Result for 9B3EED16AD0452462F1E5A69814ED2EEDBDCB6F8

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/packages/perl-LWP-Online/Changes
FileSize844
MD5DA236E799659AEDB7766EAF15BCB8B7E
SHA-19B3EED16AD0452462F1E5A69814ED2EEDBDCB6F8
SHA-256C1E5B20AF405145189126A11ECA3FC8575AEB732F3BE465A98E7B67403BC308F
SSDEEP12:8Afa4fexF7GweXczFVkNGVqZ9gg/Vy8lKWABI2A/V1MWOFT1c2BGYmg6LDT92BGK:3HexFoXcZqNG0mA86KWOgjMhrGwld6S
TLSHT164011E9F58743036B0AB62F695FB30F85BFA80CA9F215878D42E4CFC431749A46B5193
hashlookup:parent-total51
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 51)

The searched file hash is included in 51 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD56A7736D7D78E3F2B207DF19A82845DB5
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is: Am I on the internet?
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease13.fc23
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-1015499A0F6B355A1AB9E33AC408770D69AB097F3
SHA-256D28D77913F208F0A82174814F9B20BE3B90048C0283349A6B94662D9D45164A5
Key Value
MD58E6A243D0DF3046E4075D693A4BAF809
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is: Am I on the internet?
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease10.fc21
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-101E4EF4CE21C912A095589FD04DA55A2C36A05D6
SHA-256303B20A277F836D9CF55F084F5A2169825E6D1FDB03AD0CEC3C2256BD8B10BD1
Key Value
MD5C50F31B6306D351B1104404B10F0EAC9
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is: Am I on the internet?
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease9.fc20
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-1046B2EFB282BDF4A07EF6BAA5BA16760623F5DD6
SHA-256E8EAFADBF092200DF018498B366B21EF2D8EE5ACF2F4DA205D30B7F2BC71305D
Key Value
MD5207764A9C4AA90C376E73AD4043CABF6
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease2.28
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-10D1E08470CFA817071A19F44CA5D82D2ED2F9967
SHA-25640468FBEB0BE862A79D471643BBB1BA075BFD2C444E670F8692792C88013563C
Key Value
MD595A399FE8E5A028395261F23FC9B64BB
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleaselp153.21.12
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-116FB2813D383D5B72947B6B264C9084BC6450BE9
SHA-256D86DE8C28177CE8CC001DA20C0C46F5A3C8F0C123186B3638DEFCF566751F957
Key Value
MD5A926585B6219310BB07283B01C7F14CB
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleasebp155.2.10
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-118522F3112ED71D9FCAD3EFEB6737CC01090F0D9
SHA-2561F7CF73F87CB74309E1EDF76C9470D7004F52FC72E20B6C2509F7D200A3A3B33
Key Value
MD5D8544F10C93DA64A5078E60DA176B50D
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is: Am I on the internet?
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease10.fc21
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-118DBF336A1AD4A842448F7C62A497DC4251CD7E1
SHA-2568C796FF42723DAF90DE03476B3B703F9674DFD737E8D9A8E40B1C6C335108DC0
Key Value
MD531F453EAAA81635E91A7137FDCBD38B1
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is: Am I on the internet?
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease7.fc19
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-1196ACE29584D0DF481171C38E745CBABAFF59D64
SHA-256D567E0D5754CF71EC520197195AF031C9C0E627237A670C2565E4501F000C9D1
Key Value
MD52E8DA5E500107B402BC6E26A6C75EAA3
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is: Am I on the internet?
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease11.fc22
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-127F42539D1EEA2FCE4710CAB8800F139A9E4BB6E
SHA-2567A0A39ACADE7FA549EB90D70174214FBDE27285E07187CC29FFA11676A3C9B03
Key Value
MD576270856C6EB82F738C1EB77A87B25F1
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease21.2
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-12A9FB9E2074AAE70E60D7A6780FD5070FCCB6600
SHA-256B3D45157EC6DB43D1A60AE320E2EDCB825079EF68966C3C1CD4BB78104E6B870