Result for C79B21986ACD80CBAB2FE0F75BC6693429752306

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/File::pushd.3pm.gz
FileSize3326
MD5228A4534BB95B31CDADE8BF00915B945
SHA-1C79B21986ACD80CBAB2FE0F75BC6693429752306
SHA-256F5F8874D32B9C1E9244F6866FA94413B467C25CC08845A9FAAB2E6ED7D0CF824
SSDEEP48:XEsuThHo/tTPV80Zljg4dEOWY9FR6yX4rYqndpe2KXedDV9cPl8da3dhDoTT+j9g:0JHolB8ejRpWWR6iq5KXetI3dhETTog
TLSHT1D1615CEEBF83A17A060EEF11D650900573AC92E7C4005A4C7B3016EF7FB99899508E09
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
MD5F79DA770AB6F6AB3FAC6CBC54318AEAD
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageRelease1.14
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-145C40ACBF7394267676502D7852C8CE61D5EA32E
SHA-2569F6F021583F8C808B0544215F3C60207B7C61C546B914E66B6DF88AEE46E200E
Key Value
MD5863C0AAAB79303BBD93B3C917673E9A7
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionFile::pushd does a temporary 'chdir' that is easily and automatically reverted, similar to 'pushd' in some Unix command shells. It works by creating an object that caches the original working directory. When the object is destroyed, the destructor calls 'chdir' to revert to the original working directory. By storing the object in a lexical variable with a limited scope, this happens automatically at the end of the scope. This is very handy when working with temporary directories for tasks like testing; a function is provided to streamline getting a temporary directory from File::Temp. For convenience, the object stringifies as the canonical form of the absolute pathname of the directory entered. *Warning*: if you create multiple 'pushd' objects in the same lexical scope, their destruction order is not guaranteed and you might not wind up in the directory you expect.
PackageNameperl-File-pushd
PackageRelease19.37
PackageVersion1.016
SHA-182C65E1C506BB9935BAD76F84D3F95F0709C0F69
SHA-256071B50DC450EEA2FEBF9795D53C5D490948DF4B7ED3DE6696E6B3809A37918B9