uawdijnntqw1x1x1
IP : 3.133.107.188
Hostname : ns1.eurodns.top
Kernel : Linux ns1.eurodns.top 4.18.0-553.5.1.lve.1.el7h.x86_64 #1 SMP Fri Jun 14 14:24:52 UTC 2024 x86_64
Disable Function : mail,sendmail,exec,passthru,shell_exec,system,popen,curl_multi_exec,parse_ini_file,show_source,eval,open_base,symlink
OS : Linux
PATH:
/
home
/
.
/
.
/
..
/
.
/
lib64
/
sa
/
..
/
perl5
/
PerlIO
/
scalar.pm
/
/
package PerlIO::scalar; our $VERSION = '0.14_01'; require XSLoader; XSLoader::load(); 1; __END__ =head1 NAME PerlIO::scalar - in-memory IO, scalar IO =head1 SYNOPSIS my $scalar = ''; ... open my $fh, "<", \$scalar or die; open my $fh, ">", \$scalar or die; open my $fh, ">>", \$scalar or die; or my $scalar = ''; ... open my $fh, "<:scalar", \$scalar or die; open my $fh, ">:scalar", \$scalar or die; open my $fh, ">>:scalar", \$scalar or die; =head1 DESCRIPTION A filehandle is opened but the file operations are performed "in-memory" on a scalar variable. All the normal file operations can be performed on the handle. The scalar is considered a stream of bytes. Currently fileno($fh) returns -1. =head1 IMPLEMENTATION NOTE C<PerlIO::scalar> only exists to use XSLoader to load C code that provides support for treating a scalar as an "in memory" file. One does not need to explicitly C<use PerlIO::scalar>. =cut
/home/././.././lib64/sa/../perl5/PerlIO/scalar.pm