Result for FA27BC817B7B5E1B3C1362A259901B48D1843C26

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/man/man3/LWP::Online.3pm.gz
FileSize4271
MD53A99BE27C643D8DB903D3B43A78C229B
SHA-1FA27BC817B7B5E1B3C1362A259901B48D1843C26
SHA-256E2B82C5F7E2CA558C17FD807E3B0F3F89220A07AAFABDCA5399047036D43B727
SSDEEP96:+fGPg1N/dLO/uZVeoyytX7RMJkw/ByCA6ultCDKaMK9:tUN/1FUytX9SD5yaUCWw9
TLSHT133917EF8223728A8F4CE3D9BB2D9037839F8BBD252A97D69D60008142E9A5C41C35C58
hashlookup:parent-total16
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 16)

The searched file hash is included in 16 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD595A399FE8E5A028395261F23FC9B64BB
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleaselp153.21.12
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-116FB2813D383D5B72947B6B264C9084BC6450BE9
SHA-256D86DE8C28177CE8CC001DA20C0C46F5A3C8F0C123186B3638DEFCF566751F957
Key Value
MD5A926585B6219310BB07283B01C7F14CB
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleasebp155.2.10
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-118522F3112ED71D9FCAD3EFEB6737CC01090F0D9
SHA-2561F7CF73F87CB74309E1EDF76C9470D7004F52FC72E20B6C2509F7D200A3A3B33
Key Value
MD576270856C6EB82F738C1EB77A87B25F1
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease21.2
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-12A9FB9E2074AAE70E60D7A6780FD5070FCCB6600
SHA-256B3D45157EC6DB43D1A60AE320E2EDCB825079EF68966C3C1CD4BB78104E6B870
Key Value
MD596ED52B1A7031B7C49843F70ECD429DA
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease21.26
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-12E0C8AA1F1654155784D96C9C515AF7E7851B78F
SHA-256C9300E66F7FB028BD5C6E0E5039051B74122CA121110B5044BDF0563646CD570
Key Value
MD58483C52D839616275AF50CB8CD04E594
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleaselp151.2.1
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-133768BC18E3811CAA05DAE0F14DAFC8DBB372522
SHA-256320728A25D790BE5DE63DFC61D80F7A9957F620DA305E63122271A8EB46DF335
Key Value
MD559F5E7EBA6F9D92E1E3FD906639E0572
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleasebp153.1.14
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-162AE31E471B75E3841548E8D8DD1A7482A53E507
SHA-25676664E068E49392350F551FCA9AA3167235F7F4AB55F343D3C1D2FB75AC7B1C6
Key Value
MD5CC343B1DE8F409E909CE7CBD2DC2DED0
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageRelease21.1
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-19861E10A69B63D3CAEF875D66268AEECC05808DD
SHA-2567E7696A93D7DC193792F8C5A3E28FF1F9AB3EB13BE4C8A204632084AC8897B0F
Key Value
MD5978673988CE42E4B6B7B49ADAF367974
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleaselp152.3.2
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-1A0DBD77722511FDC68A84AB7269E47E5EA926423
SHA-25624D21AEA0F2EF8807A4C141EC952296D5C0C162C9A8322684304B254297EE327
Key Value
MD529768FEFB2D9C5DF5BFC3A09BD8DDB73
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleaselp151.21.1
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-1A3C2BD8EE09A42657355015658B13474963F9D79
SHA-256B184D3ECAD96E2513CEF7D5A1C72BB3FFB40B704D450C90728695E803985E68B
Key Value
MD5E9423DF9E33719C71CC58F129CBD1C93
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThis module attempts to answer, as accurately as it can, one of the nastiest technical questions there is. *Am I on the internet?* The answer is useful in a wide range of decisions. For example... _Should my test scripts run the online portion of the tests or just skip them?_ _Do I try to fetch fresh data from the server?_ _If my request to the server breaks, is it because I'm offline, or because the server is offline?_ And so on, and so forth. But a host of networking and security issues make this problem very difficult. There are firewalls, proxies (both well behaved and badly behaved). We might not have DNS. We might not have a network card at all! You might have network access, but only to a for-money wireless network that responds to ever HTTP request with a page asking you to enter your credit card details for paid access. Which means you don't "REALLY" have access. The mere nature of the question makes it practically unsolvable. But with the answer being so useful, and the only other alternative being to ask the user "duh... are you online?" (when you might not have a user at all) it's my gut feeling that it is worthwhile at least making an attempt to solve the problem, if only in a limited way.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNameperl-LWP-Online
PackageReleasebp154.1.22
PackageVersion1.08
SHA-1B54946BDF8C01ED99E36C69210797E28A45BAAEF
SHA-256DB81CF94C7CCF5DE8571BF470CC3A6B0526CF7268F3A8B997AA331C2FB6484A6