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 : 18.116.85.111
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 :  /proc/thread-self/root/proc/thread-self/root/lib/python3.6/site-packages/urllib3/util/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Command :


[ Back ]     

Current File : /proc/thread-self/root/proc/thread-self/root/lib/python3.6/site-packages/urllib3/util//wait.py
import errno
from functools import partial
import select
import sys
try:
    from time import monotonic
except ImportError:
    from time import time as monotonic

__all__ = ["NoWayToWaitForSocketError", "wait_for_read", "wait_for_write"]


class NoWayToWaitForSocketError(Exception):
    pass


# How should we wait on sockets?
#
# There are two types of APIs you can use for waiting on sockets: the fancy
# modern stateful APIs like epoll/kqueue, and the older stateless APIs like
# select/poll. The stateful APIs are more efficient when you have a lots of
# sockets to keep track of, because you can set them up once and then use them
# lots of times. But we only ever want to wait on a single socket at a time
# and don't want to keep track of state, so the stateless APIs are actually
# more efficient. So we want to use select() or poll().
#
# Now, how do we choose between select() and poll()? On traditional Unixes,
# select() has a strange calling convention that makes it slow, or fail
# altogether, for high-numbered file descriptors. The point of poll() is to fix
# that, so on Unixes, we prefer poll().
#
# On Windows, there is no poll() (or at least Python doesn't provide a wrapper
# for it), but that's OK, because on Windows, select() doesn't have this
# strange calling convention; plain select() works fine.
#
# So: on Windows we use select(), and everywhere else we use poll(). We also
# fall back to select() in case poll() is somehow broken or missing.

if sys.version_info >= (3, 5):
    # Modern Python, that retries syscalls by default
    def _retry_on_intr(fn, timeout):
        return fn(timeout)
else:
    # Old and broken Pythons.
    def _retry_on_intr(fn, timeout):
        if timeout is None:
            deadline = float("inf")
        else:
            deadline = monotonic() + timeout

        while True:
            try:
                return fn(timeout)
            # OSError for 3 <= pyver < 3.5, select.error for pyver <= 2.7
            except (OSError, select.error) as e:
                # 'e.args[0]' incantation works for both OSError and select.error
                if e.args[0] != errno.EINTR:
                    raise
                else:
                    timeout = deadline - monotonic()
                    if timeout < 0:
                        timeout = 0
                    if timeout == float("inf"):
                        timeout = None
                    continue


def select_wait_for_socket(sock, read=False, write=False, timeout=None):
    if not read and not write:
        raise RuntimeError("must specify at least one of read=True, write=True")
    rcheck = []
    wcheck = []
    if read:
        rcheck.append(sock)
    if write:
        wcheck.append(sock)
    # When doing a non-blocking connect, most systems signal success by
    # marking the socket writable. Windows, though, signals success by marked
    # it as "exceptional". We paper over the difference by checking the write
    # sockets for both conditions. (The stdlib selectors module does the same
    # thing.)
    fn = partial(select.select, rcheck, wcheck, wcheck)
    rready, wready, xready = _retry_on_intr(fn, timeout)
    return bool(rready or wready or xready)


def poll_wait_for_socket(sock, read=False, write=False, timeout=None):
    if not read and not write:
        raise RuntimeError("must specify at least one of read=True, write=True")
    mask = 0
    if read:
        mask |= select.POLLIN
    if write:
        mask |= select.POLLOUT
    poll_obj = select.poll()
    poll_obj.register(sock, mask)

    # For some reason, poll() takes timeout in milliseconds
    def do_poll(t):
        if t is not None:
            t *= 1000
        return poll_obj.poll(t)

    return bool(_retry_on_intr(do_poll, timeout))


def null_wait_for_socket(*args, **kwargs):
    raise NoWayToWaitForSocketError("no select-equivalent available")


def _have_working_poll():
    # Apparently some systems have a select.poll that fails as soon as you try
    # to use it, either due to strange configuration or broken monkeypatching
    # from libraries like eventlet/greenlet.
    try:
        poll_obj = select.poll()
        _retry_on_intr(poll_obj.poll, 0)
    except (AttributeError, OSError):
        return False
    else:
        return True


def wait_for_socket(*args, **kwargs):
    # We delay choosing which implementation to use until the first time we're
    # called. We could do it at import time, but then we might make the wrong
    # decision if someone goes wild with monkeypatching select.poll after
    # we're imported.
    global wait_for_socket
    if _have_working_poll():
        wait_for_socket = poll_wait_for_socket
    elif hasattr(select, "select"):
        wait_for_socket = select_wait_for_socket
    else:  # Platform-specific: Appengine.
        wait_for_socket = null_wait_for_socket
    return wait_for_socket(*args, **kwargs)


def wait_for_read(sock, timeout=None):
    """ Waits for reading to be available on a given socket.
    Returns True if the socket is readable, or False if the timeout expired.
    """
    return wait_for_socket(sock, read=True, timeout=timeout)


def wait_for_write(sock, timeout=None):
    """ Waits for writing to be available on a given socket.
    Returns True if the socket is readable, or False if the timeout expired.
    """
    return wait_for_socket(sock, write=True, timeout=timeout)

Youez - 2016 - github.com/yon3zu
LinuXploit