Result for D34E8E78D95434C9D038B48575B5AF4146776BB8

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/Data::OptList.3pm.gz
FileSize3099
MD5C24ABE60C73084DCD9449C9B4ABDD2FC
SHA-1D34E8E78D95434C9D038B48575B5AF4146776BB8
SHA-256C99BA916F91D608300FC1EDC360B5E191DF89BBD50B95F7C5E53EFCC08C2B95D
SSDEEP48:XLXjDq4kZLYQV2VJ1lZkk+WsvPQS1nxgbYefn1oPVnG++bwZZSYgIud/XDN9pSyK:bTD9SVbkPsvt1e6GwrSYgRFXDT0yK9
TLSHT1B4514C14419DD6AC4F16FECF3A806C59F5EC4528C0B9961DB91A4D21CB361606C38BE8
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
MD57D1B6C210A2A22ECC0FE3B5588CB3F3A
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionHashes are great for storing named data, but if you want more than one entry for a name, you have to use a list of pairs. Even then, this is really boring to write: $values = [ foo => undef, bar => undef, baz => undef, xyz => { ... }, ]; With Data::OptList, you can do this instead: $values = Data::OptList::mkopt([ qw(foo bar baz), xyz => { ... }, ]); This works by assuming that any defined scalar is a name and any reference following a name is its value.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameperl-Data-OptList
PackageRelease14.module_f34+11298+4cde107a
PackageVersion0.110
SHA-160076D5A17BE1D504C0D849322CF41D66E167BFB
SHA-256A44ED6C13C92DB77CCA48FF3C50978C0557091283BF6A4F0FC9D4D3B933F313C