Description | Command |
---|---|
Start a new session with session name | screen -S <session_name> |
List running sessions / screens | screen -ls |
Attach to a running session | screen -x |
Attach to a running session with name | screen -r |
import exifread | |
# based on https://gist.github.com/erans/983821 | |
def _get_if_exist(data, key): | |
if key in data: | |
return data[key] | |
return None |
- Install
ipset
:
apt-get install ipset
- Create new ipset:
ipset create tor iphash
As of January 2018, Raspbian does not yet include the latest Python release, Python 3.6. This means we will have to build it ourselves, and here is how to do it. There is also an ansible role attached that automates it all for you.
- Install the required build-tools (some might already be installed on your system).
import emoji | |
import schedule | |
import asyncio | |
import inspect | |
from datetime import datetime | |
class Job(schedule.Job): |
This is about documenting getting Linux running on the late 2016 and mid 2017 MPB's; the focus is mostly on the MacBookPro13,3 and MacBookPro14,3 (15inch models), but I try to make it relevant and provide information for MacBookPro13,1, MacBookPro13,2, MacBookPro14,1, and MacBookPro14,2 (13inch models) too. I'm currently using Fedora 27, but most the things should be valid for other recent distros even if the details differ. The kernel version is 4.14.x (after latest update).
The state of linux on the MBP (with particular focus on MacBookPro13,2) is also being tracked on https://github.com/Dunedan/mbp-2016-linux . And for Ubuntu users there are a couple tutorials (here and here) focused on that distro and the MacBook.
Note: For those who have followed these instructions ealier, and in particular for those who have had problems with the custom DSDT, modifying the DSDT is not necessary anymore - se
Last updated March 13, 2024
This Gist explains how to sign commits using gpg in a step-by-step fashion. Previously, krypt.co was heavily mentioned, but I've only recently learned they were acquired by Akamai and no longer update their previous free products. Those mentions have been removed.
Additionally, 1Password now supports signing Git commits with SSH keys and makes it pretty easy-plus you can easily configure Git Tower to use it for both signing and ssh.
For using a GUI-based GIT tool such as Tower or Github Desktop, follow the steps here for signing your commits with GPG.
# This is a GitLab CI configuration to build the project as a docker image | |
# The file is generic enough to be dropped in a project containing a working Dockerfile | |
# Author: Florent CHAUVEAU <[email protected]> | |
# Mentioned here: https://blog.callr.tech/building-docker-images-with-gitlab-ci-best-practices/ | |
# do not use "latest" here, if you want this to work in the future | |
image: docker:20 | |
stages: | |
- build |
--- | |
# in retrospect, it's better to just run e.g. | |
# ansible all -a true --ssh-extra-args="-o UpdateHostKeys=yes -o StrictHostKeyChecking=accept-new" | |
- hosts: all | |
gather_facts: false | |
tasks: | |
- name: Set custom SSH port fact (or use default) | |
delegate_to: localhost | |
set_fact: |