If you're working with the rpi3's gpio, the pigpio
library can be very handy.
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install pigpio
If you also want to access pigpio from python, install:
sudo apt-get install python-pigpio python3-pigpio
#!/bin/bash | |
# Renames subtitles files according to tv shows names found in a directory | |
# Acceped syntaxes for season/episode are: 304, s3e04, s03e04, 3x04 (case insensitive) | |
# | |
# Usage: | |
# Put this gist somewhere in your $PATH, like /usr/local/bin/subtitles-renamer | |
# Chmod +x it | |
# cd ~/YourHolidaysTvShowsWithSubtitles | |
# subtitles-renamer |
@if ($format === 'pdf') | |
<style media="print"> | |
.print-header-footer { | |
position: fixed; | |
width: 100%; | |
} | |
.print-footer { | |
position: fixed; | |
bottom: -40px; |
Published: 16 December 2022
Reference: https://docs.opnsense.org/manual/how-tos/wireguard-selective-routing.html
Goal: Set up one or more Wireguard connections from ProtonVPN on OPNsense, with policy based routing, and optional Killswitch.
I'm writing this guide first as a reference for my future self for when I inevitably forget how to do this, but also to help others out. I found there were not many guides on this specific configuration, particularly not with multiple concurrent connections, and these were some steps which were not at all obvious. I did begin with the guide in the official OPNsense documentation, but even that was missing info to make ProtonVPN work. If you are a pfSense user, it is very similar to OPNsense, and you should be able to follow along with some success, but I have not tested it myself.