Result for 80784EE7242E3DCF28305C9154812E57D7D4E421

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/bin/notmuch-emacs-mua
FileSize4266
MD555E33D58D481E4D56443502EA0DD3518
SHA-180784EE7242E3DCF28305C9154812E57D7D4E421
SHA-256BAA62AEF57DBFEBC282DA8B34009FFD5BD68CDBAC13D1D3955B27CDBC05814A9
SSDEEP96:J9ZzfQHBxz5BveliaFvY7icgkwjqqASBw8p9mC:z1fw+lTY7i6SBN
TLSHT15691A51AB78292B631871166270700CFE13E9A636854BE563F45775D37324B322E63E8
tar:gnameroot
tar:unameroot
hashlookup:parent-total22
hashlookup:trust100

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 22)

The searched file hash is included in 22 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5C0C8874081B35F20996E1087B0991D7A
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionBecause dealing with your mail can be so much better. "Not much mail" is what Notmuch thinks about your email collection. Even if you receive 12000 messages per month or have on the order of millions of messages that you've been saving for decades. Regardless, Notmuch will be able to quickly search all of it. It's just plain not much mail. "Not much mail" is also what you should have in your inbox at any time. Notmuch gives you what you need, (tags and fast search), so that you can keep your inbox tamed and focus on what really matters in your life, (which is surely not email). Notmuch is an answer to Sup. Sup is a very good email program written by William Morgan (and others) and is the direct inspiration for Notmuch. Notmuch began as an effort to rewrite performance-critical pieces of Sup in C rather than ruby. From there, it grew into a separate project. One significant contribution Notmuch makes compared to Sup is the separation of the indexer/searcher from the user interface. (Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated into any email program.) Notmuch is not much of an email program. It doesn't receive messages (no POP or IMAP support). It doesn't send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). And for what it does do (email search) that work is provided by an external library, Xapian. So if Notmuch provides no user interface and Xapian does all the heavy lifting, then what's left here? Not much.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageReleasebp154.1.92
PackageVersion0.35
SHA-10F7A85C2E1FC962AC95CA6796A2F6B5BAED663DB
SHA-2564514E13F9A356BFC9CCC4D9E62CE1450E8E03F10C6F4E3CE407B2D948B3C1CCE
Key Value
MD59582ED4F42118486E1F7CD698C49A2D7
PackageArchi586
PackageDescriptionBecause dealing with your mail can be so much better. "Not much mail" is what Notmuch thinks about your email collection. Even if you receive 12000 messages per month or have on the order of millions of messages that you've been saving for decades. Regardless, Notmuch will be able to quickly search all of it. It's just plain not much mail. "Not much mail" is also what you should have in your inbox at any time. Notmuch gives you what you need, (tags and fast search), so that you can keep your inbox tamed and focus on what really matters in your life, (which is surely not email). Notmuch is an answer to Sup. Sup is a very good email program written by William Morgan (and others) and is the direct inspiration for Notmuch. Notmuch began as an effort to rewrite performance-critical pieces of Sup in C rather than ruby. From there, it grew into a separate project. One significant contribution Notmuch makes compared to Sup is the separation of the indexer/searcher from the user interface. (Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated into any email program.) Notmuch is not much of an email program. It doesn't receive messages (no POP or IMAP support). It doesn't send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). And for what it does do (email search) that work is provided by an external library, Xapian. So if Notmuch provides no user interface and Xapian does all the heavy lifting, then what's left here? Not much.
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageRelease86.7
PackageVersion0.34.1
SHA-10F9E2FC1F514107334B20D20A9220E232474DC7D
SHA-2560846DAA2665D7E4F9F8588EA6C653BF75345FCFEAB032BE6958385D94EEF7EE0
Key Value
MD5C474FF15E650B7E184D3BDE48BE91CC8
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionBecause dealing with your mail can be so much better. "Not much mail" is what Notmuch thinks about your email collection. Even if you receive 12000 messages per month or have on the order of millions of messages that you've been saving for decades. Regardless, Notmuch will be able to quickly search all of it. It's just plain not much mail. "Not much mail" is also what you should have in your inbox at any time. Notmuch gives you what you need, (tags and fast search), so that you can keep your inbox tamed and focus on what really matters in your life, (which is surely not email). Notmuch is an answer to Sup. Sup is a very good email program written by William Morgan (and others) and is the direct inspiration for Notmuch. Notmuch began as an effort to rewrite performance-critical pieces of Sup in C rather than ruby. From there, it grew into a separate project. One significant contribution Notmuch makes compared to Sup is the separation of the indexer/searcher from the user interface. (Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated into any email program.) Notmuch is not much of an email program. It doesn't receive messages (no POP or IMAP support). It doesn't send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). And for what it does do (email search) that work is provided by an external library, Xapian. So if Notmuch provides no user interface and Xapian does all the heavy lifting, then what's left here? Not much.
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageRelease86.7
PackageVersion0.34.1
SHA-14C5994688166FAF7140B55D3EE8B3051B29E3411
SHA-256B654969DF284A220C0662AC6B61348A2E40C1F4C9FD48542EB6E8C89F619B947
Key Value
MD52436100C49970A2ED9F2605B2C1C83A9
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionBecause dealing with your mail can be so much better. "Not much mail" is what Notmuch thinks about your email collection. Even if you receive 12000 messages per month or have on the order of millions of messages that you've been saving for decades. Regardless, Notmuch will be able to quickly search all of it. It's just plain not much mail. "Not much mail" is also what you should have in your inbox at any time. Notmuch gives you what you need, (tags and fast search), so that you can keep your inbox tamed and focus on what really matters in your life, (which is surely not email). Notmuch is an answer to Sup. Sup is a very good email program written by William Morgan (and others) and is the direct inspiration for Notmuch. Notmuch began as an effort to rewrite performance-critical pieces of Sup in C rather than ruby. From there, it grew into a separate project. One significant contribution Notmuch makes compared to Sup is the separation of the indexer/searcher from the user interface. (Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated into any email program.) Notmuch is not much of an email program. It doesn't receive messages (no POP or IMAP support). It doesn't send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). And for what it does do (email search) that work is provided by an external library, Xapian. So if Notmuch provides no user interface and Xapian does all the heavy lifting, then what's left here? Not much.
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageReleaselp153.86.3
PackageVersion0.34.1
SHA-1661AC4C87AB4DCF43472E36FB334E60E688A9647
SHA-256D009D0D2E423AAC7EE5890AC1DFA843C901CAF706D4BD0FC18C51B8BB3255C81
Key Value
MD5C15B551C5438C21C6A1C1A24B0364457
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionA global-search and tag-based email system that can be used from a terminal or from within a text editor. Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated elsewhere. Notmuch is not much of an email program. It does not receive messages (no POP or IMAP support), it does not send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). It does email search, for which it uses the Xapian library.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageReleasebp156.4.7
PackageVersion0.37
SHA-167846D4FAED68F76D7D39A869035E07D08912DCF
SHA-256FAA4EFDACD286737EF332BFE52427DCD32D7648BE6DF1788BAC512C1CB9C8E5D
Key Value
MD5E3F9AE0B276A5D671A86335C7CB24D56
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptionBecause dealing with your mail can be so much better. "Not much mail" is what Notmuch thinks about your email collection. Even if you receive 12000 messages per month or have on the order of millions of messages that you've been saving for decades. Regardless, Notmuch will be able to quickly search all of it. It's just plain not much mail. "Not much mail" is also what you should have in your inbox at any time. Notmuch gives you what you need, (tags and fast search), so that you can keep your inbox tamed and focus on what really matters in your life, (which is surely not email). Notmuch is an answer to Sup. Sup is a very good email program written by William Morgan (and others) and is the direct inspiration for Notmuch. Notmuch began as an effort to rewrite performance-critical pieces of Sup in C rather than ruby. From there, it grew into a separate project. One significant contribution Notmuch makes compared to Sup is the separation of the indexer/searcher from the user interface. (Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated into any email program.) Notmuch is not much of an email program. It doesn't receive messages (no POP or IMAP support). It doesn't send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). And for what it does do (email search) that work is provided by an external library, Xapian. So if Notmuch provides no user interface and Xapian does all the heavy lifting, then what's left here? Not much.
PackageMaintainerhttps://www.suse.com/
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageRelease150400.86.2
PackageVersion0.34.1
SHA-16B1C0CDDE37F28EEA5D08EC5681A4522CFEA59B3
SHA-2566D30C996BA4002C575CD77D4F5EE5514E9D3D0A1F9358065CACED57643C3E0AF
Key Value
MD59D83F54E92E9AED6D1AF82062E475ACF
PackageArchi586
PackageDescriptionBecause dealing with your mail can be so much better. "Not much mail" is what Notmuch thinks about your email collection. Even if you receive 12000 messages per month or have on the order of millions of messages that you've been saving for decades. Regardless, Notmuch will be able to quickly search all of it. It's just plain not much mail. "Not much mail" is also what you should have in your inbox at any time. Notmuch gives you what you need, (tags and fast search), so that you can keep your inbox tamed and focus on what really matters in your life, (which is surely not email). Notmuch is an answer to Sup. Sup is a very good email program written by William Morgan (and others) and is the direct inspiration for Notmuch. Notmuch began as an effort to rewrite performance-critical pieces of Sup in C rather than ruby. From there, it grew into a separate project. One significant contribution Notmuch makes compared to Sup is the separation of the indexer/searcher from the user interface. (Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated into any email program.) Notmuch is not much of an email program. It doesn't receive messages (no POP or IMAP support). It doesn't send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). And for what it does do (email search) that work is provided by an external library, Xapian. So if Notmuch provides no user interface and Xapian does all the heavy lifting, then what's left here? Not much.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageRelease1.1
PackageVersion0.34.1
SHA-17E1006798C4CF7AACC6880F16AB5FBB1D2441A2A
SHA-256DAC865246A3FB7DA81F77BE00327014B8BF1D4EA9C33D08FB3FD570D6F3F280F
Key Value
MD5416E4D575954763CD481E3B98AF34F04
PackageArchs390x
PackageDescriptionA global-search and tag-based email system that can be used from a terminal or from within a text editor. Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated elsewhere. Notmuch is not much of an email program. It does not receive messages (no POP or IMAP support), it does not send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). It does email search, for which it uses the Xapian library.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageReleasebp156.4.7
PackageVersion0.37
SHA-188392F7702C4011C30352A760B95C6A48F9E64B9
SHA-256614288213213BDDCEDF1CCEC02E7B1A7AE48939A00DB6567A736A95AC39D4EFC
Key Value
MD52297C304DEA3728D9E36344E513A40FF
PackageArcharmv7hl
PackageDescriptionBecause dealing with your mail can be so much better. "Not much mail" is what Notmuch thinks about your email collection. Even if you receive 12000 messages per month or have on the order of millions of messages that you've been saving for decades. Regardless, Notmuch will be able to quickly search all of it. It's just plain not much mail. "Not much mail" is also what you should have in your inbox at any time. Notmuch gives you what you need, (tags and fast search), so that you can keep your inbox tamed and focus on what really matters in your life, (which is surely not email). Notmuch is an answer to Sup. Sup is a very good email program written by William Morgan (and others) and is the direct inspiration for Notmuch. Notmuch began as an effort to rewrite performance-critical pieces of Sup in C rather than ruby. From there, it grew into a separate project. One significant contribution Notmuch makes compared to Sup is the separation of the indexer/searcher from the user interface. (Notmuch provides a library interface so that its indexing/searching/tagging features can be integrated into any email program.) Notmuch is not much of an email program. It doesn't receive messages (no POP or IMAP support). It doesn't send messages (no mail composer, no network code at all). And for what it does do (email search) that work is provided by an external library, Xapian. So if Notmuch provides no user interface and Xapian does all the heavy lifting, then what's left here? Not much.
PackageNamenotmuch
PackageRelease86.4
PackageVersion0.34.1
SHA-1924D1D03F4E667A024AC9AB185EF7AB486837060
SHA-25651B2E66E4389DB70074FBD1C6B0B5ECF291824F006332C864DD52615880D6228
Key Value
MD5BDF48F19B034B262CB67D950F0C81FDE
PackageArchnoarch
PackageDescriptionNot much support for Emacs.
PackageMaintainerFedora Project
PackageNameemacs-notmuch
PackageRelease1.fc33
PackageVersion0.31
SHA-19CF29B1B80F0976D357A3F4368B4F06750016756
SHA-256C15E639AE264AA1F6260F9851C2BF8125B4C98E9CD76D5E5A169008BED90E23B