Result for F8A5A924D246D5EE77C18CC8CCDF6A14342F3828

Query result

Key Value
FileNamextide.spec
FileSize21576
MD5F7198B39637F98E1D121BF70AF0E66C9
SHA-1F8A5A924D246D5EE77C18CC8CCDF6A14342F3828
SHA-2569EE10CF633AEFE289943E3C8B1794E1138738048EB4A91645C5FB1CBE5AFE56A
SSDEEP384:sNxD1c12RxvC3BtoAo3aH77vzh8VRcrDPGPOBniZDhpIp9IP1csr84EYAmuCmg:GdTvkBvH/zh8WbGPOBKcKRx
TLSHT161A2B8BAB5C897B1B695F7D31408FD43A723757AC27948687E0C23240B805B6F5391BE
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
MD505BDF7A5341A40A3BA787BAFE4473397
PackageArchppc64
PackageDescriptionXTide is a package that provides tide and current predictions in a wide variety of formats. Graphs, text listings, and calendars can be generated, or a tide clock can be provided on your desktop. XTide can work with X-windows, plain text terminals, or the web. This is accomplished with three separate programs: the interactive interface (xtide), the non-interactive or command line interface (tide), and the web interface. The algorithm that XTide uses to predict tides is the one used by the National Ocean Service in the U.S. It is significantly more accurate than the simple tide clocks that can be bought in novelty stores. However, it takes more to predict tides accurately than just a spiffy algorithm -- you also need some special data for each and every location for which you want to predict tides. XTide reads this data from harmonics files. See http://www.flaterco.com/xtide/files.html for details on where to get these NOTE: Please also see README.fedora in xtide-common package for Fedora specific issue.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamextide
PackageRelease2.fc22
PackageVersion2.14
SHA-16613F056EA6CC3CCA07048F1DF81F29B7D28EB19
SHA-256607A1573D753DF29AA646E846291F497D736B14F9C1CA2FB1A97AE9CCC7C6930