command | description |
---|---|
ctrl + a | Goto BEGINNING of command line |
# remove specified host from /etc/hosts | |
function removehost() { | |
if [[ "$1" ]] | |
then | |
HOSTNAME=$1 | |
if [ -n "$(grep $HOSTNAME /etc/hosts)" ] | |
then | |
echo "$HOSTNAME Found in your /etc/hosts, Removing now..."; | |
sudo sed -i".bak" "/$HOSTNAME/d" /etc/hosts |
Set-ExecutionPolicy Unrestricted; | |
iex ((New-Object System.Net.WebClient).DownloadString('http://boxstarter.org/bootstrapper.ps1')); | |
get-boxstarter -Force; | |
Install-BoxstarterPackage -PackageName 'https://gist.githubusercontent.com/OALabs/afb619ce8778302c324373378abbaef5/raw/4006323180791f464ec0a8a838c7b681f42d238c/oalabs_x86vm.ps1'; |
- How to Build a Successful Information Security Career (Daniel Miessler)
- The First Steps to a Career in Information Security (Errata Security - Marisa Fagan)
- Hiring your first Security Professional (Peerlyst - Dawid Balut)
- How to Start a Career in Cyber security
- How to Get Into Information Security (ISC^2)
- https://www.isc2.org/how-to-get-into-information-security.aspx
These commands were taking from the talk Introduction to Advanced Bash Usage by James Pannacciulli
Updated 21 Jan 2017 06:54:53
Custom recipe to get OS X 10.11 El Capitan running from scratch, setup applications and developer environment. This is very similar (and currently mostly the same) as my 10.10 Yosemite setup recipe (as found on this gist https://gist.github.com/kevinelliott/0726211d17020a6abc1f). Note that I expect this to change significantly as I install El Capitan several times.
I use this gist to keep track of the important software and steps required to have a functioning system after a semi-annual fresh install. On average, I reinstall each computer from scratch every 6 months, and I do not perform upgrades between distros.
This keeps the system performing at top speeds, clean of trojans, spyware, and ensures that I maintain good organizational practices for my content and backups. I highly recommend this.
You are encouraged to fork this and modify it to your heart's content to match your own needs.
#!/bin/bash | |
JAILS=`fail2ban-client status | grep "Jail list" | sed -E 's/^[^:]+:[ \t]+//' | sed 's/,//g'` | |
for JAIL in $JAILS | |
do | |
fail2ban-client status $JAIL | |
done |