Result for EC3163CA51D778F4AE33255ACB7DE0F1B568339C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/File::ShareDir.3pm.gz
FileSize4834
MD56028752AD56753086730772B97E475FA
SHA-1EC3163CA51D778F4AE33255ACB7DE0F1B568339C
SHA-2567238FA668FD6A65EE53FA19E9F62F7676890B58B5D650392B50BA9D0569F3969
SSDEEP96:1s2PhI8OP8UHD3/2JVB/Dbp28FZWjCEzaxDs/V44jF3lk2XsKYDCM4KCaq6:1s25I8wHD3/2JVB/30OIjC6aFg5jNOWQ
TLSHT19DA17E0E48CCE858506C27BD265B266794BC67AFCC87C4329FF469C6C1D68724310FC1
hashlookup:parent-total9
hashlookup:trust95

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 9)

The searched file hash is included in 9 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD56DE4876E9BB4D6078CD41EBEFEB98636
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageRelease33.1
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-178C1F00D07F8F0EB4B07D5B1DFC9C89F749F0C5D
SHA-2562EF8CC16A650A4128FB496629EB37C81E41C3A90DF993DC23F88068BC9DDAF46
Key Value
MD5C240F70D5F95C0F301BED394B22B572B
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageRelease33.1
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-160C836CADA625728563A098446579C3DCFFCBCE3
SHA-256D3732E9FE45EB9777BCB60531998C27ED743281EE6E966D4DC638B8B8425B7A1
Key Value
MD5D435B0E64EB2961B7BA5D133E55A9218
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageReleaselp150.33.1
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-116E1F45793DCF02B84B56D19E12AAE9EABEC3853
SHA-25666AFBBC72A8A19E45D30353DE7868D14D428A08473A9872E9F5A68C0E1FF3915
Key Value
MD59F6916AEE96E99C7D46A56A0D13DF846
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageReleaselp153.33.12
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-102E9ECA84EA8DE5D3D7C1A6B8CACD5019ED0213C
SHA-256B29F41CAA5BB10C68759C51AA44F55D17658F636BBC88174474DFA147DFE999D
Key Value
MD5B69FA50A7825656BF0FBB3D61EDD8449
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageReleaselp151.33.1
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-1F886331B29355ED35A03298AE9CEFFDB50D7BC45
SHA-25633905F56CEBCFC6E561D76B0F083FD619BC0909EE772522613D1C4D16C437B15
Key Value
MD5E04E1AD71E8CAC720CF1E816BFD5E1E2
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageReleaselp152.33.1
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-1D8FE0A233BDF196B2E7176A37CC05E06E39D104E
SHA-256C5FE97DFE5E1D4F1AAC3E39DA3FF8E45547A1CD6C4630DD67EFA63B4851F9BB2
Key Value
MD562847331D48D2AFD9D99781CAB22FA3F
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageRelease33.2
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-14D00EFDEB5B2E343308ED01E2F0E46B9BA79F470
SHA-2563FE1441B8140B1826AAB615815F0F9B80A33A7D0948AD761999E026B86CB9E4F
Key Value
MD540E11260D1D4361081C7F400AA3369F0
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageRelease33.1
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-14D9780830D0CE604C0C1DD56A1B5BE07A91B3163
SHA-256248D52E502AA1A28A7908433C7BE8886E0D71204DD5E0E5395B7395B4DF4F90B
Key Value
MD5EDEA13D665996AC4C1F15F6EAE5C65C2
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe intent of File::ShareDir is to provide a companion to Class::Inspector and File::HomeDir, modules that take a process that is well-known by advanced Perl developers but gets a little tricky, and make it more available to the larger Perl community. Quite often you want or need your Perl module (CPAN or otherwise) to have access to a large amount of read-only data that is stored on the file-system at run-time. On a linux-like system, this would be in a place such as /usr/share, however Perl runs on a wide variety of different systems, and so the use of any one location is unreliable. Perl provides a little-known method for doing this, but almost nobody is aware that it exists. As a result, module authors often go through some very strange ways to make the data available to their code. The most common of these is to dump the data out to an enormous Perl data structure and save it into the module itself. The result are enormous multi-megabyte .pm files that chew up a lot of memory needlessly. Another method is to put the data "file" after the __DATA__ compiler tag and limit yourself to access as a filehandle. The problem to solve is really quite simple. 1. Write the data files to the system at install time. 2. Know where you put them at run-time. Perl's install system creates an "auto" directory for both every distribution and for every module file. These are used by a couple of different auto-loading systems to store code fragments generated at install time, and various other modules written by the Perl "ancient masters". But the same mechanism is available to any dist or module to store any sort of data.
PackageNameperl-File-ShareDir
PackageRelease33.1
PackageVersion1.118
SHA-1E5A983AFDD109EAAFAB46B4829B9ECAE6CA63BD4
SHA-256A6E1E657CCB3A1F18C9A222957D086A17ADE915980670212B1113C5EC0422DB2