shell bypass 403

UnknownSec Shell

: /sbin/ [ dr-xr-xr-x ]

name : exiqsumm
#! /usr/local/cpanel/3rdparty/perl/536/bin/perl

# Mail Queue Summary
# Christoph Lameter, 21 May 1997
#
# Copyright (c) The Exim Maintainers 2023
# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later
# See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution.

# Modified by Philip Hazel, June 1997
# Bug fix: June 1998 by Philip Hazel
#   Message sizes not listed by -bp with K or M
#   suffixes were getting divided by 10.
# Bug fix: October 1998 by Philip Hazel
#   Sorting wasn't working right with Perl 5.005
#   Fix provided by John Horne
# Bug fix: November 1998 by Philip Hazel
#   Failing to recognize domain literals in recipient addresses
#   Fix provided by Malcolm Ray
# Bug fix: July 2002 by Philip Hazel
#   Not handling time periods of more than 100 days
#   Fix provided by Randy Banks
# Added summary line: September 2002 by Philip Hazel
#   Code provided by Joachim Wieland
# June 2003 by Philip Hazel
#   Initialize $size, $age, $id to avoid warnings when bad
#   data is provided
# Bug fix: July 2003 by Philip Hazel
#   Incorrectly skipping the first lines of messages whose
#   message ID ends in 'D'! Before Exim 4.14 this didn't
#   matter because they never did. Looks like an original
#   typo. Fix provided by Chris Liddiard.
# November 2006 by Jori Hamalainen
#   Added feature to separate frozen and bounced messages from queue
#   Added feature to list queue per source - destination pair
#   Changed regexps to compile once to very minor speed optimization
#   Short circuit for empty lines
#
# Usage: mailq | exiqsumm [-a] [-b] [-c] [-f] [-s]
#   Default sorting is by domain name
#   -a sorts by age of oldest message
#   -b enables bounce message separation
#   -c sorts by count of message
#   -f enables frozen message separation
#   -s enables source destination separation

# Slightly modified sub from eximstats

use warnings;
BEGIN { pop @INC if $INC[-1] eq '.' };
use File::Basename;

if (@ARGV && ($ARGV[0] eq '--version' || ($ARGV[0] eq '-v'))) {
    print basename($0) . ": $0\n",
        "build: 4.98\n",
        "perl(runtime): $]\n";
        exit 0;
}

sub print_volume_rounded {
my($x) = pop @_;
if ($x < 10000)
  {
  return sprintf("%6d", $x);
  }
elsif ($x < 10000000)
  {
  return sprintf("%4dKB", ($x + 512)/1024);
  }
else
  {
  return sprintf("%4dMB", ($x + 512*1024)/(1024*1024));
  }
}

sub s_conv {
  my($x) = @_;
  my($v,$s) = $x =~ /([\d\.]+)([A-Z]|)/o;
  if ($s eq "K") { return $v * 1024 };
  if ($s eq "M") { return $v * 1024 * 1024 };
  return $v;
}

sub older {
  my($x1,$x2) = @_;
  my($v1,$s1) = $x1 =~ /(\d+)(\w)/o;
  my($v2,$s2) = $x2 =~ /(\d+)(\w)/o;
  return $v1 <=> $v2 if ($s1 eq $s2);
  return (($s2 eq "m") ||
          ($s2 eq "h" && $s1 eq "d") ||
          ($s2 eq "d" && $s1 eq "w"))? 1 : -1;
}

#
# Main Program
#

$sort_by_count = 0;
$sort_by_age = 0;

$size = "0";
$age = "0d";
$id = "";


while (@ARGV > 0 && substr($ARGV[0], 0, 1) eq "-")
  {
  if ($ARGV[0] eq "-a") { $sort_by_age = 1; }
  if ($ARGV[0] eq "-c") { $sort_by_count = 1; }
  if ($ARGV[0] eq "-f") { $enable_frozen = 1; }
  if ($ARGV[0] eq "-b") { $enable_bounces = 1; }
  if ($ARGV[0] eq "-s") { $enable_source = 1; }
  shift @ARGV;
  }

while (<>)
{
# Skip empty and already delivered lines

if (/^$/o || /^\s*D\s\S+/o) { next; }

# If it's the first line of a message, pick out the data. Note: it may
# have text after the final > (e.g. frozen) so don't insist that it ends >.

if (/^	   (?<age>[\d\s]{2,3}\w)
      \s+  (?<size>\S+)
      \s   (?<id>\S+)
      \s\< (?<src>\S*) \>/ox)
  {
  ($age,$size,$id,$src)=($+{age},$+{size},$+{id},$+{src});
  $src =~ s/([^\@]*)\@(.*?)$/$2/o;
  if (/\*\*\*\sfrozen\s\*\*\*/o) { $frozen=1; } else { $frozen=0; }
  if ($src eq "") { $bounce=1; $src="<>"; } else { $bounce=0; }
  }

# Else check for a recipient line: to handle source-routed addresses, just
# pick off the first domain.

elsif (/^\s+[^@]*\@([\w\.\-]+|\[(\d+\.){3}\d+\])/o)
  {
  if ($enable_source) {
      $domain = "\L$src > $1";
  } else {
      $domain = "\L$1";
  }
  $domain .= " (b)" if ($bounce && $enable_bounces);
  $domain .= " (f)" if ($frozen && $enable_frozen);
  $queue{$domain}++;
  $q_oldest{$domain} = $age
    if (!defined $q_oldest{$domain} || &older($age,$q_oldest{$domain}) > 0);
  $q_recent{$domain} = $age
    if (!defined $q_recent{$domain} || &older($q_recent{$domain},$age) > 0);
  $q_size{$domain} = 0 if (!defined $q_size{$domain});
  $q_size{$domain} += &s_conv($size);
  }
}

print "\nCount  Volume  Oldest  Newest  Domain";
print "\n-----  ------  ------  ------  ------\n\n";

my ($count, $volume, $max_age, $min_age) = (0, 0, "0m", undef);

foreach $id (sort
            {
            $sort_by_age? &older($q_oldest{$b}, $q_oldest{$a}) :
            $sort_by_count? ($queue{$b} <=> $queue{$a}) :
            $a cmp $b
            }
            keys %queue)
  {
  printf("%5d  %.6s  %6s  %6s  %.80s\n",
    $queue{$id}, &print_volume_rounded($q_size{$id}), $q_oldest{$id},
    $q_recent{$id}, $id);
    $max_age = $q_oldest{$id} if &older($q_oldest{$id}, $max_age) > 0;
    $min_age = $q_recent{$id}
      if (!defined $min_age || &older($min_age, $q_recent{$id}) > 0);
    $volume += $q_size{$id};
    $count += $queue{$id};
  }
  $min_age ||= "0000d";
printf("---------------------------------------------------------------\n");
printf("%5d  %.6s  %6s  %6s  %.80s\n",
  $count, &print_volume_rounded($volume), $max_age, $min_age, "TOTAL");
print "\n";

# End

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Web Design for Beginners | Anyleson - Learning Platform
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Web Design for Beginners

Web Design for Beginners

in Design
Created by Linda Anderson
+2
5 Users are following this upcoming course
Course Published
This course was published already and you can check the main course
Course
Web Design for Beginners
in Design
4.25
1:45 Hours
8 Jul 2021
₹11.80

What you will learn?

Create any website layout you can imagine

Support any device size with Responsive (mobile-friendly) Design

Add tasteful animations and effects with CSS3

Course description

You can launch a new career in web development today by learning HTML & CSS. You don't need a computer science degree or expensive software. All you need is a computer, a bit of time, a lot of determination, and a teacher you trust. I've taught HTML and CSS to countless coworkers and held training sessions for fortune 100 companies. I am that teacher you can trust. 


Don't limit yourself by creating websites with some cheesy “site-builder" tool. This course teaches you how to take 100% control over your webpages by using the same concepts that every professional website is created with.


This course does not assume any prior experience. We start at square one and learn together bit by bit. By the end of the course you will have created (by hand) a website that looks great on phones, tablets, laptops, and desktops alike.


In the summer of 2020 the course has received a new section where we push our website live up onto the web using the free GitHub Pages service; this means you'll be able to share a link to what you've created with your friends, family, colleagues and the world!

Requirements

No prerequisite knowledge required

No special software required

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