Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

anonymous
anonymous / gist:161265
Created August 4, 2009 14:09
== Rules ==
On Infrastructure
-----------------
There is one system, not a collection of systems.
The desired state of the system should be a known quantity.
The "known quantity" must be machine parseable.
The actual state of the system must self-correct to the desired state.
The only authoritative source for the actual state of the system is the system.
The entire system must be deployable using source media and text files.
@nimbupani
nimbupani / index.html
Created December 2, 2011 05:00
Showing latest post on home page with Jekyll
---
layout: default
---
<div class="blog-index">
{% assign post = site.posts.first %}
{% assign content = post.content %}
{% include post_detail.html %}
</div>

tmux cheatsheet

As configured in my dotfiles.

start new:

tmux

start new with session name:

@btoone
btoone / curl.md
Last active June 29, 2024 16:01
A curl tutorial using GitHub's API

Introduction

An introduction to curl using GitHub's API.

The Basics

Makes a basic GET request to the specifed URI

curl https://api.github.com/users/caspyin
@caycefischer
caycefischer / jekyllSyntaxHighlighting.md
Created July 30, 2012 02:19
Various Methods of Syntax Highlighting w/ Jekyll

1. Highlighting the Jekyll way.

This method uses Liquid tags and works when published to Github Pages. It doesn't work in Github's viewer when browsing the repo.

{{ "{% highlight html linenos "}}%}
<div>this is some preformatted code</div>
{{ "{% endhighlight "}}%}

2. Highlighting the Markdown way

@iros
iros / API.md
Created August 22, 2012 14:42
Documenting your REST API

Title

<Additional information about your API call. Try to use verbs that match both request type (fetching vs modifying) and plurality (one vs multiple).>

  • URL

    <The URL Structure (path only, no root url)>

  • Method:

@pwenzel
pwenzel / internet_radio_stream_aliases.sh
Created October 23, 2012 15:16
Internet Radio Streams Via Command Line
# 1. Install mplayer command line (via Brew, Macports, or APT)
# 2. Add the following aliases to ~/.profile
# 3. Type `source ~/.profile`
# 3. Type `news` or `current` to listen in your terminal
alias news="mplayer -playlist http://minnesota.publicradio.org/tools/play/streams/news.pls" # MPR News
alias current="mplayer -playlist http://minnesota.publicradio.org/tools/play/streams/the_current.pls" # The Current
alias classical="mplayer -playlist http://minnesota.publicradio.org/tools/play/streams/classical.pls" # Classical MPR
alias localcurrent="mplayer -playlist http://minnesota.publicradio.org/tools/play/streams/local.pls" # Local Current
alias heartland="mplayer -playlist http://minnesota.publicradio.org/tools/play/streams/radio_heartland.pls" # MPR Radio Heartland
@mislav
mislav / _readme.md
Last active June 28, 2024 15:16
tmux-vim integration to transparently switch between tmux panes and vim split windows

I use tmux splits (panes). Inside one of these panes there's a Vim process, and it has its own splits (windows).

In Vim I have key bindings C-h/j/k/l set to switch windows in the given direction. (Vim default mappings for windows switching are the same, but prefixed with C-W.) I'd like to use the same keystrokes for switching tmux panes.

An extra goal that I've solved with a dirty hack is to toggle between last active panes with C-\.

Here's how it should work:

@tylerneylon
tylerneylon / learn.lua
Last active July 25, 2024 19:50
Learn Lua quickly with this short yet comprehensive and friendly script. It's written as both an introduction and a quick reference. It's also a valid Lua script so you can verify that the code does what it says, and learn more by modifying and running this script in your Lua interpreter.
-- Two dashes start a one-line comment.
--[[
Adding two ['s and ]'s makes it a
multi-line comment.
--]]
----------------------------------------------------
-- 1. Variables and flow control.
----------------------------------------------------
@ksafranski
ksafranski / expecting.md
Last active November 11, 2023 23:00
Basic principles of using tcl-expect scripts

Intro

TCL-Expect scripts are an amazingly easy way to script out laborious tasks in the shell when you need to be interactive with the console. Think of them as a "macro" or way to programmaticly step through a process you would run by hand. They are similar to shell scripts but utilize the .tcl extension and a different #! call.

Setup Your Script

The first step, similar to writing a bash script, is to tell the script what it's executing under. For expect we use the following:

#!/usr/bin/expect