git clone [email protected]:YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-FORKED-REPO.git
cd into/cloned/fork-repo
git remote add upstream git://github.com/ORIGINAL-DEV-USERNAME/REPO-YOU-FORKED-FROM.git
git fetch upstream
# ~/.tmux.conf | |
# | |
# See the following files: | |
# | |
# /opt/local/share/doc/tmux/t-williams.conf | |
# /opt/local/share/doc/tmux/screen-keys.conf | |
# /opt/local/share/doc/tmux/vim-keys.conf | |
# | |
# URLs to read: | |
# |
FILE SPACING: | |
# double space a file | |
sed G | |
# double space a file which already has blank lines in it. Output file | |
# should contain no more than one blank line between lines of text. | |
sed '/^$/d;G' |
git clone [email protected]:YOUR-USERNAME/YOUR-FORKED-REPO.git
cd into/cloned/fork-repo
git remote add upstream git://github.com/ORIGINAL-DEV-USERNAME/REPO-YOU-FORKED-FROM.git
git fetch upstream
These are only examples, for a few very common actions. You are expected to write your own rules for the rest. The syntax is regular JavaScript, but see the polkit(8)
manpage for the object structure and available API. These examples are for polkit versions 106 and later, with the JS interpreter. They won't work with Debian's polkit v105.
If you don't know the action name, run pkaction
:
pkaction | grep cups
The possible results are YES
, AUTH_SELF(_KEEP)
, AUTH_ADMIN(_KEEP)
, NO
. Returning a result is final. Returning null
will continue checking other rules.
Put your rules in /etc/polkit-1/rules.d/*.rules
. (You can check everything in one giant addRule, or you can have a separate file and separate addRule for each program; it doesn't matter.)
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c> | |
RewriteEngine On | |
RewriteRule ^index\.php$ - [L] | |
RewriteRule (.*) ./index.php?id=$1 [L] | |
</IfModule> |
# With your phone in debug mode, etc. | |
adb start-server | |
adb remount | |
adb shell < remove.sh |
Others have recently developed packages for this same functionality, and done it better than anything I could do. Use the packages instead of this script:
Gargoyle package by @lantis1008
OpenWRT package by @dibdot
In its basic usage, this script will modify the router such that blocked addresses are null routed and unreachable. Since the address blocklist is full of advertising, malware, and tracking servers, this setup is generally a good thing. In addition, the router will update the blocklist weekly. However, the blocking is leaky, so do not expect everything to be blocked.
To limit a CPU to a certain C-state, you can pass the processor.max_cstate=X
option in the kernel
line of /boot/grub/grub.conf
.
Here we limit the system to only C-State 1:
kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.18-371.1.2.el5 ... processor.max_cstate=1
On some systems, the kernel can override the BIOS setting, and the parameter intel_idle.max_cstate=0
may be required to ensure sleep states are not entered:
I’m currently working (I’m just at the beginning, and I’m quite slow) on a personal project that will use Keepass files (kdb and kdbx).
I tried to find some documentation about .kdb and .kdbx format, but I didn’t find anything, even in the Keepass official website. I you want to know how these file formats are structured, you must read Keepass’s source code. So I wrote this article that explains how Keepass file format are structured, maybe it will help someone.
ffmpeg -f lavfi -i anullsrc=r=11025:cl=mono -t <number of seconds> -acodec aac out.m4a |