start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
Each of these commands will run an ad hoc http static server in your current (or specified) directory, available at http://localhost:8000. Use this power wisely.
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
GitHub repositories can disclose all sorts of potentially valuable information for bug bounty hunters. The targets do not always have to be open source for there to be issues. Organization members and their open source projects can sometimes accidentally expose information that could be used against the target company. in this article I will give you a brief overview that should help you get started targeting GitHub repositories for vulnerabilities and for general recon.
You can just do your research on github.com, but I would suggest cloning all the target's repositories so that you can run your tests locally. I would highly recommend @mazen160's GitHubCloner. Just run the script and you should be good to go.
$ python githubcloner.py --org organization -o /tmp/output
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FFmpeg is one of the most powerful tools for video transcoding and manipulation, but it's fairly complex and confusing to use. That's why I decided to create this cheat sheet which shows some of the most often used commands.
Let's start with some basics:
ffmpeg
calls the FFmpeg application in the command line window, could also be the full path to the FFmpeg binary or .exe file" _ _ " | |
" _ /|| . . ||\ _ " | |
" ( } \||D ' ' ' C||/ { % " | |
" | /\__,=_[_] ' . . ' [_]_=,__/\ |" | |
" |_\_ |----| |----| _/_|" | |
" | |/ | | | | \| |" | |
" | /_ | | | | _\ |" | |
It is all fun and games until someone gets hacked! |
#!/bin/bash | |
IPT="/sbin/iptables" | |
# Server IP | |
SERVER_IP="$(ip addr show eth0 | grep 'inet ' | cut -f2 | awk '{ print $2}')" | |
# Your DNS servers you use: cat /etc/resolv.conf | |
DNS_SERVER="8.8.4.4 8.8.8.8" | |
# Allow connections to this package servers |
/* | |
* object.watch polyfill | |
* | |
* 2012-04-03 | |
* | |
* By Eli Grey, http://eligrey.com | |
* Public Domain. | |
* NO WARRANTY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK. | |
*/ |
This entire guide is based on an old version of Homebrew/Node and no longer applies. It was only ever intended to fix a specific error message which has since been fixed. I've kept it here for historical purposes, but it should no longer be used. Homebrew maintainers have fixed things and the options mentioned don't exist and won't work.
I still believe it is better to manually install npm separately since having a generic package manager maintain another package manager is a bad idea, but the instructions below don't explain how to do that.
Installing node through Homebrew can cause problems with npm for globally installed packages. To fix it quickly, use the solution below. An explanation is also included at the end of this document.
#!/usr/bin/env python3 | |
# Distributed under the MIT software license | |
import binascii, struct, sys, io, argparse | |
from PIL import Image | |
IMG_WIDTH = 512 # could be made adaptive... | |
MIN_HEIGHT = 4 # minimum height of image; twitter won't let us upload anything smaller | |
BYTES_PER_PIXEL = 4 # RGBA, 8 bit | |
def div_roundup(x,y): |
Download source code from Overleaf if you use it: menu
-> download
-> source
.
Strip comments and combine all tex
files (f01-main.tex
, f02-intro.tex
, etc.) into one file arxiv_main.tex
.
# Replace f01-main.tex with the main tex file in your overleaf project
latexpand --empty-comments f01-main.tex > arxiv_main.tex