Hi there!
The docker cheat sheet has moved to a Github project under https://github.com/wsargent/docker-cheat-sheet.
Please click on the link above to go to the cheat sheet.
package main | |
import ( | |
"errors" | |
"path/filepath" | |
"archive/zip" | |
"io" | |
"log" | |
"net/http" | |
"os" |
# Copy and self modified from ys.zsh-theme, the one of default themes in master repository | |
# Clean, simple, compatible and meaningful. | |
# Tested on Linux, Unix and Windows under ANSI colors. | |
# It is recommended to use with a dark background and the font Inconsolata. | |
# Colors: black, red, green, yellow, *blue, magenta, cyan, and white. | |
# http://xiaofan.at | |
# 2 Jul 2015 - Xiaofan | |
# Machine name. | |
function box_name { |
// https://blogs.oracle.com/janp/entry/how_the_scp_protocol_works | |
package main | |
import ( | |
"fmt" | |
"golang.org/x/crypto/ssh" | |
) | |
const privateKey = `content of id_rsa` |
Hi there!
The docker cheat sheet has moved to a Github project under https://github.com/wsargent/docker-cheat-sheet.
Please click on the link above to go to the cheat sheet.
# default.custom.yaml | |
# save it to: | |
# ~/.config/ibus/rime (linux) | |
# ~/Library/Rime (macos) | |
# %APPDATA%\Rime (windows) | |
patch: | |
schema_list: | |
- schema: luna_pinyin # 朙月拼音 | |
- schema: luna_pinyin_simp # 朙月拼音 简化字模式 |
It is possible to compile Go programs for a different OS, even though go build
says otherwise.
You'll need:
golang-crosscompile
helper script https://github.com/davecheney/golang-crosscompileMany users of Git are curious about the lack of delta compression at the object (blob) level when commits are first written. This efficiency is saved until the pack file is written. Loose objects are written in compressed, but non-delta format at the time of each commit.
A simple run though of a commit sequence with only the smallest change to the image (in uncompressed TIFF format to amplify the observable behavior) aids the understanding of this deferred and different approach efficiency.
Create the repo:
# In order for gpg to find gpg-agent, gpg-agent must be running, and there must be an env | |
# variable pointing GPG to the gpg-agent socket. This little script, which must be sourced | |
# in your shell's init script (ie, .bash_profile, .zshrc, whatever), will either start | |
# gpg-agent or set up the GPG_AGENT_INFO variable if it's already running. | |
# Add the following to your shell init to set up gpg-agent automatically for every shell | |
if [ -f ~/.gnupg/.gpg-agent-info ] && [ -n "$(pgrep gpg-agent)" ]; then | |
source ~/.gnupg/.gpg-agent-info | |
export GPG_AGENT_INFO | |
else |
This is a story about how I tried to use Go for scripting. In this story, I’ll discuss the need for a Go script, how we would expect it to behave and the possible implementations; During the discussion I’ll deep dive to scripts, shells, and shebangs. Finally, we’ll discuss solutions that will make Go scripts work.
While python and bash are popular scripting languages, C, C++ and Java are not used for scripts at all, and some languages are somewhere in between.
#!/bin/sh | |
# Called by "git push" after it has checked the remote status, | |
# but before anything has been pushed. | |
# | |
# If this script exits with a non-zero status nothing will be pushed. | |
# | |
# Steps to install, from the root directory of your repo... | |
# 1. Copy the file into your repo at `.git/hooks/pre-push` | |
# 2. Set executable permissions, run `chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-push` |