Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View bdashrad's full-sized avatar
😎

Brad Clark bdashrad

😎
View GitHub Profile
@earthgecko
earthgecko / bash.generate.random.alphanumeric.string.sh
Last active July 4, 2024 17:31
shell/bash generate random alphanumeric string
#!/bin/bash
# bash generate random alphanumeric string
#
# bash generate random 32 character alphanumeric string (upper and lowercase) and
NEW_UUID=$(cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc 'a-zA-Z0-9' | fold -w 32 | head -n 1)
# bash generate random 32 character alphanumeric string (lowercase only)
cat /dev/urandom | tr -dc 'a-z0-9' | fold -w 32 | head -n 1
@louiszuckerman
louiszuckerman / gfid-resolver.sh
Last active November 29, 2023 10:01
Glusterfs GFID Resolver Turns a GFID into a real path in the brick
#!/bin/bash
if [[ "$#" < "2" || "$#" > "3" ]]; then
cat <<END
Glusterfs GFID resolver -- turns a GFID into a real file path
Usage: $0 <brick-path> <gfid> [-q]
<brick-path> : the path to your glusterfs brick (required)
#!/usr/bin/ruby
# Create display override file to force Mac OS X to use RGB mode for Display
# see http://embdev.net/topic/284710
require 'base64'
data=`ioreg -l -d0 -w 0 -r -c AppleDisplay`
edids=data.scan(/IODisplayEDID.*?<([a-z0-9]+)>/i).flatten
vendorids=data.scan(/DisplayVendorID.*?([0-9]+)/i).flatten
@ejdyksen
ejdyksen / patch-edid.md
Last active July 26, 2024 11:46
A script to fix EDID problems on external monitors in macOS

patch-edid.rb

A script to fix EDID problems on external monitors in macOS.

Instructions

  1. Connect only the problem display.

  2. Create this directory structure (if it doesn't already exist):

@lelandbatey
lelandbatey / whiteboardCleaner.md
Last active June 16, 2024 13:44
Whiteboard Picture Cleaner - Shell one-liner/script to clean up and beautify photos of whiteboards!

Description

This simple script will take a picture of a whiteboard and use parts of the ImageMagick library with sane defaults to clean it up tremendously.

The script is here:

#!/bin/bash
convert "$1" -morphology Convolve DoG:15,100,0 -negate -normalize -blur 0x1 -channel RBG -level 60%,91%,0.1 "$2"

Results

@sh1n0b1
sh1n0b1 / ssltest.py
Created April 8, 2014 07:53
Python Heartbleed (CVE-2014-0160) Proof of Concept
#!/usr/bin/python
# Quick and dirty demonstration of CVE-2014-0160 by Jared Stafford (jspenguin@jspenguin.org)
# The author disclaims copyright to this source code.
import sys
import struct
import socket
import time
import select
@altryne
altryne / Readme.md
Created May 7, 2014 17:46
Hubot Slack webhook

#A script to post back to Slack via the webhooks API

##why this exists?

Slack's own hubot adapter needs the hubot installation to be accessible via web. This can be problematic in some cases, as a security risk.

This hack let's you run your Hubot behind a firewall, and connect to Slack via the IRC gateway.

To respond, Hubot uses the incoming webhooks end-point of Slack.

@markwalkom
markwalkom / logstash.conf
Last active April 29, 2022 10:23
Reindexing Elasticsearch with Logstash 2.0
input {
elasticsearch {
hosts => [ "HOSTNAME_HERE" ]
port => "9200"
index => "INDEXNAME_HERE"
size => 1000
scroll => "5m"
docinfo => true
scan => true
}
@lmarkus
lmarkus / README.MD
Last active July 19, 2024 17:41
Extracting / Exporting custom emoji from Slack

Extracting Emoji From Slack!

Slack doesn't provide an easy way to extract custom emoji from a team. (Especially teams with thousands of custom emoji) This Gist walks you through a relatively simple approach to get your emoji out.

If you're an admin of your own team, you can get the list of emoji directly using this API: https://api.slack.com/methods/emoji.list. Once you have it, skip to Step 3

HOWEVER! This gist is intended for people who don't have admin access, nor access tokens for using that list.

Follow along...

@bmhatfield
bmhatfield / .profile
Last active June 18, 2024 09:38
Automatic Git commit signing with GPG on OSX
# 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