Result for 83E130658502919CC28B96F538989071E3BF61E5

Query result

Key Value
FileName./sbin/ipset
FileSize28208
MD5C466E4D246D0DED506DC3DC66DB3BF27
SHA-183E130658502919CC28B96F538989071E3BF61E5
SHA-256D5B38790EE8F0B107D45CB3CC53A7AA1002DC39C0EFE5660BB5456809D472D2A
SSDEEP384:xnBvTbtm1JnoZPcHsQWZwhgT/FN7og+VVWzpsgnBT1FVbW9+vkMyYa/:jTbtidewG/FNwVuimP4+vkMyr
TLSHT124C20883BB485DA2D0E2CF31457F22651B7DA82DF341C313B99C8AA91F175CC9E96D48
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
FileSize47502
MD52940604BFA2F7E080BD395DD7ACD4AE3
PackageDescriptionadministration tool for kernel IP sets IP sets are a framework inside the Linux 2.4.x and 2.6.x kernel which can be administered by the ipset(8) utility. Depending on the type, currently an IP set may store IP addresses, (TCP/UDP) port numbers or IP addresses with MAC addresses in a way which ensures lightning speed when matching an entry against a set. . If you want to . * store multiple IP addresses or port numbers and match against the entire collection using a single iptables rule. * dynamically update iptables rules against IP addresses or ports without performance penalty. * express complex IP address and ports based rulesets with a single iptables rule and benefit from the speed of IP sets. . then IP sets may be the proper tool for you.
PackageMaintainerNeutron Soutmun <neutrons@debian.org>
PackageNameipset
PackageSectionnet
PackageVersion6.30-2
SHA-15446BD319880B076B50EEFADB9D70E76DA57BC99
SHA-256946A4A623DF298A1665773A9F59C77A67971DD65AB56DE33D893C23C73104335