Result for C683B61D587ED1BCB204217DE6A86DFBBA881EB6

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/trustme/__pycache__/_version.cpython-38.pyc
FileSize164
MD538F46B261190B172D6EC41917ECC73B1
SHA-1C683B61D587ED1BCB204217DE6A86DFBBA881EB6
SHA-2564300F65BC8CC09D7C7DBA42BCD15178F9384E84228A12AFA6352EDD490A5302F
SSDEEP3:UtCBotuletxbkCoz7Rt/lPlJhG9YAKWMmoWrzwPK4yLe8ITit:cCBotqetGCoz7//G9YvLor8PKFy8I6
TLSHT120C02B000904827BF98AFF379520433C33F13CE0A35519113328E7E85D553684932C04
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

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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
MD50BBDF911BCFEECB6657B80C38336F27F
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionYou wrote a cool network client or server. It encrypts connections using TLS. Your test suite needs to make TLS connections to itself. Uh oh. Your test suite probably doesn't have a valid TLS certificate. Now what? trustme is a tiny Python package that does one thing: it gives you a fake certificate authority (CA) that you can use to generate fake TLS certs to use in your tests. Well, technically they are real certs, they are just signed by your CA, which nobody trusts. But you can trust it. Trust me.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamepython3-trustme
PackageRelease5.fc32
PackageVersion0.5.2
SHA-1DD0C2D086F2CD916CA45024236C745F02035C7AC
SHA-2563DE9E638FF3A10924D54FDCC816DB2A9C46F3EDC1123D8662D4FD40FC5524FEC