Two ways to do it, but only worked for me so I'll put it first and the second for reference:
$ openssl pkcs12 -export -in hostname.crt -inkey hostname.key -out hostname.p12
$ openssl pkcs12 -in hostname.p12 -nodes -out hostname.pem
Other options for this method in comments below:
# Note, the -certfile root.crt appends all CA certs to the export, I've never needed these so it's optional for my personal steps
$ openssl pkcs12 -export -in hostname.crt -inkey hostname.key -certfile root.crt -out hostname.p12
# Generate a new pgp key: (better to use gpg2 instead of gpg in all below commands) | |
gpg --gen-key | |
# maybe you need some random work in your OS to generate a key. so run this command: `find ./* /home/username -type d | xargs grep some_random_string > /dev/null` | |
# check current keys: | |
gpg --list-secret-keys --keyid-format LONG | |
# See your gpg public key: | |
gpg --armor --export YOUR_KEY_ID | |
# YOUR_KEY_ID is the hash in front of `sec` in previous command. (for example sec 4096R/234FAA343232333 => key id is: 234FAA343232333) |
- Bytes and Blobs by David Flanagan
- Conference Wifi Redux by Malte Ubi
- Sashimi - https://github.com/cramforce/Sashimi
- Run Your JS everywhere with Jellyfish by Adam Christian - http://jelly.io Project
- Fighting Crime and Kicking Apps with Batman.js by Nick Small
- Hello Jo by Dave Balmer - Project - http://joapp.com
GitHub supports several lightweight markup languages for documentation; the most popular ones (generally, not just at GitHub) are Markdown and reStructuredText. Markdown is sometimes considered easier to use, and is often preferred when the purpose is simply to generate HTML. On the other hand, reStructuredText is more extensible and powerful, with native support (not just embedded HTML) for tables, as well as things like automatic generation of tables of contents.
# Add field | |
echo '{"hello": "world"}' | jq --arg foo bar '. + {foo: $foo}' | |
# { | |
# "hello": "world", | |
# "foo": "bar" | |
# } | |
# Override field value | |
echo '{"hello": "world"}' | jq --arg foo bar '. + {hello: $foo}' | |
{ |
-
jq — https://jqlang.github.io/jq/ — "like sed for JSON data"
There are several options available for installing jq. I prefer to use Homebrew:
brew install jq