Result for 888EBCC78143E65A845626F05A73A7297C7F38D5

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/pear/Symfony/Component/EventDispatcher/ContainerAwareEventDispatcher.php
FileSize6637
MD54A61034AA9D379F40CBE0E2E209CAAD4
SHA-1888EBCC78143E65A845626F05A73A7297C7F38D5
SHA-256A388C3A941965DC1FABF5DF87730D671742B80E0EEA81AC02DF07D4DB3066823
SSDEEP96:/948ZLOJ3aT+MywyiSCafHQ78/YQCy68/reZXyL:V48ZLOJ3+HywyiSCavQ78gQCy68zedyL
TLSHT1DCD1CE0856D25A73E0AFB77F3B8F4685A12DD39B2019581179EECEE04F85FAC4190ADC
hashlookup:parent-total3
hashlookup:trust65

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Parents (Total: 3)

The searched file hash is included in 3 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
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
Key Value
MD57153434287BF98B04457DDAD276057FC
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-1BE665D6049950D8FC015E182A392D2193C836E04
SHA-256FD8D5A541EC1972DA78D59075C2CF2FC6BE3D7481396DA4D11AC76EEFAD2E381