Result for EAE52E70D242D601A24483A9DDB11FA1D2B6ADC7

Query result

Key Value
FileNamegpsd.spec
FileSize40796
MD5A87A4D869B8CC156E7B0AF9BE7BC3D71
SHA-1EAE52E70D242D601A24483A9DDB11FA1D2B6ADC7
SHA-256B109BC1A6AA65DAB28A20419A95AFEF9C224EDC924998B583CA0E29CDDC04A07
SSDEEP768:4ubIHK9296b8486FfHjiCNTB1iFNQbAeVhHgfuFB0IeSeNgGYOrKVUrG0dZHQwNr:4fHK9e6b84fFfHGC1B1gNQkeHQuFB0Ii
TLSHT16703F9376389523366D21295AA7BB462F73B41BE75A9630970FC931C1B010E5E37B374
hashlookup:parent-total1
hashlookup:trust55

Network graph view

Parents (Total: 1)

The searched file hash is included in 1 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
MD5699B149F3A116CB0154B72A93A10CA21
PackageArchx86_64
PackageDescriptiongpsd is a service daemon that mediates access to a GPS sensor connected to the host computer by serial or USB interface, making its data on the location/course/velocity of the sensor available to be queried on TCP port 2947 of the host computer. With gpsd, multiple GPS client applications (such as navigational and wardriving software) can share access to a GPS without contention or loss of data. Also, gpsd responds to queries with a format that is substantially easier to parse than NMEA 0183. A client library is provided for applications. After installing this RPM, gpsd will automatically connect to USB GPSes when they are plugged in and requires no configuration. For serial GPSes, you will need to start gpsd by hand. Once connected, the daemon automatically discovers the correct baudrate, stop bits, and protocol. The daemon will be quiescent when there are no clients asking for location information, and copes gracefully when the GPS is unplugged and replugged.
PackageMaintainerhttps://bugs.opensuse.org
PackageNamegpsd
PackageRelease2.3
PackageVersion3.23.1
SHA-1CDFABD62AA6225C50EC35A83E5E09B6690C2D964
SHA-2567C8300E5CC814DA8309621B0D731B932DA13C41AAD357DBBE5564633E98C354C