Failed to save the file to the "xx" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "ll" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "mm" directory.

Failed to save the file to the "wp" directory.

403WebShell
403Webshell
Server IP : 66.29.132.124  /  Your IP : 18.221.221.171
Web Server : LiteSpeed
System : Linux business141.web-hosting.com 4.18.0-553.lve.el8.x86_64 #1 SMP Mon May 27 15:27:34 UTC 2024 x86_64
User : wavevlvu ( 1524)
PHP Version : 7.4.33
Disable Function : NONE
MySQL : OFF  |  cURL : ON  |  WGET : ON  |  Perl : ON  |  Python : ON  |  Sudo : OFF  |  Pkexec : OFF
Directory :  /usr/share/tcl8/8.4/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Command :


[ Back ]     

Current File : /usr/share/tcl8/8.4/platform-1.0.14.tm
# -*- tcl -*-
# ### ### ### ######### ######### #########
## Overview

# Heuristics to assemble a platform identifier from publicly available
# information. The identifier describes the platform of the currently
# running tcl shell. This is a mixture of the runtime environment and
# of build-time properties of the executable itself.
#
# Examples:
# <1> A tcl shell executing on a x86_64 processor, but having a
#   wordsize of 4 was compiled for the x86 environment, i.e. 32
#   bit, and loaded packages have to match that, and not the
#   actual cpu.
#
# <2> The hp/solaris 32/64 bit builds of the core cannot be
#   distinguished by looking at tcl_platform. As packages have to
#   match the 32/64 information we have to look in more places. In
#   this case we inspect the executable itself (magic numbers,
#   i.e. fileutil::magic::filetype).
#
# The basic information used comes out of the 'os' and 'machine'
# entries of the 'tcl_platform' array. A number of general and
# os/machine specific transformation are applied to get a canonical
# result.
#
# General
# Only the first element of 'os' is used - we don't care whether we
# are on "Windows NT" or "Windows XP" or whatever.
#
# Machine specific
# % arm*   -> arm
# % sun4*  -> sparc
# % intel  -> ix86
# % i*86*  -> ix86
# % Power* -> powerpc
# % x86_64 + wordSize 4 => x86 code
#
# OS specific
# % AIX are always powerpc machines
# % HP-UX 9000/800 etc means parisc
# % linux has to take glibc version into account
# % sunos -> solaris, and keep version number
#
# NOTE: A platform like linux glibc 2.3, which can use glibc 2.2 stuff
# has to provide all possible allowed platform identifiers when
# searching search. Ditto a solaris 2.8 platform can use solaris 2.6
# packages. Etc. This is handled by the other procedure, see below.

# ### ### ### ######### ######### #########
## Requirements

namespace eval ::platform {}

# ### ### ### ######### ######### #########
## Implementation

# -- platform::generic
#
# Assembles an identifier for the generic platform. It leaves out
# details like kernel version, libc version, etc.

proc ::platform::generic {} {
    global tcl_platform

    set plat [string tolower [lindex $tcl_platform(os) 0]]
    set cpu  $tcl_platform(machine)

    switch -glob -- $cpu {
	sun4* {
	    set cpu sparc
	}
	intel -
	i*86* {
	    set cpu ix86
	}
	x86_64 {
	    if {$tcl_platform(wordSize) == 4} {
		# See Example <1> at the top of this file.
		set cpu ix86
	    }
	}
	"Power*" {
	    set cpu powerpc
	}
	"arm*" {
	    set cpu arm
	}
	ia64 {
	    if {$tcl_platform(wordSize) == 4} {
		append cpu _32
	    }
	}
    }

    switch -glob -- $plat {
	cygwin* {
	    set plat cygwin
	}
	windows {
	    if {$tcl_platform(platform) == "unix"} {
		set plat cygwin
	    } else {
		set plat win32
	    }
	    if {$cpu eq "amd64"} {
		# Do not check wordSize, win32-x64 is an IL32P64 platform.
		set cpu x86_64
	    }
	}
	sunos {
	    set plat solaris
	    if {[string match "ix86" $cpu]} {
		if {$tcl_platform(wordSize) == 8} {
		    set cpu x86_64
		}
	    } elseif {![string match "ia64*" $cpu]} {
		# sparc
		if {$tcl_platform(wordSize) == 8} {
		    append cpu 64
		}
	    }
	}
	darwin {
	    set plat macosx
	    # Correctly identify the cpu when running as a 64bit
	    # process on a machine with a 32bit kernel
	    if {$cpu eq "ix86"} {
		if {$tcl_platform(wordSize) == 8} {
		    set cpu x86_64
		}
	    }
	}
	aix {
	    set cpu powerpc
	    if {$tcl_platform(wordSize) == 8} {
		append cpu 64
	    }
	}
	hp-ux {
	    set plat hpux
	    if {![string match "ia64*" $cpu]} {
		set cpu parisc
		if {$tcl_platform(wordSize) == 8} {
		    append cpu 64
		}
	    }
	}
	osf1 {
	    set plat tru64
	}
    }

    return "${plat}-${cpu}"
}

# -- platform::identify
#
# Assembles an identifier for the exact platform, by extending the
# generic identifier. I.e. it adds in details like kernel version,
# libc version, etc., if they are relevant for the loading of
# packages on the platform.

proc ::platform::identify {} {
    global tcl_platform

    set id [generic]
    regexp {^([^-]+)-([^-]+)$} $id -> plat cpu

    switch -- $plat {
	solaris {
	    regsub {^5} $tcl_platform(osVersion) 2 text
	    append plat $text
	    return "${plat}-${cpu}"
	}
	macosx {
	    set major [lindex [split $tcl_platform(osVersion) .] 0]
	    if {$major > 8} {
		incr major -4
		append plat 10.$major
		return "${plat}-${cpu}"
	    }
	}
	linux {
	    # Look for the libc*.so and determine its version
	    # (libc5/6, libc6 further glibc 2.X)

	    set v unknown

	    # Determine in which directory to look. /lib, or /lib64.
	    # For that we use the tcl_platform(wordSize).
	    #
	    # We could use the 'cpu' info, per the equivalence below,
	    # that however would be restricted to intel. And this may
	    # be a arm, mips, etc. system. The wordsize is more
	    # fundamental.
	    #
	    # ix86   <=> (wordSize == 4) <=> 32 bit ==> /lib
	    # x86_64 <=> (wordSize == 8) <=> 64 bit ==> /lib64
	    #
	    # Do not look into /lib64 even if present, if the cpu
	    # doesn't fit.

	    # TODO: Determine the prefixes (i386, x86_64, ...) for
	    # other cpus.  The path after the generic one is utterly
	    # specific to intel right now.  Ok, on Ubuntu, possibly
	    # other Debian systems we may apparently be able to query
	    # the necessary CPU code. If we can't we simply use the
	    # hardwired fallback.

	    switch -exact -- $tcl_platform(wordSize) {
		4 {
		    lappend bases /lib
		    if {[catch {
			exec dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_MULTIARCH
		    } res]} {
			lappend bases /lib/i386-linux-gnu
		    } else {
			# dpkg-arch returns the full tripled, not just cpu.
			lappend bases /lib/$res
		    }
		}
		8 {
		    lappend bases /lib64
		    if {[catch {
			exec dpkg-architecture -qDEB_HOST_MULTIARCH
		    } res]} {
			lappend bases /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu
		    } else {
			# dpkg-arch returns the full tripled, not just cpu.
			lappend bases /lib/$res
		    }
		}
		default {
		    return -code error "Bad wordSize $tcl_platform(wordSize), expected 4 or 8"
		}
	    }

	    foreach base $bases {
		if {[LibcVersion $base -> v]} break
	    }

	    append plat -$v
	    return "${plat}-${cpu}"
	}
    }

    return $id
}

proc ::platform::LibcVersion {base _->_ vv} {
    upvar 1 $vv v
    set libclist [lsort [glob -nocomplain -directory $base libc*]]

    if {![llength $libclist]} { return 0 }

    set libc [lindex $libclist 0]

    # Try executing the library first. This should suceed
    # for a glibc library, and return the version
    # information.

    if {![catch {
	set vdata [lindex [split [exec $libc] \n] 0]
    }]} {
	regexp {version ([0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)*)} $vdata -> v
	foreach {major minor} [split $v .] break
	set v glibc${major}.${minor}
	return 1
    } else {
	# We had trouble executing the library. We are now
	# inspecting its name to determine the version
	# number. This code by Larry McVoy.

	if {[regexp -- {libc-([0-9]+)\.([0-9]+)} $libc -> major minor]} {
	    set v glibc${major}.${minor}
	    return 1
	}
    }
    return 0
}

# -- platform::patterns
#
# Given an exact platform identifier, i.e. _not_ the generic
# identifier it assembles a list of exact platform identifier
# describing platform which should be compatible with the
# input.
#
# I.e. packages for all platforms in the result list should be
# loadable on the specified platform.

# << Should we add the generic identifier to the list as well ? In
#    general it is not compatible I believe. So better not. In many
#    cases the exact identifier is identical to the generic one
#    anyway.
# >>

proc ::platform::patterns {id} {
    set res [list $id]
    if {$id eq "tcl"} {return $res}

    switch -glob --  $id {
	solaris*-* {
	    if {[regexp {solaris([^-]*)-(.*)} $id -> v cpu]} {
		if {$v eq ""} {return $id}
		foreach {major minor} [split $v .] break
		incr minor -1
		for {set j $minor} {$j >= 6} {incr j -1} {
		    lappend res solaris${major}.${j}-${cpu}
		}
	    }
	}
	linux*-* {
	    if {[regexp {linux-glibc([^-]*)-(.*)} $id -> v cpu]} {
		foreach {major minor} [split $v .] break
		incr minor -1
		for {set j $minor} {$j >= 0} {incr j -1} {
		    lappend res linux-glibc${major}.${j}-${cpu}
		}
	    }
	}
	macosx-powerpc {
	    lappend res macosx-universal
	}
	macosx-x86_64 {
	    lappend res macosx-i386-x86_64
	}
	macosx-ix86 {
	    lappend res macosx-universal macosx-i386-x86_64
	}
	macosx*-*    {
	    # 10.5+
	    if {[regexp {macosx([^-]*)-(.*)} $id -> v cpu]} {

		switch -exact -- $cpu {
		    ix86    {
			lappend alt i386-x86_64
			lappend alt universal
		    }
		    x86_64  { lappend alt i386-x86_64 }
		    default { set alt {} }
		}

		if {$v ne ""} {
		    foreach {major minor} [split $v .] break

		    # Add 10.5 to 10.minor to patterns.
		    set res {}
		    for {set j $minor} {$j >= 5} {incr j -1} {
			lappend res macosx${major}.${j}-${cpu}
			foreach a $alt {
			    lappend res macosx${major}.${j}-$a
			}
		    }

		    # Add unversioned patterns for 10.3/10.4 builds.
		    lappend res macosx-${cpu}
		    foreach a $alt {
			lappend res macosx-$a
		    }
		} else {
		    # No version, just do unversioned patterns.
		    foreach a $alt {
			lappend res macosx-$a
		    }
		}
	    } else {
		# no v, no cpu ... nothing
	    }
	}
    }
    lappend res tcl ; # Pure tcl packages are always compatible.
    return $res
}


# ### ### ### ######### ######### #########
## Ready

package provide platform 1.0.14

# ### ### ### ######### ######### #########
## Demo application

if {[info exists argv0] && ($argv0 eq [info script])} {
    puts ====================================
    parray tcl_platform
    puts ====================================
    puts Generic\ identification:\ [::platform::generic]
    puts Exact\ identification:\ \ \ [::platform::identify]
    puts ====================================
    puts Search\ patterns:
    puts *\ [join [::platform::patterns [::platform::identify]] \n*\ ]
    puts ====================================
    exit 0
}

Youez - 2016 - github.com/yon3zu
LinuXploit