Result for BCE5A8422B8963ABC8D1DA457ED60DDD74277D7C

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/golang-github-xordataexchange-crypt/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize900
MD5C7F387655A79935F877ED91102FDA3AD
SHA-1BCE5A8422B8963ABC8D1DA457ED60DDD74277D7C
SHA-2561A753E414F3BB4AC54CAAA773D99C80B67B415318CFB2A702FB210F773304B84
SSDEEP12:X925AjdiArf/qpTjZfo6JlEXJPmF767iQt9MYlB4e563C21SoED7xq/rqbx1k/gW:X98Api0fCDfo6/wP2cPB1KxSHJbx1k/j
TLSHT16D11B765AFDE06BD7C0BC57100E4E80C931ED2D32B6AE90AEA41133C204C0AD054FD7D
hashlookup:parent-total3
hashlookup:trust65

Network graph view

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
FileSize2014912
MD5E6A4DC69E40A668FCAFD0DA122EC33F0
PackageDescriptionStore/retrieve encrypted configs from etcd or Consul (CLI tool) Fess up. You have passwords and usernames hard coded in your apps. You have IP addresses checked in to your source code repository. You have entire configuration files that were created by the developer who wrote the app and haven’t been changed since she typed "git init". . "crypt" is here to lead you back to the Path of Enlightened Configuration. Store encrypted configuration values in etcd or Consul using a command-line application. . Decrypt them before starting your application using a wrapper script and the handy CLI tool, or inside the app using the "crypt/config" library. . "crypt" is built on time-tested standards like OpenPGP, base64, and gzip. Your data is encrypted using public key encryption, and can only be decrypted by when the private key is available. After compression, it is encrypted, and base64-encoded so it can be stored in your key/value store of choice. etcd and Consul are supported out of the box, but adding other storage tools is a trivial task, thanks to Go’s interfaces. . This package provides the command-line tool "bin/crypt", but renamed to /usr/bin/crypt-xordataexchange, to avoid filename collision with /usr/bin/crypt from the mcrypt package.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamegolang-github-xordataexchange-crypt
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion0.0.2+git20170626.21.b2862e3-1
SHA-1DAAA11C08C0C9B3BF9D49C78DF00C4EFAFEF2631
SHA-2568842AEF7118BA14A4B341B1C40DDD63078A9945AFFAC95CB81D1263F2834B346
Key Value
FileSize2142534
MD56B6704E072BEBF54E7E35662AF9B229A
PackageDescriptionStore/retrieve encrypted configs from etcd or Consul (CLI tool) Fess up. You have passwords and usernames hard coded in your apps. You have IP addresses checked in to your source code repository. You have entire configuration files that were created by the developer who wrote the app and haven’t been changed since she typed "git init". . "crypt" is here to lead you back to the Path of Enlightened Configuration. Store encrypted configuration values in etcd or Consul using a command-line application. . Decrypt them before starting your application using a wrapper script and the handy CLI tool, or inside the app using the "crypt/config" library. . "crypt" is built on time-tested standards like OpenPGP, base64, and gzip. Your data is encrypted using public key encryption, and can only be decrypted by when the private key is available. After compression, it is encrypted, and base64-encoded so it can be stored in your key/value store of choice. etcd and Consul are supported out of the box, but adding other storage tools is a trivial task, thanks to Go’s interfaces. . This package provides the command-line tool "bin/crypt", but renamed to /usr/bin/crypt-xordataexchange, to avoid filename collision with /usr/bin/crypt from the mcrypt package.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamegolang-github-xordataexchange-crypt
PackageSectionutils
PackageVersion0.0.2+git20170626.21.b2862e3-1
SHA-16D25E6A80C23A5F02C43C49060E1DCD7D09A5610
SHA-25633B3F6E5B6D1A265E9F539F1ADFF355F8850428D5AF262437C0045B3CA4BDCAC
Key Value
FileSize12210
MD56B84A556B862F64FD997865DA6FD1636
PackageDescriptionStore/retrieve encrypted configs from etcd or Consul (Go library) Fess up. You have passwords and usernames hard coded in your apps. You have IP addresses checked in to your source code repository. You have entire configuration files that were created by the developer who wrote the app and haven’t been changed since she typed "git init". . "crypt" is here to lead you back to the Path of Enlightened Configuration. Store encrypted configuration values in etcd or Consul using a command-line application. . Decrypt them before starting your application using a wrapper script and the handy CLI tool, or inside the app using the "crypt/config" library. . "crypt" is built on time-tested standards like OpenPGP, base64, and gzip. Your data is encrypted using public key encryption, and can only be decrypted by when the private key is available. After compression, it is encrypted, and base64-encoded so it can be stored in your key/value store of choice. etcd and Consul are supported out of the box, but adding other storage tools is a trivial task, thanks to Go’s interfaces. . This package provides the "github.com/xordataexchange/crypt/config" Go library.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamegolang-github-xordataexchange-crypt-dev
PackageSectiondevel
PackageVersion0.0.2+git20170626.21.b2862e3-1
SHA-1372137EC571991C40A3D2996BD92F205168FA181
SHA-2569B031575F39613539ECDD9203487616002C251F1D786D0314DA50D81AB63C09B