Inspired by dannyfritz/commit-message-emoji
See also gitmoji.
Commit type | Emoji |
---|---|
Initial commit | 🎉 :tada: |
Version tag | 🔖 :bookmark: |
New feature | ✨ :sparkles: |
Bugfix | 🐛 :bug: |
Inspired by dannyfritz/commit-message-emoji
See also gitmoji.
Commit type | Emoji |
---|---|
Initial commit | 🎉 :tada: |
Version tag | 🔖 :bookmark: |
New feature | ✨ :sparkles: |
Bugfix | 🐛 :bug: |
import os | |
import sys | |
import time | |
from subprocess import Popen, DEVNULL | |
import datetime | |
from scapy.all import IP, UDP, NTP | |
from netfilterqueue import NetfilterQueue | |
def get_switch_ip(): |
See https://github.com/comp500/fabric-serverside-mods for the latest mod list!
There was a reddit post about installing Arch on NTFS3 partition. Since Windows and Linux doesn't have directories with same names under the /
(C:\
), I thought it's possible, and turned out it was actually possible.
If you are not familiar to Linux, for example you've searched on Google "how to dualboot Linux and Windos" or brbrbr... you mustn't try this. This is not practical.
use rand::{Rng, thread_rng}; | |
const ZALGO_UP: [char; 50] = | |
[ | |
'\u{030e}', /* ̎ */ '\u{0304}', /* ̄ */ '\u{0305}', /* ̅ */ | |
'\u{033f}', /* ̿ */ '\u{0311}', /* ̑ */ '\u{0306}', /* ̆ */ '\u{0310}', /* ̐ */ | |
'\u{0352}', /* ͒ */ '\u{0357}', /* ͗ */ '\u{0351}', /* ͑ */ '\u{0307}', /* ̇ */ | |
'\u{0308}', /* ̈ */ '\u{030a}', /* ̊ */ '\u{0342}', /* ͂ */ '\u{0343}', /* ̓ */ | |
'\u{0344}', /* ̈́ */ '\u{034a}', /* ͊ */ '\u{034b}', /* ͋ */ '\u{034c}', /* ͌ */ | |
'\u{0303}', /* ̃ */ '\u{0302}', /* ̂ */ '\u{030c}', /* ̌ */ '\u{0350}', /* ͐ */ |
In the following gist I'm going to guide you through the process of installing and booting an entire linux distribution with full desktop environment just like you would have with a classical VM, but with much better performance and much worse isolation :)
The reason why I did this was mainly because it's cool, but also to test new distros with decent graphics performance without actually booting them on my PC.
If you "try this at home" just keep in mind a container is not as secure as a VM, and some of the option we're going to explore will weaken container isolation from "a bit risky" to "totally unsafe" depending on what you choose.
Also, we're going to use systemd-nspawn for containers as it's probably the best fit for our use case and can also boot any linux partition without needing to prepare an apposite container image.
Less go!
If you want resources offline to learn about programming and web technologies MDN is for you! and I recommend to use MDN over w3school because w3school is outdated.
Download it offline (2.1gb) at https://mdn-downloads.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/developer.mozilla.org.tar.gz