????JFIF??x?x????'
Server IP : 79.136.114.73 / Your IP : 18.222.116.64 Web Server : Apache/2.4.7 (Ubuntu) PHP/5.5.9-1ubuntu4.29 OpenSSL/1.0.1f System : Linux b8009 3.13.0-170-generic #220-Ubuntu SMP Thu May 9 12:40:49 UTC 2019 x86_64 User : www-data ( 33) PHP Version : 5.5.9-1ubuntu4.29 Disable Function : pcntl_alarm,pcntl_fork,pcntl_waitpid,pcntl_wait,pcntl_wifexited,pcntl_wifstopped,pcntl_wifsignaled,pcntl_wexitstatus,pcntl_wtermsig,pcntl_wstopsig,pcntl_signal,pcntl_signal_dispatch,pcntl_get_last_error,pcntl_strerror,pcntl_sigprocmask,pcntl_sigwaitinfo,pcntl_sigtimedwait,pcntl_exec,pcntl_getpriority,pcntl_setpriority, MySQL : ON | cURL : ON | WGET : ON | Perl : ON | Python : ON | Sudo : ON | Pkexec : ON Directory : /usr/share/doc/w3m/ |
Upload File : |
The siteconf: Site-specific preferences The siteconf consists of URL patterns and preferences associated to them. You can improve "decode_url" feature by giving charsets of URLs site by site, or bypass Google's redirector for performance and your privacy. The siteconf is read from ~/.w3m/siteconf by default. ===== The syntax ===== url <url>|/<re-url>/|m@<re-url>@i [exact] substitute_url "<destination-url>" url_charset <charset> no_referer_from on|off no_referer_to on|off The last match wins. ===== Examples ===== url "http://twitter.com/#!/" substitute_url "http://mobile.twitter.com/" This forwards the twitter.com to its mobile site. url "http://your.bookmark.net/" no_referer_from on This prevents HTTP referers from being sent when you follow links at the your.bookmark.net. url "http://www.google.com/url?" exact substitute_url "file:///cgi-bin/your-redirector.cgi?" This forwards the Google's redirector to your local CGI. url /^http:\/\/[a-z]*\.wikipedia\.org\// url_charset utf-8 When combinated with "decode_url" option turned on, links to Wikipedia will be human-readable. ===== Regular expressions notes ===== Following expressions are all equivalent: /http:\/\/www\.example\.com\// m/http:\/\/www\.example\.com\// m@http://www\.example\.com/@ m!http://www\.example\.com/! With a trailing 'i' modifier, you can specify a case-insensitive match. For example, m@^http://www\.example\.com/abc/@i matches to: http://www.example.com/abc/ http://www.example.com/Abc/ http://www.example.com/ABC/ Hostnames, however, are always converted to lowercases before compared.