Result for 828DB06BB411C78E320D0692EAD7C9C3C8C4F569

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/File::pushd.3pm.gz
FileSize3279
MD59F4B9DA5C38A90485ECB78B958F16A37
SHA-1828DB06BB411C78E320D0692EAD7C9C3C8C4F569
SHA-2567C3F2A6549E4D5F2A0F89B95B5F9827066CAB0C8942089242B2D281B9C3D48C7
SSDEEP48:XQEw4aCY1g6a27Xjm9RrL/slSzJPUnO8uL9t3oCw6X0u5b9JSHA09hZ9s:NaC8a2fM1klePUK9t4q0G9JcW
TLSHT1E9615B5EFB075D894D0772A2F0EBD0AB6C272471668BB3EBB059C8D053C20D58586476
hashlookup:parent-total7
hashlookup:trust85

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Parents (Total: 7)

The searched file hash is included in 7 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5E476A0BD7284B2E659BA7E91310EADF0
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleasebp155.2.12
PackageVersion1.014
SHA-1722B1F2E4A229BA4F383779F179FBF5025C571FC
SHA-256B0CE46062EAC47312AB66D7464F5ADF0526CEF6B7E237C48DABD0ED705B7D7F7
Key Value
MD58B4C409683EE5B09294AE096F09BF554
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleaselp151.2.1
PackageVersion1.014
SHA-1787AD603B3D74182E603820B86A0EFCF8C2282DC
SHA-25645E9C3CF5713EF6E24C1E7FFBEC32772A7A46C444B2DB112961EA5221B9D4BE8
Key Value
MD582DF7B32EFCD4A9C9CC1C9FAC66A6E2E
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleaselp152.3.2
PackageVersion1.014
SHA-15DCFA685BBCC4C29960B3939633127189FF9C743
SHA-2567D57550A8F855E80F2D9BC2070208E4FA3C1E453B2A3BA009F9FB9665857366D
Key Value
MD57918E62F7391911D9F2CE4557953F781
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleasebp154.1.60
PackageVersion1.014
SHA-16382E3245D8F74FB4AEEFBB9A6E4787E7D68A088
SHA-25611E016DA623F68EB75CC92C13C81241346A23D61042420342A7A25A6F43ADDC3
Key Value
MD50ED3B12CCF89C2FEDD93D5F37A721024
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleasebp156.3.1
PackageVersion1.014
SHA-14A9D5C3FB48A1C0443AACEF6519401BBDF76BCC9
SHA-256A1C1CA94D8CFFEC34691CFB555B2C0CA3F0BA8F9E4D4AD73C4918CF8C9103F82
Key Value
MD5914B58C41137396C5BCBA86ED7C30318
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleasebp153.1.17
PackageVersion1.014
SHA-1F45E11110AF055EC1182AF763D88C8186ED4CAC9
SHA-25650A2184513D8475F7FA2EC2FF4E7CEDB0643545BF143FF32BAA640CD0E8D15C5
Key Value
MD59CFA2EC44611B065024A8A0EE4B05464
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageReleaselp150.1.3
PackageVersion1.014
SHA-19E8DA7494B3498090E63BE587FB05E97C1FBBB98
SHA-2562B321FC2628F72E676B15F4BDBA0D7B2FA0E3A03F287951B17074F9AF9255159