Result for DDBCB0B22A097A5C71060D54C9D919ACBF10235E

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/enfuse-mp
FileSize2876968
MD5E7136B26E43D9437E4DAE1A37611FB5E
SHA-1DDBCB0B22A097A5C71060D54C9D919ACBF10235E
SHA-256B9940F193F922825881F6F046F5078170E85DAF56EC1E71447FC25475851A826
SSDEEP49152:v01iwynATFro1u/WEWO/pKAIJB1yNsnOj90BorF3w18h5S:4o1+/pKAaB1yNMOJ
TLSHT1FED54A06E362988DC082F07077B6F4D2922134BD503C793AB7A59F351A3AF51AB97727
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
CRC320BD64D6A
FileName19614
FileSize1873930
MD5E05AC5CFCEB5A238777635327F4EF250
OpSystemCode362
PackageDescriptionimage exposure blending tool Enfuse blends differently exposed images of the same scene into a nice output image, without producing intermediate HDR images that are then tonemapped to a viewable image. This simplified process often works much better and quicker than the currently known tonemapping algorithms. . The exposure blending is done using the Mertens-Kautz-Van Reeth exposure fusion algorithm. The basic idea is that pixels in the input images are weighted according to qualities such as proper exposure, good contrast, and high saturation. These weights determine how much a given pixel will contribute to the final image. . Enfuse does not align images for you. Use a tool like Hugin or PanoTools to do this. The TIFFs produced by these programs are exactly what Enfuse is designed to work with.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNameenfuse
PackageSectiongraphics
PackageVersion4.1.4+dfsg-5
ProductCode184814
RDS:package_id184814
SHA-1D8ED545EDF2C114F1E5A25C078F0EA7D5EB5A17E
SHA-256D5754D2F9F1458A0EA7D5AA99E06F5AF17FC400B293CFE1947ACD7D5230876AE
SpecialCode
dbnsrl_legacy
insert-timestamp1648755917.2224205
sourceRDS_2022.03.1_legacy.db