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@petrstepanov
petrstepanov / install-facetime-hd-webcam.sh
Created September 28, 2020 04:22
Linux Install FaceTimeHD Camera
#!/bin/bash
set -e
export CONFIG_MODULE_SIG=n
export CONFIG_MODULE_SIG_ALL=n
# For current kernel
export KERNELRELEASE=$(cat /proc/version | awk '{print $3}')
temp_dir=$(mktemp -d)
echo "Installing FacetimeHD camera for $KERNELRELEASE"
@luk6xff
luk6xff / ARMonQEMUforDebianUbuntu.md
Last active April 23, 2024 17:11 — forked from bruce30262/ARMDebianUbuntu.md
Emulating ARM with QEMU on Debian/Ubuntu

You might want to read this to get an introduction to armel vs armhf.

If the below is too much, you can try Ubuntu-ARMv7-Qemu but note it contains non-free blobs.

Running ARM programs under linux (without starting QEMU VM!)

First, cross-compile user programs with GCC-ARM toolchain. Then install qemu-arm-static so that you can run ARM executables directly on linux

If there's no qemu-arm-static in the package list, install qemu-user-static instead

@luismts
luismts / GitCommitBestPractices.md
Last active May 13, 2024 03:07
Git Tips and Git Commit Best Practices

Git Commit Best Practices

Basic Rules

Commit Related Changes

A commit should be a wrapper for related changes. For example, fixing two different bugs should produce two separate commits. Small commits make it easier for other developers to understand the changes and roll them back if something went wrong. With tools like the staging area and the ability to stage only parts of a file, Git makes it easy to create very granular commits.

Commit Often

Committing often keeps your commits small and, again, helps you commit only related changes. Moreover, it allows you to share your code more frequently with others. That way it‘s easier for everyone to integrate changes regularly and avoid having merge conflicts. Having large commits and sharing them infrequently, in contrast, makes it hard to solve conflicts.

@bmhatfield
bmhatfield / .zshrc
Last active March 7, 2024 23:11
OSX Keychain Environment Variables
# If you use bash, this technique isn't really zsh specific. Adapt as needed.
source ~/keychain-environment-variables.sh
# AWS configuration example, after doing:
# $ set-keychain-environment-variable AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
# provide: "AKIAYOURACCESSKEY"
# $ set-keychain-environment-variable AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
# provide: "j1/yoursupersecret/password"
export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=$(keychain-environment-variable AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID);
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=$(keychain-environment-variable AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY);
@fntlnz
fntlnz / self-signed-certificate-with-custom-ca.md
Last active May 17, 2024 07:59
Self Signed Certificate with Custom Root CA

Create Root CA (Done once)

Create Root Key

Attention: this is the key used to sign the certificate requests, anyone holding this can sign certificates on your behalf. So keep it in a safe place!

openssl genrsa -des3 -out rootCA.key 4096
@pensierinmusica
pensierinmusica / network-tuning.conf
Last active January 18, 2024 22:37
Linux sysctl configuration file for NginX
## Place this file in "/etc/sysctl.d/network-tuning.conf" and
## run "sysctl -p" to have the kernel pick the new settings up
# Avoid a smurf attack
net.ipv4.icmp_echo_ignore_broadcasts = 1
# Turn on protection for bad icmp error messages
net.ipv4.icmp_ignore_bogus_error_responses = 1
# Turn on syncookies for SYN flood attack protection