Result for 252DB5A8FD572A22FFD103E60912F2359989739F

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/lib64/libinih.so.0
FileSize15280
MD528B4335540DF8E58E165DF3F65A40FEB
SHA-1252DB5A8FD572A22FFD103E60912F2359989739F
SHA-2566BB136A85CCA4B308F1D70F193918F79BE9615F61D70A3F0CD44F05728C7BB4A
SSDEEP96:R0wEBWBvm2oCgOloFA35RURycSpSUnXM0rEUoBOxwVO+xYAJVhiS/T+iVvqVFJQP:RY8g2FgOloSVJpSbKdwVOCnVhpai
TLSHT12162074AF3A2CE7FC1B8557840CB53313BB17816A71317232648F7712EA2BB85A63656
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
MD5E930608746C9AE8D8621A7B489002651
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptioninih (INI Not Invented Here) is a simple .INI file parser written in C. It's only a couple of pages of code, and it was designed to be small and simple, so it's good for embedded systems. It's also more or less compatible with Python's ConfigParser style of .INI files, including RFC 822-style multi-line syntax and name: value entries. To use it, just give ini_parse() an INI file, and it will call a callback for every name=value pair parsed, giving you strings for the section, name, and value. It's done this way ("SAX style") because it works well on low-memory embedded systems, but also because it makes for a KISS implementation.
PackageMaintainerkekepower <kekepower>
PackageNamelib64inih0
PackageRelease1.mga8
PackageVersion52
SHA-1074B2A7177019143A2F842F377A6969A67016696
SHA-256529313B98502670D4DFB54431C38480D4DF8E2C2B3C745165F6F98AFFA9B15FF