Result for 7B30A75E4103A4EB287DCBC6EB02636B22B43014

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/perl5/vendor_perl/5.26.1/x86_64-linux-thread-multi/auto/DateTime/DateTime.so
FileSize18536
MD5CC8BE83988B4DCB11F102AE154846CD4
SHA-17B30A75E4103A4EB287DCBC6EB02636B22B43014
SHA-2560B7A54C408282337C28531E904127D7194838FEB48C4A2141320DE1D07B639D3
SSDEEP384:I+vHuyYho3v0jW+cB2c4Uw8IGU7KABeChGMqA:I+vHuJi3sjWfB2v4IntBY
TLSHT17F820906269A44BBC866D134CEE70395B7BA78C2537CDE3F20A8B3352D56D984F64E03
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
MD5BC57558FA77D057E43E8212BC7DDF15C
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionDateTime is a class for the representation of date/time combinations, and is part of the Perl DateTime project. For details on this project please see http://datetime.perl.org/. The DateTime site has a FAQ which may help answer many "how do I do X?" questions. The FAQ is at http://datetime.perl.org/wiki/datetime/page/FAQ. It represents the Gregorian calendar, extended backwards in time before its creation (in 1582). This is sometimes known as the "proleptic Gregorian calendar". In this calendar, the first day of the calendar (the epoch), is the first day of year 1, which corresponds to the date which was (incorrectly) believed to be the birth of Jesus Christ. The calendar represented does have a year 0, and in that way differs from how dates are often written using "BCE/CE" or "BC/AD". For infinite datetimes, please see the DateTime::Infinite module.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-DateTime
PackageReleaselp152.3.2
PackageVersion1.45
SHA-1B1FB43865106DF42E705EE0F3B36CAE06C3284EA
SHA-2562403E96656E69A04B6F5CA588E6BBCA999720803847C1CEA6B6A2172A0760663