In Git you can add a submodule to a repository. This is basically a repository embedded in your main repository. This can be very useful. A couple of usecases of submodules:
- Separate big codebases into multiple repositories.
#!/usr/bin/python | |
# Grant Assistive Access to Terminal and “osascript”. | |
import sqlite3 | |
conn = sqlite3.connect('/Library/Application Support/com.apple.TCC/TCC.db') | |
conn.cursor().execute("INSERT or REPLACE INTO access VALUES('kTCCServiceAccessibility','com.apple.Terminal',0,1,1,NULL,NULL)") | |
conn.cursor().execute("INSERT or REPLACE INTO access VALUES('kTCCServiceAccessibility','$(which osascript)',1,1,1,NULL,NULL)") | |
conn.commit() |
The only way I've succeeded so far is to employ SSH.
Assuming you are new to this like me, first I'd like to share with you that your Mac has a SSH config
file in a .ssh
directory. The config
file is where you draw relations of your SSH keys to each GitHub (or Bitbucket) account, and all your SSH keys generated are saved into .ssh
directory by default. You can navigate to it by running cd ~/.ssh
within your terminal, open the config
file with any editor, and it should look something like this:
Host * AddKeysToAgent yes
> UseKeyChain yes