Result for 95EDAF3B43C951227E7D39B25117AF1A57521253

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/dexconf
FileSize14404
MD5210A349165C8A5EDF0B8E02005704663
SHA-195EDAF3B43C951227E7D39B25117AF1A57521253
SHA-256A9A0AB4CDDD5F819A904CBACD746E0BF89F865FF5E967F777C3AD048617BB3FE
SSDEEP384:ZzZyxBid71H3547G5GLxTtkeYdE16MLXzs0CgONd+T8407zbfTHn:ZzZ28d71p47G5GLx5keYdE1hLXzs0CDT
TLSHT19D52D70BF5041BA714435291FB86A89D5A3BA29E03A83188713DF9DCBB365714BE3F49
hashlookup:parent-total6
hashlookup:trust80

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 6)

The searched file hash is included in 6 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize324660
MD56DA99D536807288E3FDCECBEB48C3B73
PackageDescriptionfiles and utilities common to all X servers The X server is the hardware interface of the X Window System. Its job is to communicate with video display and input devices, and present them in a standardized, abstract fashion via the X protocol to X clients (X-based programs). The X server largely relieves programs of having to know or care about the details of the hardware with which they are interacting (such things as 32-bit versus 8-bit color, the layout of the keyboard, how many buttons the mouse has, etc.). The catch is that the X server must itself know the technical specifications of the graphics hardware and monitor, the keyboard layout, the protocol used by the mouse, and so forth. . X servers either need fonts installed on the local host, or need to know of a remote host that provides font services (with xfs, for instance). The former means that font packages are mandatory. The latter means that font packages may be gratuitous. To err on the side of caution, install at least the xfonts-base, xfonts-100dpi or xfonts-75dpi, and xfonts-scalable packages.
PackageMaintainerDebian X Strike Force <debian-x@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamexserver-common
PackageSectionx11
PackageVersion4.3.0.dfsg.1-6ubuntu25
SHA-10F41B230557462F5A7387D546DCA14EF11625E1B
SHA-25624AF41B60A53606A9A3D91A59F98F2A5C783FA22BD8E91CD9891F54923C9CB13
Key Value
FileSize325044
MD5619538349A6BF3FBCF0B84B3AD8537FF
PackageDescriptionfiles and utilities common to all X servers The X server is the hardware interface of the X Window System. Its job is to communicate with video display and input devices, and present them in a standardized, abstract fashion via the X protocol to X clients (X-based programs). The X server largely relieves programs of having to know or care about the details of the hardware with which they are interacting (such things as 32-bit versus 8-bit color, the layout of the keyboard, how many buttons the mouse has, etc.). The catch is that the X server must itself know the technical specifications of the graphics hardware and monitor, the keyboard layout, the protocol used by the mouse, and so forth. . X servers either need fonts installed on the local host, or need to know of a remote host that provides font services (with xfs, for instance). The former means that font packages are mandatory. The latter means that font packages may be gratuitous. To err on the side of caution, install at least the xfonts-base, xfonts-100dpi or xfonts-75dpi, and xfonts-scalable packages.
PackageMaintainerDebian X Strike Force <debian-x@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamexserver-common
PackageSectionx11
PackageVersion4.3.0.dfsg.1-6ubuntu25
SHA-1733AC209C5FFB8A1C4A4843339731852B3827ABB
SHA-256BFEBDC52F48B0A9C4EC677717EAEEFF59ED68E49AD5BDCDB01F8AD9A65339BEC
Key Value
FileSize324996
MD5CFFA12F71D5E3C17C1B67A90F768DD74
PackageDescriptionfiles and utilities common to all X servers The X server is the hardware interface of the X Window System. Its job is to communicate with video display and input devices, and present them in a standardized, abstract fashion via the X protocol to X clients (X-based programs). The X server largely relieves programs of having to know or care about the details of the hardware with which they are interacting (such things as 32-bit versus 8-bit color, the layout of the keyboard, how many buttons the mouse has, etc.). The catch is that the X server must itself know the technical specifications of the graphics hardware and monitor, the keyboard layout, the protocol used by the mouse, and so forth. . X servers either need fonts installed on the local host, or need to know of a remote host that provides font services (with xfs, for instance). The former means that font packages are mandatory. The latter means that font packages may be gratuitous. To err on the side of caution, install at least the xfonts-base, xfonts-100dpi or xfonts-75dpi, and xfonts-scalable packages.
PackageMaintainerDebian X Strike Force <debian-x@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamexserver-common
PackageSectionx11
PackageVersion4.3.0.dfsg.1-6ubuntu25.3
SHA-1C4F621898090066EFD48C91C14C7AE57673EA03C
SHA-256B2D1713A805046CDADB308527EF3D440F35F328D7FE288C940B6626A46E03D88
Key Value
FileSize324934
MD59501622FF99DC08DE5D0CB99C48F7D1F
PackageDescriptionfiles and utilities common to all X servers The X server is the hardware interface of the X Window System. Its job is to communicate with video display and input devices, and present them in a standardized, abstract fashion via the X protocol to X clients (X-based programs). The X server largely relieves programs of having to know or care about the details of the hardware with which they are interacting (such things as 32-bit versus 8-bit color, the layout of the keyboard, how many buttons the mouse has, etc.). The catch is that the X server must itself know the technical specifications of the graphics hardware and monitor, the keyboard layout, the protocol used by the mouse, and so forth. . X servers either need fonts installed on the local host, or need to know of a remote host that provides font services (with xfs, for instance). The former means that font packages are mandatory. The latter means that font packages may be gratuitous. To err on the side of caution, install at least the xfonts-base, xfonts-100dpi or xfonts-75dpi, and xfonts-scalable packages.
PackageMaintainerDebian X Strike Force <debian-x@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamexserver-common
PackageSectionx11
PackageVersion4.3.0.dfsg.1-6ubuntu25
SHA-1F1AA88ACB48CCDB2A9B90D3CA1331D0DFDDDD25E
SHA-256FB0DF847E4C6F14C517FD6A221E8281FD885912D391EB7D157E3B474AD5EFC6C
Key Value
FileSize325366
MD530E3F4EEE2BC32096B4731A2C77B90B4
PackageDescriptionfiles and utilities common to all X servers The X server is the hardware interface of the X Window System. Its job is to communicate with video display and input devices, and present them in a standardized, abstract fashion via the X protocol to X clients (X-based programs). The X server largely relieves programs of having to know or care about the details of the hardware with which they are interacting (such things as 32-bit versus 8-bit color, the layout of the keyboard, how many buttons the mouse has, etc.). The catch is that the X server must itself know the technical specifications of the graphics hardware and monitor, the keyboard layout, the protocol used by the mouse, and so forth. . X servers either need fonts installed on the local host, or need to know of a remote host that provides font services (with xfs, for instance). The former means that font packages are mandatory. The latter means that font packages may be gratuitous. To err on the side of caution, install at least the xfonts-base, xfonts-100dpi or xfonts-75dpi, and xfonts-scalable packages.
PackageMaintainerDebian X Strike Force <debian-x@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamexserver-common
PackageSectionx11
PackageVersion4.3.0.dfsg.1-6ubuntu25.3
SHA-1B11CC06C2A7E3D702911F20A21B65FB106148F16
SHA-256A51E28BDD06B321F037732F339EF68BD56A57BBE3F901143F312948A608131CC
Key Value
FileSize325252
MD5E58B5310F679F45CAA79CBDC287BA73C
PackageDescriptionfiles and utilities common to all X servers The X server is the hardware interface of the X Window System. Its job is to communicate with video display and input devices, and present them in a standardized, abstract fashion via the X protocol to X clients (X-based programs). The X server largely relieves programs of having to know or care about the details of the hardware with which they are interacting (such things as 32-bit versus 8-bit color, the layout of the keyboard, how many buttons the mouse has, etc.). The catch is that the X server must itself know the technical specifications of the graphics hardware and monitor, the keyboard layout, the protocol used by the mouse, and so forth. . X servers either need fonts installed on the local host, or need to know of a remote host that provides font services (with xfs, for instance). The former means that font packages are mandatory. The latter means that font packages may be gratuitous. To err on the side of caution, install at least the xfonts-base, xfonts-100dpi or xfonts-75dpi, and xfonts-scalable packages.
PackageMaintainerDebian X Strike Force <debian-x@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamexserver-common
PackageSectionx11
PackageVersion4.3.0.dfsg.1-6ubuntu25.3
SHA-134EB92C6042A9DD10E41100F0F680DBDA02AF8D8
SHA-25634A5B1FCC99A7B741AE26B1C658E85E86867B8CD509E235EA2EFB522EF79CAF1