shell bypass 403

UnknownSec Shell

: /usr/lib64/python3.6/ [ drwxr-xr-x ]

name : zipapp.py
import contextlib
import os
import pathlib
import shutil
import stat
import sys
import zipfile

__all__ = ['ZipAppError', 'create_archive', 'get_interpreter']


# The __main__.py used if the users specifies "-m module:fn".
# Note that this will always be written as UTF-8 (module and
# function names can be non-ASCII in Python 3).
# We add a coding cookie even though UTF-8 is the default in Python 3
# because the resulting archive may be intended to be run under Python 2.
MAIN_TEMPLATE = """\
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import {module}
{module}.{fn}()
"""


# The Windows launcher defaults to UTF-8 when parsing shebang lines if the
# file has no BOM. So use UTF-8 on Windows.
# On Unix, use the filesystem encoding.
if sys.platform.startswith('win'):
    shebang_encoding = 'utf-8'
else:
    shebang_encoding = sys.getfilesystemencoding()


class ZipAppError(ValueError):
    pass


@contextlib.contextmanager
def _maybe_open(archive, mode):
    if isinstance(archive, pathlib.Path):
        archive = str(archive)
    if isinstance(archive, str):
        with open(archive, mode) as f:
            yield f
    else:
        yield archive


def _write_file_prefix(f, interpreter):
    """Write a shebang line."""
    if interpreter:
        shebang = b'#!' + interpreter.encode(shebang_encoding) + b'\n'
        f.write(shebang)


def _copy_archive(archive, new_archive, interpreter=None):
    """Copy an application archive, modifying the shebang line."""
    with _maybe_open(archive, 'rb') as src:
        # Skip the shebang line from the source.
        # Read 2 bytes of the source and check if they are #!.
        first_2 = src.read(2)
        if first_2 == b'#!':
            # Discard the initial 2 bytes and the rest of the shebang line.
            first_2 = b''
            src.readline()

        with _maybe_open(new_archive, 'wb') as dst:
            _write_file_prefix(dst, interpreter)
            # If there was no shebang, "first_2" contains the first 2 bytes
            # of the source file, so write them before copying the rest
            # of the file.
            dst.write(first_2)
            shutil.copyfileobj(src, dst)

    if interpreter and isinstance(new_archive, str):
        os.chmod(new_archive, os.stat(new_archive).st_mode | stat.S_IEXEC)


def create_archive(source, target=None, interpreter=None, main=None):
    """Create an application archive from SOURCE.

    The SOURCE can be the name of a directory, or a filename or a file-like
    object referring to an existing archive.

    The content of SOURCE is packed into an application archive in TARGET,
    which can be a filename or a file-like object.  If SOURCE is a directory,
    TARGET can be omitted and will default to the name of SOURCE with .pyz
    appended.

    The created application archive will have a shebang line specifying
    that it should run with INTERPRETER (there will be no shebang line if
    INTERPRETER is None), and a __main__.py which runs MAIN (if MAIN is
    not specified, an existing __main__.py will be used).  It is an error
    to specify MAIN for anything other than a directory source with no
    __main__.py, and it is an error to omit MAIN if the directory has no
    __main__.py.
    """
    # Are we copying an existing archive?
    source_is_file = False
    if hasattr(source, 'read') and hasattr(source, 'readline'):
        source_is_file = True
    else:
        source = pathlib.Path(source)
        if source.is_file():
            source_is_file = True

    if source_is_file:
        _copy_archive(source, target, interpreter)
        return

    # We are creating a new archive from a directory.
    if not source.exists():
        raise ZipAppError("Source does not exist")
    has_main = (source / '__main__.py').is_file()
    if main and has_main:
        raise ZipAppError(
            "Cannot specify entry point if the source has __main__.py")
    if not (main or has_main):
        raise ZipAppError("Archive has no entry point")

    main_py = None
    if main:
        # Check that main has the right format.
        mod, sep, fn = main.partition(':')
        mod_ok = all(part.isidentifier() for part in mod.split('.'))
        fn_ok = all(part.isidentifier() for part in fn.split('.'))
        if not (sep == ':' and mod_ok and fn_ok):
            raise ZipAppError("Invalid entry point: " + main)
        main_py = MAIN_TEMPLATE.format(module=mod, fn=fn)

    if target is None:
        target = source.with_suffix('.pyz')
    elif not hasattr(target, 'write'):
        target = pathlib.Path(target)

    with _maybe_open(target, 'wb') as fd:
        _write_file_prefix(fd, interpreter)
        with zipfile.ZipFile(fd, 'w') as z:
            root = pathlib.Path(source)
            for child in root.rglob('*'):
                arcname = str(child.relative_to(root))
                z.write(str(child), arcname)
            if main_py:
                z.writestr('__main__.py', main_py.encode('utf-8'))

    if interpreter and not hasattr(target, 'write'):
        target.chmod(target.stat().st_mode | stat.S_IEXEC)


def get_interpreter(archive):
    with _maybe_open(archive, 'rb') as f:
        if f.read(2) == b'#!':
            return f.readline().strip().decode(shebang_encoding)


def main(args=None):
    """Run the zipapp command line interface.

    The ARGS parameter lets you specify the argument list directly.
    Omitting ARGS (or setting it to None) works as for argparse, using
    sys.argv[1:] as the argument list.
    """
    import argparse

    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
    parser.add_argument('--output', '-o', default=None,
            help="The name of the output archive. "
                 "Required if SOURCE is an archive.")
    parser.add_argument('--python', '-p', default=None,
            help="The name of the Python interpreter to use "
                 "(default: no shebang line).")
    parser.add_argument('--main', '-m', default=None,
            help="The main function of the application "
                 "(default: use an existing __main__.py).")
    parser.add_argument('--info', default=False, action='store_true',
            help="Display the interpreter from the archive.")
    parser.add_argument('source',
            help="Source directory (or existing archive).")

    args = parser.parse_args(args)

    # Handle `python -m zipapp archive.pyz --info`.
    if args.info:
        if not os.path.isfile(args.source):
            raise SystemExit("Can only get info for an archive file")
        interpreter = get_interpreter(args.source)
        print("Interpreter: {}".format(interpreter or "<none>"))
        sys.exit(0)

    if os.path.isfile(args.source):
        if args.output is None or (os.path.exists(args.output) and
                                   os.path.samefile(args.source, args.output)):
            raise SystemExit("In-place editing of archives is not supported")
        if args.main:
            raise SystemExit("Cannot change the main function when copying")

    create_archive(args.source, args.output,
                   interpreter=args.python, main=args.main)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()

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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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