tmux, like other great software, is deceptive. On the one hand, it's fairly easy to get set up and start using right away. On the other hand, it's difficult to take advantage of tmux's adanced features without spending some quality alone time with the manual. But the problem with manuals is that they aren't geared toward beginners. They are geared toward helping seasoned developers and computer enthusiasts quickly obtain the
Last updated March 13, 2024
This Gist explains how to sign commits using gpg in a step-by-step fashion. Previously, krypt.co was heavily mentioned, but I've only recently learned they were acquired by Akamai and no longer update their previous free products. Those mentions have been removed.
Additionally, 1Password now supports signing Git commits with SSH keys and makes it pretty easy-plus you can easily configure Git Tower to use it for both signing and ssh.
For using a GUI-based GIT tool such as Tower or Github Desktop, follow the steps here for signing your commits with GPG.
This gist has been moved to its own Github repo, so it's easier to contribute with additions and corrections. Please open a PR there if you see any mistake, I don't track comments on here as there's no notification system for gists AFAIK. Thanks.
Function | Shortcut |
---|---|
Previous Tab | ⌘ + Left Arrow |
Next Tab | ⌘ + Right Arrow |
Go to Tab | ⌘ + Number |
#!/bin/bash | |
# Might as well ask for password up-front, right? | |
sudo -v | |
# Keep-alive: update existing sudo time stamp if set, otherwise do nothing. | |
while true; do sudo -n true; sleep 60; kill -0 "$$" || exit; done 2>/dev/null & | |
# Example: do stuff over the next 30+ mins that requires sudo here or there. | |
function wait() { |