Result for BA5B0F82856EEBD4CE3DF9B34622E86FB7575E1C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/golang-github-ryanuber-go-glob-dev/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize220
MD50E7EDE3FBCA44D3337A62A17CD1CDD5F
SHA-1BA5B0F82856EEBD4CE3DF9B34622E86FB7575E1C
SHA-2561ACC83CDDEAD727ADCCCE1449F0E1595A988F6CC85053CA739FC5E8DCE7F04CF
SSDEEP6:XtdfWE0RMZ992z//zqK7CWtVsRwbQ593wQP:X6Hq92zD4aVWasZP
TLSHT130D0A75C7D0989A5D4190361070114139966482FE4493A5884E794BCA4BF6E99513E19
hashlookup:parent-total2
hashlookup:trust60

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 2)

The searched file hash is included in 2 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize4640
MD5AC43D1539670FA2F4EB63F124CC68D66
PackageDescriptionBasic string globs in golang Go-glob is a single-function library implementing basic string glob support. . Globs are an extremely user-friendly way of supporting string matching without requiring knowledge of regular expressions or Go's particular regex engine. Most people understand that if you put a * character somewhere in a string, it is treated as a wildcard. Surprisingly, this functionality isn't found in Go's standard library, except for path.Match, which is intended to be used while comparing paths (not arbitrary strings), and contains specialized logic for this use case. A better solution might be a POSIX basic (non-ERE) regular expression engine for Go, which doesn't exist currently.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamegolang-github-ryanuber-go-glob-dev
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion1.0.0-2
SHA-1AFC66E4EDA555531D19F2F6A920FC5E4CF8FCDEE
SHA-256DAE99FD8918C4479B8430DAAA26C5EBC396527CE8F71FEB343ADD98241F9AC09
Key Value
FileSize4588
MD52AD11CB25440B5880601829834330DA1
PackageDescriptionBasic string globs in golang Go-glob is a single-function library implementing basic string glob support. . Globs are an extremely user-friendly way of supporting string matching without requiring knowledge of regular expressions or Go's particular regex engine. Most people understand that if you put a * character somewhere in a string, it is treated as a wildcard. Surprisingly, this functionality isn't found in Go's standard library, except for path.Match, which is intended to be used while comparing paths (not arbitrary strings), and contains specialized logic for this use case. A better solution might be a POSIX basic (non-ERE) regular expression engine for Go, which doesn't exist currently.
PackageMaintainerDebian Go Packaging Team <team+pkg-go@tracker.debian.org>
PackageNamegolang-github-ryanuber-go-glob-dev
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion1.0.0-2
SHA-17C6F72DD50A40DF8487D3AB448BCA97DE8FDB4A1
SHA-256C8DF23D6292149D937FBD3C05BA5C0D9998F91ECC26118C1C9E6A7B0B2E98365