![]() ![]() I surmise that the asterisk tells whatever comparing app Oracle had in mind to find that: A 7-zip hash looks very different.Ī binary vs text comparison is as follows: MD5deep's SHA256deep.exe has two spaces between the hash and file name, maybe yours did too but the forum truncated the spaces? Or maybe yours only has one space. And if the app is different, then the layout of the hash and name might be different. If your hash function app is the same as the hash function app Oracle uses, then either they manually insert the asterisk to indicate the binary-only nature of the name, or they are using a command line switch you aren't using, etc. Only the hash serves to identify whether two files (might be) the same. Otherwise you'd have a list of hashes and no idea which was which. ![]() If you run a hash function on a series of files, the hash function may show the name of the file that goes with the hash. ![]()
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