. You can specify names for individual values to be dumped if you use the 'Dump()' method, or you can change the default '$VAR' prefix to something else. See '$Data::Dumper::Varname' and '$Data::Dumper::Terse' below. The default output of self-referential structures can be 'eval'ed, but the nested references to '$VAR'_n_ will be undefined, since a recursive structure cannot be constructed using one Perl statement. You should set the 'Purity' flag to 1 to get additional statements that will correctly fill in these references. Moreover, if 'eval'ed when strictures are in effect, you need to ensure that any variables it accesses are previously declared. In the extended usage form, the references to be dumped can be given user-specified names. If a name begins with a '*', the output will describe the dereferenced type of the supplied reference for hashes and arrays, and coderefs. Output of names will be avoided where possible if the 'Terse' flag is set. In many cases, methods that are used to set the internal state of the object will return the object itself, so method calls can be conveniently chained together. Several styles of output are possible, all controlled by setting the 'Indent' flag. See Configuration Variables or Methods below for details.
PackageNameperl-Data-Dumper
PackageRelease1.1
PackageVersion2.183
SHA-1F86182E8795DAA77A74AC8C5B50AE0DFD32BBCA4
SHA-2568AF0A6FEF76182F5D6055AB62A08815AC3443E1C1389D870E277074DF5257D91