We install certutil
and pk12util
if necessary:
sudo apt install libnss3-tools
On Linux, Chromium uses the NSS Shared DB. Check if you have the ~/.pki/nssdb
directory:
ls $HOME/.pki/nssdb
We install certutil
and pk12util
if necessary:
sudo apt install libnss3-tools
On Linux, Chromium uses the NSS Shared DB. Check if you have the ~/.pki/nssdb
directory:
ls $HOME/.pki/nssdb
There is no problem with being a noobie and I do not use the term to sligtht or disparage anyone.
This is a way to setup your permissions for running Plex in Linux. Different folks may use different methods.
The permissions concepts provided here apply to OSX, but the users and groups are controlled and modified differently, so much of this will not work properly. I think the command is dscl
, but that could be out of date.
There are many ways to setup your permissions scheme in Linux, this methodology describes a way to do it, not everyone will like it, but it works for me, so whatever.
<component name="ProjectRunConfigurationManager"> | |
<configuration default="false" name="MEP" type="Application" factoryName="Application"> | |
<option name="MAIN_CLASS_NAME" value="ar.com.bbva.arq.mep.MepSpringBootSamLocalApplication" /> | |
<module name="mep" /> | |
<option name="PROGRAM_PARAMETERS" value="--spring.profiles.active=local" /> | |
<option name="VM_PARAMETERS" value="-Dserver.port=8081" /> | |
<method v="2"> | |
<option name="Make" enabled="true" /> | |
</method> | |
</configuration> |
{ | |
"configurations": [ | |
{ | |
"type": "java", | |
"name": "Launch Current File", | |
"request": "launch", | |
"mainClass": "${file}", | |
"projectName": "mep", | |
"args": "--spring.profiles.active=local", | |
"vmArgs": "-Dserver.port=8081" |
{ | |
// VSCode | |
"extensions.ignoreRecommendations": true, | |
"files.autoSave": "onFocusChange", | |
"liveServer.settings.donotVerifyTags": true, | |
"redhat.telemetry.enabled": true, | |
"rsp-ui.enableStartServerOnActivation": [ | |
{ | |
"id": "redhat.vscode-community-server-connector", | |
"name": "Community Server Connector", |
{ | |
//VSCode | |
"extensions.ignoreRecommendations": true, | |
"files.autoSave": "onFocusChange", | |
"liveServer.settings.donotVerifyTags": true, | |
"redhat.telemetry.enabled": true, | |
"rsp-ui.enableStartServerOnActivation": [ | |
{ | |
"id": "redhat.vscode-community-server-connector", | |
"name": "Community Server Connector", |
// Install a specific version number | |
nvm install 8.0.0 | |
// Install the latest LTS version | |
nvm install --lts | |
// Use the latest available 8.0.x release | |
nvm use 8.0 | |
// Use the latest LTS version | |
nvm use --lts | |
// Run app.js using node 6.10.3 | |
nvm run 6.10.3 app.js |
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -N '' -C "rthijssen@gmail.com" -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa | |
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -N '' -C "rthijssen@gmail.com" -f ~/.ssh/github_rsa | |
ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -N '' -C "rthijssen@gmail.com" -f ~/.ssh/mozilla_rsa |
I have two Github accounts: oanhnn (personal) and superman (for work). I want to use both accounts on same computer (without typing password everytime, when doing git push or pull).
Use ssh keys and define host aliases in ssh config file (each alias for an account).