Result for 7F3C1F1963947C44B32E61A01D6B3EC79877D4A7

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/enca
FileSize60560
MD5B05A12C198C4FD2FFCB6D3E99773F306
SHA-17F3C1F1963947C44B32E61A01D6B3EC79877D4A7
SHA-256605A8552D3F93F50F110F02C6297C14FEEABA6E0836867D7DB103C89FD4B1198
SSDEEP768:sLzOSNnVqEXqiKyBRcAq3uV6af1VI4jS/pyGXhmrarmqQf+KxuqB/9WcWc:ez3qOqQuQIbMGxBmqQ2yuqBVWcr
TLSHT15A43080E6A2187F1C9D203752A6F85DBA733D0F8621D01DD354CC39F279BE2489BBA65
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
MD591233F298101EF1F486ED8EA55E3B71B
PackageArchs390
PackageDescriptionEnca is an Extremely Naive Charset Analyser. It detects character set and encoding of text files and can also convert them to other encodings using either a built-in converter or external libraries and tools like libiconv, librecode, or cstocs. Currently, it has support for Belarussian, Bulgarian, Croatian, Czech, Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Russian, Slovak, Slovene, Ukrainian, Chinese and some multibyte encodings (mostly variants of Unicode) independent on the language. This package also contains shared Enca library other programs can make use of. Install enca if you need to cope with text files of dubious origin and unknown encoding and convert them to some reasonable encoding.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameenca
PackageRelease3.fc22
PackageVersion1.15
SHA-163211C8E1101049298A6C3297FF18B363E5AAD6B
SHA-256FB2D215BE7AF2BCF115AF99FEF21A24D0CEAB561EB0F43ADD02E145BD5CA4D16