The Google Browser Security Handbook is a description of various oddities in the way different browsers handle different code and other Web-related entities. These differences can possibly be exploited in security attacks. Internet Explorer (a few versions), Firefox (a few versions), Safari, Opera, Chrome, and Android are examined.
Original post from this thread on browser caching.
To add to this, it is an effective security measure to clear absolutely all cached data (cookies, web content, ....) when closing the browser - i.e. in case of a shutdown. It takes a bit of work to re-login to all the sites but websites will not... (7 Replies)
Hi, would like to share a complete reference about Debian GNU/Linux.
TBH, i've never seen a complete reference book like this one here ...
http://debian-handbook.info/files/2012/04/front-cover-232x300.png
You can get the book with three formats : pdf, epub, mobi.
The Debian... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
This is my operating system.
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.7 (Tikanga).
This is a64 bit version
# cat /etc/redhat-release
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 5.7 (Tikanga)
# uname -a
Linux oim11gdevlab 2.6.18-274.el5 #1 SMP Fri Jul 8 17:36:59 EDT 2011 x86_64... (2 Replies)
Padre::Browser(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Padre::Browser(3pm)NAME
Padre::Browser -- documentation browser for Padre
DESCRIPTION
Provide an interface for retrieving / generating documentation, resolving terms to documentation (search?) and formatting documentation.
Allow new packages to be loaded and interrogated for the MIME types they can generate documentation for. Provide similar mechanism for
registering new documentation viewers and URI schemes accepted for resolving.
NOTE: I think all the method names are wrong. Blast it.
SYNOPSIS
# Does perlish things by default via 'Padre::Browser::POD'
my $browser = Padre::Browser->new;
my $source = Padre::Document->new( filename=>'source/Package.pm' );
my $docs = $browser->docs( $source );
# $docs provided by Browser::POD->generate
# should be Padre::Browser::Document , application/x-pod
my $output = $browser->browse( $docs );
# $output provided by Browser::POD->render
# should be Padre::Document , text/x-html
$browser->load_viewer( 'Padre::Browser::PodAdvanced' );
# PodAdvanced->render might add an html TOC in addition to
# just pod2html
my $new_output = $browser->browse( $docs );
# $new_output now with a table of contents
METHODS
new
Boring constructor, pass nothing. Yet.
load_provider
Accepts a single class name, will attempt to auto-use the class and interrogate its "provider_for" method. Any MIME types returned will be
associated with the class for dispatch to "generate".
Additionally, interrogate class for "accept_schemes" and associate the class with URI schemes for dispatch to "resolve".
load_viewer
Accepts a single class name, will attempt to auto-use the class and interrogate its "viewer_for" method. Any MIME types returned will be
associated with the class for dispatch to "render".
resolve
Accepts a URI or scalar
browse
accept
EXTENDING
package My::Browser::Doxygen;
# URI of doxygen:$string or doxygen://path?query
sub accept_schemes {
'doxygen',
}
sub provider_for {
'text/x-c++src'
}
sub viewer_for {
'text/x-doxygen',
}
sub generate {
my ($self,$doc) = @_;
# $doc will be Padre::Document of any type specified
# by ->provider_for
# push $doc through doxygen
# ...
# that was easy :)
# You know your own output type, be explicit
my $response = Padre::Document->new;
$response->{original_content} = $doxygen->output;
$response->set_mimetype( 'text/x-doxygen' );
return $response;
}
sub render {
my ($self,$docs) = @_;
# $docs will be of any type specified
# by ->viewer_for;
## turn $docs into doxygen(y) html document
# ...
#
my $response = Padre::Document->new;
$response->{original_content} = $doxy2html->output;
$response->set_mimetype( 'text/x-html' );
return $response;
}
perl v5.14.2 2012-06-27 Padre::Browser(3pm)