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@rxaviers
rxaviers / gist:7360908
Last active May 19, 2024 13:20
Complete list of github markdown emoji markup

People

:bowtie: :bowtie: 😄 :smile: 😆 :laughing:
😊 :blush: 😃 :smiley: ☺️ :relaxed:
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😚 :kissing_closed_eyes: 😳 :flushed: 😌 :relieved:
😆 :satisfied: 😁 :grin: 😉 :wink:
😜 :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye: 😝 :stuck_out_tongue_closed_eyes: 😀 :grinning:
😗 :kissing: 😙 :kissing_smiling_eyes: 😛 :stuck_out_tongue:
@grenade
grenade / 01-generate-ed25519-ssh-key.sh
Last active May 2, 2024 23:15
generate ed25519 ssh and gpg/pgp keys and set file permissions for ssh keys and config
#!/bin/bash
# generate new personal ed25519 ssh key
ssh-keygen -o -a 100 -t ed25519 -f ~/.ssh/id_ed25519 -C "rob thijssen <rthijssen@gmail.com>"
# generate new host cert authority (host_ca) ed25519 ssh key
# used for signing host keys and creating host certs
ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -f manta_host_ca -C manta.network
eval "$(ssh-agent -s)"
@datagrok
datagrok / git-branch-simplify.md
Last active April 16, 2024 17:26
How to simplify the graph produced by git log --graph

Ideas for improvements to git log --graph

I will maybe someday get around to dusting off my C and making these changes myself unless someone else does it first.

Make the graph for --topo-order less wiggly

Imagine a long-running development branch periodically merges from master. The git log --graph --all --topo-order is not as simple as it could be, as of git version 1.7.10.4.

It doesn't seem like a big deal in this example, but when you're trying to follow the history trails in ASCII and you've got several different branches displayed at once, it gets difficult quickly.

#!/bin/bash
if [ -z "$1" ]; then
echo "Usage: sudo $0 /dev/sdh1"
exit 1;
fi
dd if=$1 of=/dev/null & pid=$!
while true; do
ps -p$pid --no-heading || break;
echo "-- $(date) ------------------";
@benhosmer
benhosmer / udp-port-scanning.txt
Created April 20, 2012 15:31
UDP Port Troubleshooting using netcat
Using the nc command you can scan a port or a range of ports to verify whether a UDP port is open and able to receive traffic.
This first command will scan all of the UDP ports from 1 to 65535 and add the results to a text file:
$ nc -vnzu server.ip.address.here 1-65535 > udp-scan-results.txt
This merely tells you that the UDP ports are open and receive traffic.
Perhaps a more revealing test would be to actually transfer a file using UDP.
@tonyc
tonyc / gist:1384523
Last active February 6, 2023 04:05
Using strace and lsof

Using strace and lsof to debug blocked processes

You can use strace on a specific pid to figure out what a specific process is doing, e.g.:

strace -fp <pid>

You might see something like:

select(9, [3 5 8], [], [], {0, 999999}) = 0 (Timeout)