Want to create a Gist from your editor, the command line, or the Services menu? Here's how.
ּ_בּ | |
בּ_בּ | |
טּ_טּ | |
כּ‗כּ | |
לּ_לּ | |
מּ_מּ | |
סּ_סּ | |
תּ_תּ | |
٩(×̯×)۶ | |
٩(̾●̮̮̃̾•̃̾)۶ |
#!/bin/bash | |
if [ "$1" = "-h" -o "$1" = "--help" -o -z "$1" ]; then cat <<EOF | |
appify v3.0.1 for Mac OS X - http://mths.be/appify | |
Creates the simplest possible Mac app from a shell script. | |
Appify takes a shell script as its first argument: | |
`basename "$0"` my-script.sh |
churn number and file name | |
git log --all -M -C --name-only | grep -E '^(app|lib)/' | sort | uniq -c | sort | awk 'BEGIN {print "count,file"} {print $1 "," $2}' | |
churn number and file name w/ limiting to last n commits | |
git log --all -n 5000 -M -C --name-only | grep -E '^spec/models' | sort | uniq -c | sort | awk 'BEGIN {print "count,file"} {print $1 "," $2}' | |
graph of churn number and frequency | |
git log --all -M -C --name-only | grep -E '^(app|lib)/' | sort | uniq -c | sort | awk '{print $1}' | uniq -c | sort | awk 'BEGIN { print "frequency,churn_count"} { print $1,$2}' | |
var express = require('express'); | |
var redis = require('redis'); | |
const serverType = process.argv[2]; | |
const serverHost = process.argv[3]; | |
const serverPort = parseInt(process.argv[4]); | |
const redisPort = 6379; | |
const redisHost = '127.0.0.1'; |
package com.webile.upload; | |
import java.io.BufferedReader; | |
import java.io.ByteArrayOutputStream; | |
import java.io.InputStreamReader; | |
import java.util.Date; | |
import org.apache.http.HttpResponse; | |
import org.apache.http.client.HttpClient; | |
import org.apache.http.client.methods.HttpPost; |
# Usage: | |
# source iterm2.zsh | |
# iTerm2 tab color commands | |
# https://iterm2.com/documentation-escape-codes.html | |
if [[ -n "$ITERM_SESSION_ID" ]]; then | |
tab-color() { | |
echo -ne "\033]6;1;bg;red;brightness;$1\a" | |
echo -ne "\033]6;1;bg;green;brightness;$2\a" |
Prereq:
apt-get install zsh
apt-get install git-core
Getting zsh to work in ubuntu is weird, since sh
does not understand the source
command. So, you do this to install zsh
wget https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/raw/master/tools/install.sh -O - | zsh
#Script to extract to data from google cache This is a simple python script which retrieves content like your blog posts from googles cache, you can use this if your servers hard drive crashes or if a meteor hits your data center.
Remove the time.sleep
code if you don't have more than 50 pages to retrieve.
##Original Source
The "intellibook" netbook contains a rtl8192se pci network chip that is not currently included in the android-x86 builds. I could not get a complete self-build image to work so I decided to add the neccessary drivers to the existing release from 20120101. This has the added benefit that the installation contains the google apps, which are not included in the source download. The image can be downloaded from http://www.android-x86.org/releases/build-20120101 (android-x86-4.0-asus_laptop-20120101.iso).
Extract the iso image and the contained squashfs image and mount the contained filesystem image as a loopback device.
$ bsdtar -C android-image -xf android-x86-4.0-asus_laptop-20120101.iso
$ cd android-image
$ unsquashfs system.sfs
$ sudo mkdir /mnt/iso
$ sudo mount ./squashfs-root/system.img /mnt/iso -o loop