I hereby claim:
- I am PeterWhittaker on github.
- I am peterwhittaker (https://keybase.io/peterwhittaker) on keybase.
- I have a public key whose fingerprint is 5080 146B 585F 7AF2 CCD1 FCEF 0214 DC30 B9BA 7D83
To claim this, I am signing this object:
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
#!/bin/bash | |
# Searches the current directory for either all SELinux macro definitions or | |
# the SELinux macro definition specified by $1 | |
# | |
# if $2 exists, there is a quoting error and we quit | |
if [[ ! -z ${2} ]]; then | |
echo "ERROR: invoked with too many parameters, probably a quoting error." | |
echo "USAGE: $0 [pattern]" |
I'm using ghi to manage GitHub issues from the command line. ghi uses the GitHub API, which is HTTPS-only (not SSH), which means I cannot use my SSH keys to authenticate my ghi requests. GitHub is deprecating password authentication so authorization tokens are required; while this is more-or-less covered in the ghi docs, it isn't exactly clear.
Here's the simple, three-step recipe: