Result for 898C5A60A5B8ADC48E8BA34AED4ED9D09E17DD5A

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/libprotobuf.so.8.0.0
FileSize1094992
MD59CD5E71F4348DCCD731B1918EC9CDF52
SHA-1898C5A60A5B8ADC48E8BA34AED4ED9D09E17DD5A
SHA-256DAEBC144BBB6F342B3491BD7CF41725C8B17A90470CFFDDA7E9B871D0B84F941
SSDEEP24576:+TQL+rNcUlJnTrwHu1NwYBlwjL94oJYIQj6UP+SBl/3N5Zi0FI6JWAVzsHV1ph8a:+TQL+rNcUlJnTrwHu1NwYBlwjL94oJim
TLSHT110353A0BFE8748F6D0D344B4591BE36F8BA05F02D422D966EA486E07EA771C69F132C5
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

Network graph view

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
CRC327A6DF43B
FileNameprotobuf-2.5.0-8.el7.i686.rpm
FileSize348344
MD561B269966E6E7EDE38E54B27ADD424EB
OpSystemCode362
PackageArchi686
PackageDescriptionProtocol Buffers are a way of encoding structured data in an efficient yet extensible format. Google uses Protocol Buffers for almost all of its internal RPC protocols and file formats. Protocol buffers are a flexible, efficient, automated mechanism for serializing structured data – think XML, but smaller, faster, and simpler. You define how you want your data to be structured once, then you can use special generated source code to easily write and read your structured data to and from a variety of data streams and using a variety of languages. You can even update your data structure without breaking deployed programs that are compiled against the "old" format.
PackageMaintainerCentOS BuildSystem <http://bugs.centos.org>
PackageNameprotobuf
PackageRelease8.el7
PackageVersion2.5.0
ProductCode202232
SHA-11E07D8178AC0A140EBBA08EB4CF81B50CB6CACF7
SHA-25647F89644CCC02F7834C06AEB939F12F4C79401552A3D4277954E20AB70AE0D02
SpecialCode
dbnsrl_modern_rds
insert-timestamp1646989912.026172
sourceNSRL