Result for B5276FD4DC17076CD0BD48E9A2222A504FF7B38C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/searchd
FileSize1152440
MD5710ABC988E2DF4B0129BA1ED8B515369
SHA-1B5276FD4DC17076CD0BD48E9A2222A504FF7B38C
SHA-2565D4EB47CDC4D22B6EEC5382C04D2678107A00F1FB3256EFA8C766BADC0E35448
SSDEEP24576:T5zN552yx7EJ2KXlpt60gjFDKRuuuuuuuuuun:T97UXl5gjhKn
TLSHT183353A8D7D209EE4CCBA44B6F97DC28F2B666171090F558DDB86C27B8C5E40ACE43636
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
MD5316AC89C93D084B8F5D7F4567D87ADB3
PackageArchs390
PackageDescriptionSphinx is a full-text search engine, distributed under GPL version 2. Commercial licensing (e.g. for embedded use) is also available upon request. Generally, it's a standalone search engine, meant to provide fast, size-efficient and relevant full-text search functions to other applications. Sphinx was specially designed to integrate well with SQL databases and scripting languages. Currently built-in data source drivers support fetching data either via direct connection to MySQL, or PostgreSQL, or from a pipe in a custom XML format. Adding new drivers (e.g. to natively support some other DBMSes) is designed to be as easy as possible. Search API is natively ported to PHP, Python, Perl, Ruby, Java, and also available as a pluggable MySQL storage engine. API is very lightweight so porting it to new language is known to take a few hours. As for the name, Sphinx is an acronym which is officially decoded as SQL Phrase Index. Yes, I know about CMU's Sphinx project.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamesphinx
PackageRelease6.fc15
PackageVersion0.9.9
SHA-15E9061627907A73846586B8FF5C5EF8D7F9E32CA
SHA-25641B6302133CCD2F310FE8720733E3EFE9F5E1DCBA6317AC17CD71EB4D214BF2D