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Reasonably portable technique for local variables in shell scripts
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~/.ssh/config behind firewall (ssh via HTTP proxy) and faster session creation by reusing already established connection
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The goal was to be able to perform a network install of OmniOS from a Debian system.
I know there is refinement that can take place in this process (and these notes), but this got me up and running.
All testing took place on a Mac running VirtualBox with the extra extensions installed to allow for PXE booting. However I cannot see why this wouldn't work on real hardware in a network that is already setup to do PXE installs.
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tl;dr Generate a GPG key pair (exercising appropriate paranoia). Send it to key servers. Create a Keybase account with the public part of that key. Use your keypair to sign git tags and SBT artifacts.
GPG is probably one of the least understood day-to-day pieces of software in the modern developer's toolshed. It's certainly the least understood of the important pieces of software (literally no one cares that you can't remember grep's regex variant), and this is a testament to the mightily terrible user interface it exposes to its otherwise extremely simple functionality. It's almost like cryptographers think that part of the security comes from the fact that bad guys can't figure it out any more than the good guys can.
Anyway, GPG is important for open source in particular because of one specific feature of public/private key cryptography: signing. Any published software should be signed by the developer (or company) who published it. Ideally, consu
A simple script to backup an organization's GitHub repositories, wikis and issues.
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