Result for AF8A8B266C2C5B5B6C7A028D7F14A4B5F61DDCA9

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/postgresql/11/bin/ogr_fdw_info
FileSize19268
MD51DBB16BE9889F2C207F72215F4D86160
SHA-1AF8A8B266C2C5B5B6C7A028D7F14A4B5F61DDCA9
SHA-256D65495F71E2207647D7BD397B4975C0B496AC6E343128DEC3953D19C86FE3772
SSDEEP384:dLRwvSjZuZDxn60UcY87WrnDAmtpeGlcNUUqadsZetABttQI5S+9am7aMbP8:dLkSjZu1xn60UcY87WrnDAGpeG6NzqaI
TLSHT18182C9CBAB4C1E53C4DACC7E085F830350EEDC1EB1A5A35FB81DC98C6992A046CD6D68
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
FileSize82900
MD578A731A901D085BC9021C3EE14A497E0
PackageDescriptionPostgreSQL foreign data wrapper for OGR OGR is the vector half of the GDAL spatial data access library. It allows access to a large number of GIS data formats using a simple C API for data reading and writing. Since OGR exposes a simple table structure and PostgreSQL foreign data wrappers allow access to table structures, the fit seems pretty perfect. . This implementation currently has the following limitations: * Only non-spatial query restrictions are pushed down to the OGR driver. PostgreSQL foreign data wrappers support delegating portions of the SQL query to the underlying data source, in this case OGR. This implementation currently pushes down only non-spatial query restrictions, and only for the small subset of comparison operators (>, <, <=, >=, =) supported by OGR. * Spatial restrictions are not pushed down. OGR can handle basic bounding box restrictions and even (for some drivers) more explicit intersection restrictions, but those are not passed to the OGR driver yet. * OGR connections every time Rather than pooling OGR connections, each query makes (and disposes of) two new ones, which seems to be the largest performance drag at the moment for restricted (small) queries. * All columns are retrieved every time. PostgreSQL foreign data wrappers don't require all columns all the time, and some efficiencies can be gained by only requesting the columns needed to fulfill a query. This would be a minimal efficiency improvement, but can be removed given some development time, since the OGR API supports returning a subset of columns.
PackageMaintainerDebian GIS Project <pkg-grass-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepostgresql-11-ogr-fdw
PackageSectiondatabase
PackageVersion1.0.7-2
SHA-1644A84D9355DC8B942EA0A5CD83B1A14C6BA82D6
SHA-256EAD186296D9314F9F4CA597ECB13A31F34C84066AAF42CDBD9749BEB9A5D99F0