Result for 2D4B352E0814A9E5C3DEB80C34803F3102716DD2

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/python3-rjsmin/copyright
FileSize5289
MD54ECE5D6CB251D8D84A25D40E378AD731
SHA-12D4B352E0814A9E5C3DEB80C34803F3102716DD2
SHA-2569FDFC3263560EDB046AB4251CAF681F95F35088EB32A494912A7799888CBFB9F
SSDEEP96:AsTFJorYJ5Dt3i23zNU0ul0FtUb+BKjGx4gPzHFcSkuOsvQHFoO:AMLors5Dt3i23hUrl0FtUb+BKjGxxPzY
TLSHT12EB1C41F368087B30AD023D17D4BA4DAF20AE29D7BAF5615749DD3445B3A12E92FB4B0
hashlookup:parent-total69
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 69)

The searched file hash is included in 69 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize17148
MD568FD56EFC467AEF14E896C3663F3DBC3
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 2.7 rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 2.7 module.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-2ubuntu3
SHA-103E96FDF0F3FCF882D5E04674C619C2CB2292109
SHA-256AA831563ABE27F078098F33DB60C69C5DEA304C7FB93AFC252C1368534B5A3F6
Key Value
FileSize18292
MD57A36A60D591E7179EFFF790593F11404
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 3.x rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to CR) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 3.x module.
PackageMaintainerPKG OpenStack <openstack-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepython3-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-4+b2
SHA-110BACE7844C43EB80F3D791AD9E862212EC54D2E
SHA-256BF31800C66FCA4AC949FCAD6355599712DF0EF62DB63C1A8648BD761AE838E05
Key Value
FileSize17392
MD57E9AFE5D69C424B289F83D5A3FA205DC
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 3.x rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to CR) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 3.x module.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython3-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-4ubuntu1
SHA-1137CC8C61BC253575EA703FE941C880FBA38BE04
SHA-256166BD411B512D5771990D313027A7614EB8E28670CEF37AA606FA9123CE82C3D
Key Value
FileSize18392
MD58F36C4B8838B073C28AD04EB4F3EBBC2
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 2.7 rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to CR) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 2.7 module.
PackageMaintainerPKG OpenStack <openstack-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-4+b2
SHA-1193472051CF857E0ECD2BF199D57DCAB19B866EB
SHA-25636D524B9C05762384A2A217F3B78D3866AAF08A45740B5CCF7FF9DD0A8195B34
Key Value
FileSize18436
MD5A7130C164771BCC6A2A6FCB06112E01F
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 2.7 rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to CR) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 2.7 module.
PackageMaintainerPKG OpenStack <openstack-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepython-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-4+b2
SHA-11B49022196DB209E504C91AE57B8E27B3FC2F455
SHA-256A405A46110A8AB16365E6B1E629AA91EE5A3F115BE2C73DCBD38ECB15F760D99
Key Value
FileSize17868
MD5855292F9B3B304D72588223F6B9FD227
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 3.x rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to CR) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 3.x module.
PackageMaintainerPKG OpenStack <openstack-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepython3-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-4
SHA-11CA77671513A71ED005EB777420CBB642E69C0F9
SHA-256389461CEE261E368DB04BDFDEC2A6E9E02E2405E317A9D19D24883EAE6763A91
Key Value
FileSize16940
MD527BAA7E34A4FD66CFD9695881276931D
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 2.7 rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 2.7 module.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-2ubuntu3
SHA-124FD34ECA3E9ADB62CC88AD6A86D71A7E7DB5D6C
SHA-256B0C3259630BAC68F3682CF1D567A7CAC0E2685D53ED2D96609544F0E90BE1A15
Key Value
FileSize16826
MD5F7498675B9E339FDBF3FEBBD7EE424BC
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 2.7 rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 2.7 module.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-2ubuntu3
SHA-1267EA8470B100CDCDE4D440852593F0D52D0BA2B
SHA-2561DBE9DD9B3200A0F0E3DF24F05E72F4D88409C39B158091484B1F5CAC0186A9B
Key Value
FileSize17044
MD576F753ABC2A0D4AC5F97DFD7343D3384
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 2.7 rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 2.7 module.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamepython-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-2ubuntu1
SHA-126AA97CE0B39D675F4FC89ACB7AD77461DBABD63
SHA-256093D610F2AC4F7693F67759EFB2860D5E8803E105E683F14E81A007BF7711E2F
Key Value
FileSize18700
MD5937825CA112456B1A171C4A43CC8A465
PackageDescriptionjavascript minifier written in Python - Python 3.x rJSmin is a javascript minifier written in Python. The minifier is based on the semantics of jsmin.c by Douglas Crockford. . The module is a re-implementation aiming for speed, so it can be used at runtime (rather than during a preprocessing step). Usually it produces the same results as the original jsmin.c. It differs in the following ways: . - there is no error detection: unterminated string, regex and comment literals are treated as regular javascript code and minified as such. - Control characters inside string and regex literals are left untouched; they are not converted to spaces (nor to CR) - Newline characters are not allowed inside string and regex literals, except for line continuations in string literals (ECMA-5). - "return /regex/" is recognized correctly. - Line terminators after regex literals are handled more sensibly - "+ +" and "- -" sequences are not collapsed to '++' or '--' - Newlines before ! operators are removed more sensibly - Comments starting with an exclamation mark (!) can be kept optionally - rJSmin does not handle streams, but only complete strings. (However, the module provides a "streamy" interface). . Since most parts of the logic are handled by the regex engine it's way faster than the original Python port of jsmin.c by Baruch Even. The speed factor varies between about 6 and 55 depending on input and Python version (it gets faster the more compressed the input already is). Compared to the speed-refactored Python port by Dave St.Germain the performance gain is less dramatic but still between 3 and 50 (for huge inputs)). See the docs/BENCHMARKS file for details. . This package contains the Python 3.x module.
PackageMaintainerPKG OpenStack <openstack-devel@lists.alioth.debian.org>
PackageNamepython3-rjsmin
PackageSectionpython
PackageVersion1.0.12+dfsg1-4+b2
SHA-12757C02BAAE2732BBFED58677EFA17FB6542292C
SHA-256E10A5391B2E90D162AC3F333175483DAFC9517C0B8EA83E1527237ED237124AC