To create an anchor to a heading in github flavored markdown.
Add - characters between each word in the heading and wrap the value in parens (#some-markdown-heading) so your link should look like so:
[create an anchor](#anchors-in-markdown)
| #!/bin/bash | |
| # store the current dir | |
| CUR_DIR=$(pwd) | |
| # Let the person running the script know what's going on. | |
| echo "\n\033[1mPulling in latest changes for all repositories...\033[0m\n" | |
| # Find all git repositories and update it to the master latest revision | |
| for i in $(find . -name ".git" | cut -c 3-); do |
GPG subkeys marked with the "authenticate" capability can be used for public
key authentication with SSH. This is done using gpg-agent which, using the
--enable-ssh-support option, can implement the agent protocol used by SSH.
A working gpg2 setup is required. It may be possible to use gpg 1.4 but with gpg-agent compiled from gpg2. If you are using OS X 10.9 (Mavericks) then you may find the instructions [here][1] useful.
| using System; | |
| using System.Collections.Generic; | |
| using System.Linq; | |
| using System.Text; | |
| using System.Threading.Tasks; | |
| using System.Net.Http; | |
| using System.Net; | |
| namespace HTTP_Test |
| # Compiled source # | |
| ################### | |
| *.com | |
| *.class | |
| *.dll | |
| *.exe | |
| *.o | |
| *.so | |
| # Packages # |
| [Unit] | |
| Description=Keeps a tunnel to 'remote.example.com' open | |
| After=network.target | |
| [Service] | |
| User=autossh | |
| # -p [PORT] | |
| # -l [user] | |
| # -M 0 --> no monitoring | |
| # -N Just open the connection and do nothing (not interactive) |
| #add 'node_modules' to .gitignore file | |
| git rm -r --cached node_modules | |
| git commit -m 'Remove the now ignored directory node_modules' | |
| git push origin <branch-name> |
| KEYBINDINGS | |
| byobu keybindings can be user defined in /usr/share/byobu/keybindings/ (or within .screenrc if byobu-export was used). The common key bindings | |
| are: | |
| F2 - Create a new window | |
| F3 - Move to previous window | |
| F4 - Move to next window |
As a freelancer, I build a lot of web sites. That's a lot of code changes to track. Thankfully, a Git-enabled workflow with proper branching makes short work of project tracking. I can easily see development features in branches as well as a snapshot of the sites' production code. A nice addition to that workflow is that ability to use Git to push updates to any of the various sites I work on while committing changes.