I hereby claim:
- I am richvred on github.
- I am rvannauker (https://keybase.io/rvannauker) on keybase.
- I have a public key ASAIfGACPSA5SJUxVrS2D7qhscSA8KzWUwthuB1NkN_XIQo
To claim this, I am signing this object:
I hereby claim:
To claim this, I am signing this object:
# Reference: http://blog.gurudelleccelsopicco.org/2009/09/online-lun-expansion-and-partition-resizing-without-reboot-under-linux/ | |
echo 1 > /sys/block/[DEVICE]/device/rescan | |
# DETECT IF NEW DISKS ARE ATTACHED TO THE HOST | |
# Reference: http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/vmware-add-a-new-hard-disk-without-rebooting-guest.html | |
ls /sys/class/scsi_host |
This documents guides you through the process to install Debian Stretch with Full Disk Encryption. The following requirements exist:
After following this guide, you will end up with a setup like this:
#/bin/bash | |
#-- Script to automate https://help.github.com/articles/why-is-git-always-asking-for-my-password | |
REPO_URL=`git remote -v | grep -m1 '^origin' | sed -Ene's#.*(https://[^[:space:]]*).*#\1#p'` | |
if [ -z "$REPO_URL" ]; then | |
echo "-- ERROR: Could not identify Repo url." | |
echo " It is possible this repo is already using SSH instead of HTTPS." | |
exit | |
fi |
#Spider Websites with Wget – 20 Practical Examples | |
Wget is extremely powerful, but like with most other command line programs, the plethora of options it supports can be intimidating to new users. Thus what we have here are a collection of wget commands that you can use to accomplish common tasks from downloading single files to mirroring entire websites. It will help if you can read through the wget manual but for the busy souls, these commands are ready to execute. | |
1. Download a single file from the Internet | |
wget http://example.com/file.iso | |
2. Download a file but save it locally under a different name | |
wget ‐‐output-document=filename.html example.com |
// create file: | |
sudo vim /usr/share/applications/intellij.desktop | |
// add the following | |
[Desktop Entry] | |
Version=13.0 | |
Type=Application | |
Terminal=false | |
Icon[en_US]=/home/rob/.intellij-13/bin/idea.png | |
Name[en_US]=IntelliJ |
// Xorg dependency graph (dot) | |
// BLFS 7.8 | |
// | |
// style=solid : required | |
// style=dashed : recommended | |
// style=dotted : optional | |
// style=solid arrowhead=dot color=grey : required at runtime | |
strict digraph xorg { | |
label="Xorg dependencies |
declare @MaxTagFrequency int | |
declare @tt_Tags table( | |
BlogCategory_ID int, | |
[Count] int | |
) | |
insert into | |
@tt_Tags | |
select top(@CountLimit) | |
bc.BlogCategory_ID, |
#!/bin/bash | |
############################################################################## | |
# | |
# | |
# FILE : linux-explorer.sh | |
# Last Change Date : 3-06-2014 | |
# Author(s) : Joe Santoro | |
# Date Started : 15th April, 2004 | |
# Email : linuxexplo [ at ] unix-consultants.com | |
# Web : http://www.unix-consultants.com/examples/scripts/linux/linux-explorer |
A checklist for designing and developing internet scale services, inspired by James Hamilton's 2007 paper "On Desgining and Deploying Internet-Scale Services."