Result for 7B893D64A11002A14683CBFBB6A06DED7CB1DEFC

Query result

Key Value
FileNamegitlist/vendor/symfony/event-dispatcher/Symfony/Component/EventDispatcher/CHANGELOG.md
FileSize471
MD5C627C4133EA8E24EB579E4DAFE26A9F1
SHA-17B893D64A11002A14683CBFBB6A06DED7CB1DEFC
SHA-2562CB207F76EFD8AFB694DDE44ABF8C35DF585C1B6B3E15BE757B646D3BDE1FF45
SSDEEP12:7BKdsckyiKXq6+6OVXqQuAgKh3jwoBhJP862ASAuSXOCv:FKdsckyiMq61yqQjPBjTJP8HAPu09v
TLSHT121F0A09019D31FB111A4535A034F7D908B6E65EF2FB6251110F84C1E0D9DFE48EAFE90
tar:gnamebin
tar:unameroot
hashlookup:parent-total19
hashlookup:trust100

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Parents (Total: 19)

The searched file hash is included in 19 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD52AD53F19F87D7F82ED960582B601F43C
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Symfony2 Event Dispatcher component implements the Observer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observer_pattern) pattern in a simple and effective way to make all these things possible and to make your projects truly extensible. Take a simple example from the Symfony2 HttpKernel component. Once a Response object has been created, it may be useful to allow other elements in the system to modify it (e.g. add some cache headers) before it's actually used. To make this possible, the Symfony2 kernel throws an event - kernel.response. Here's how it works: * A listener (PHP object) tells a central dispatcher object that it wants to listen to the kernel.response event; * At some point, the Symfony2 kernel tells the dispatcher object to dispatch the kernel.response event, passing with it an Event object that has access to the Response object; * The dispatcher notifies (i.e. calls a method on) all listeners of the kernel.response event, allowing each of them to make modifications to the Response object. Optional dependency: HttpKernel
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamephp-symfony2-EventDispatcher
PackageRelease1.fc18
PackageVersion2.1.3
SHA-102186CB7B1421430CA395CB454F2893F23537788
SHA-25665D704B093ED5D9D72C90429346554FF6C2DB135A6242FB4A42FD9EA3FFAFF52
Key Value
MD5D2E9D1882573DCF9F4B5890E87D58EC0
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Symfony2 Event Dispatcher component implements the Observer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observer_pattern) pattern in a simple and effective way to make all these things possible and to make your projects truly extensible. Take a simple example from the Symfony2 HttpKernel component. Once a Response object has been created, it may be useful to allow other elements in the system to modify it (e.g. add some cache headers) before it's actually used. To make this possible, the Symfony2 kernel throws an event - kernel.response. Here's how it works: * A listener (PHP object) tells a central dispatcher object that it wants to listen to the kernel.response event; * At some point, the Symfony2 kernel tells the dispatcher object to dispatch the kernel.response event, passing with it an Event object that has access to the Response object; * The dispatcher notifies (i.e. calls a method on) all listeners of the kernel.response event, allowing each of them to make modifications to the Response object. Optional dependency: HttpKernel (php-symfony2-HttpKernel)
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamephp-symfony2-EventDispatcher
PackageRelease1.fc19
PackageVersion2.2.1
SHA-11858ABF57FBEE44142FDCF34F63A7EC8E58434FB
SHA-2565C29E4864E16D413BA5FDDF199DB53035DD942E87E4CADE8EE04873C66DAF81D
Key Value
MD56DAD0A766153A323051E9B078107E8D7
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Symfony Event Dispatcher component implements the Observer [1] pattern in a simple and effective way to make all these things possible and to make your projects truly extensible. [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observer_pattern
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamephp-symfony-eventdispatcher
PackageRelease3.fc20
PackageVersion2.3.7
SHA-11AD25FB18A66B55A1C0EAD4EAC7028863CE99772
SHA-256A4FBE3074CDD0633CD30B2244C70ABC340207D50C899C163F823AA2A4D7651FE
Key Value
FileNamehttps://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD/5.5/packages//m68k//gitlist-0.4.0p1.tgz
MD5F2D3407A1E90EA2707FE9353689246E9
SHA-12EFDBAE810A3F0B062997325F90445C972953117
SHA-256AC9B92A3FB8B8295D98D2463A3A22E8427F8B5EEC18668B416E33492956BD3B4
SSDEEP24576:iU6HIDdiQvJXZhFNtqnBWfaUrHiM2hvWzeMdc:iqBJhHMWiU2Izc
TLSHT1F11533786A87DF3810A8C0FDCA7696D487EC3161A70ED46CEDEAC46139A2F23C061D5D
Key Value
FileNamehttps://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD/5.5/packages//arm//gitlist-0.4.0p1.tgz
MD5D2CFE9AFAD69E82DA97E8DD8EBC0F1F8
SHA-1495C39A79893E0DF7D42CAAEDC694457D7581847
SHA-2567FF4C068FDF5B09C334037160CA059009E0ED58E7155E96BABFC539AAC2FCC9E
SSDEEP24576:kPamTNJVAHYm3+7VShPmvHTROQZTivUHKHuc:kPZ7VAHEhShLQFcuc
TLSHT191152327A34F1614A8C3268FE21BF3249460DF785F8B3AE1815546F9BBAB04746429B7
Key Value
MD54EB7D50782F929410CE9C5EFB5FFB082
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Symfony Event Dispatcher component implements the Observer [1] pattern in a simple and effective way to make all these things possible and to make your projects truly extensible. [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observer_pattern
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamephp-symfony-event-dispatcher
PackageRelease2.el6
PackageVersion2.3.42
SHA-150CD11F5FFA49D2363418363FB22F84C34131643
SHA-2563C32F5CE549B57099E3252DCE74A4ABCA1BDECFF7428B924AD2F9034F074BF3F
Key Value
MD5EF7BE78E4A56EFDC6E649BBF25E4EDFA
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Symfony Event Dispatcher component implements the Observer [1] pattern in a simple and effective way to make all these things possible and to make your projects truly extensible. [1] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observer_pattern
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamephp-symfony-event-dispatcher
PackageRelease1.el6
PackageVersion2.3.42
SHA-16A97EE928FE7AECF648111C25D3876D93D893E5D
SHA-256BCA1637936B2BAB57E9DB790EC3484850F8CE27FE386EDF3C346BC6A2443D89E
Key Value
FileNamehttps://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/OpenBSD/5.5/packages//sparc//gitlist-0.4.0p1.tgz
MD5A99D44A7D557A3272E569663DB088676
SHA-16ECE2F2C1AA3D734ECECE7D934EE6FF15D322E6D
SHA-256FBDEF9E41CBF0A315FA982227AC7DEA7352A1BDA8869ADCCC710CAFBF0B5BEBD
SSDEEP24576:EfilXeyIkZAPQ1dJRRWpOZrZARgQBAAWde0JxbqkZ:EfilnjZJdJnWkLBQtCzZ
TLSHT12E1523973D91DAAC3DE7CB3DA92A4E40D432EB009F97D8CD2DE1453F61798A06054BE2
Key Value
MD5CF6453ACBCCA206F986121818F19DF9E
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Symfony2 Event Dispatcher component implements the Observer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observer_pattern) pattern in a simple and effective way to make all these things possible and to make your projects truly extensible. Take a simple example from the Symfony2 HttpKernel component. Once a Response object has been created, it may be useful to allow other elements in the system to modify it (e.g. add some cache headers) before it's actually used. To make this possible, the Symfony2 kernel throws an event - kernel.response. Here's how it works: * A listener (PHP object) tells a central dispatcher object that it wants to listen to the kernel.response event; * At some point, the Symfony2 kernel tells the dispatcher object to dispatch the kernel.response event, passing with it an Event object that has access to the Response object; * The dispatcher notifies (i.e. calls a method on) all listeners of the kernel.response event, allowing each of them to make modifications to the Response object. Optional dependency: HttpKernel (php-symfony2-HttpKernel)
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamephp-symfony2-EventDispatcher
PackageRelease1.fc19
PackageVersion2.2.1
SHA-1766AE7E8A1D769D8E44F5F3908EF5C76A5DC2B88
SHA-2563E56C76D666A0553B70C0E17A062DF5FD95B9C8E599119F87ED6E66725A75AC7
Key Value
MD588681F17233A245CAABDA289C96DF4AA
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionThe Symfony2 Event Dispatcher component implements the Observer (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observer_pattern) pattern in a simple and effective way to make all these things possible and to make your projects truly extensible. Take a simple example from the Symfony2 HttpKernel component. Once a Response object has been created, it may be useful to allow other elements in the system to modify it (e.g. add some cache headers) before it's actually used. To make this possible, the Symfony2 kernel throws an event - kernel.response. Here's how it works: * A listener (PHP object) tells a central dispatcher object that it wants to listen to the kernel.response event; * At some point, the Symfony2 kernel tells the dispatcher object to dispatch the kernel.response event, passing with it an Event object that has access to the Response object; * The dispatcher notifies (i.e. calls a method on) all listeners of the kernel.response event, allowing each of them to make modifications to the Response object. Optional dependency: HttpKernel
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNamephp-symfony2-EventDispatcher
PackageRelease1.fc18
PackageVersion2.1.3
SHA-176923197FBAC6B87A319341A6E44FD9C511B89F2
SHA-256C2121F289E04FE0FAE9E7F3819E1C80EE2820FF29E34E178609C91B7E45E1AAD