Skip to the relevant sections if needed.
" Don't try to be vi compatible | |
set nocompatible | |
" Helps force plugins to load correctly when it is turned back on below | |
filetype off | |
" TODO: Load plugins here (pathogen or vundle) | |
" Turn on syntax highlighting | |
syntax on |
- Use
curl
to get the JSON response for the latest release - Use
grep
to find the line containing file URL - Use
cut
andtr
to extract the URL - Use
wget
to download it
curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/jgm/pandoc/releases/latest \
| grep "browser_download_url.*deb" \
| cut -d : -f 2,3 \
| tr -d \" \
# all logging settins are here on top | |
$logFile = "log-$(gc env:computername).log" | |
$logLevel = "DEBUG" # ("DEBUG","INFO","WARN","ERROR","FATAL") | |
$logSize = 1mb # 30kb | |
$logCount = 10 | |
# end of settings | |
function Write-Log-Line ($line) { | |
Add-Content $logFile -Value $Line | |
Write-Host $Line |
#!/bin/bash | |
# Check to see if your jenkins home is in | |
# /var/lib/jenkins. If it isn't, then modify the script | |
# This will traverse through all your jobs, and disable them. | |
cd /var/lib/jenkins/jobs | |
for d in */ ; do | |
cd "$d" | |
sudo sed -i 's/disabled>false/disabled>true/' config.xml |
This is the setup that I use for mutt, I have two google domain account (read as gmail) and an institution where I work and study account. This means I have two gmail accounts and one outlook 365 account that i want to sync and read via mutt.
I want to store all my email locally as I travel a lot and will be in countries without easy internet access. For this I use mbsync (iSync). As it can handle multiple account types easily and efficently.
The setup works this way
[Remote Mail Servers] <= mbsync => [Local Mail Folders]
Sometimes it is useful to route traffic through a different machine for testing or development. At work, we have a VPN to a remote facility that we haven't bothered to fix for routing, so the only way to access a certain machine over that VPN is via an SSH tunnel to a machine that is reachable over the VPN. Other times, I have used this technique to test internet-facing requests against sites I am developing. It is pretty easy, and if you don't use firefox regularly, you can treat Firefox as your "Proxy" browser and other browsers can use a normal configuration (Although you can also configure an entire system to use the proxy, other articles exists that discuss this potential).
- Open a terminal
The included script 'widevine-flash_armhf.sh' fetches a ChromeOS image for ARM and extracts the Widevine binary, saving it in a compressed archive. Since it downloads a fairly large file (2Gb+ on disk after download) it is recommended that you run the script on a machine that has plenty of disk space.
To install the resultant archive, issue the following on your ARM machine–after copying over the archive if needed:
sudo tar Cfx / widevine-flash-20200124_armhf.tgz
(Where 'widevine-flash-20200124_armhf.tgz' is updated to reflect the actual name of the created archive)
#!/bin/bash | |
# Recursively delete an entire directory in S3, including versions and deletemarkers. | |
# Modify these variables: | |
BUCKET="_bucket_" | |
PROFILE="_profile_" | |
PREFIX="_directory_prefix_" | |
# Delete Object Versions: |