Result for 7B64C5D8D3E8AA1D2D01336785272B0A6D41FEFB

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/bbox
FileSize13828
MD57C465D9C82AB203845D835516A3DAA1A
SHA-17B64C5D8D3E8AA1D2D01336785272B0A6D41FEFB
SHA-256C418F3A60C1C5FCAF47A2348D4870DBDE7682E1554ABF5471BD7A6753FBCFF67
SSDEEP192:dW//WX+vAxrVXuwB3+H82Pdm3l7U40uiNS/LyxR2tCpWE7KyOj3AnS:3rowFkPdmV7Um/LslpW+KfTqS
TLSHT141522B58B1909B33D5C01776ABA7C7867323CF28E3D333D386058A607B595AE8D74A88
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
FileSize39328
MD5B2416BBE65903FA6EF0D2C1D380AFE73
PackageDescriptionconvert PostScript to EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) files ps2eps is a tool to produce Encapsulated PostScript Files (EPS/EPSF) from usual one-paged Postscript documents. It calculates correct Bounding Boxes for those EPS files and filters some special postscript command sequences that can produce erroneous results on printers. EPS files are needed for including (scalable) graphics into TeX (or even Word) documents. Other programs like ps2epsi do not calculate the bounding box always correctly (because the values are put on the PostScript stack which may get corrupted by bad PostScript code) or rounded it off so that clipping the EPS cut off some parts of the image. Therefore ps2eps uses a resolution of 144 DPI to get the correct bounding box.
PackageMaintainerMatteo Cypriani <mcy@lm7.fr>
PackageNameps2eps
PackageSectiontext
PackageVersion1.68+binaryfree-2
SHA-1A6F7D035D9A92EC722D2AEFDDCA7BFE7D7C362C3
SHA-25614DA98323242440F12EEB4AAD6EF88BA63A2579FCD83177BD500A167112A08B3