1) Filter Table
Filter is default table for iptables. So, if you don’t define you own table, you’ll be using filter table. Iptables’s filter table has the following built-in chains.
/* | |
This script, when used with Google Apps Scripts, will delete 400 emails and | |
can be triggered to run every few minutes without user interaction enabling you | |
to bulk delete email in Gmail without getting the #793 error from Gmail. | |
Google returns a maximum of 500 email threads in a single API call. | |
This script fetches 400 threads in case 500 threads is causing timeouts | |
Configure the search query in the code below to match the type of emails | |
you want to delete |
1) Filter Table
Filter is default table for iptables. So, if you don’t define you own table, you’ll be using filter table. Iptables’s filter table has the following built-in chains.
type VaultDriver struct { | |
vaultClient *vaultapi.Client | |
project string | |
} | |
func (d VaultDriver) TokenRenewer(ctx context.Context) error { | |
renewer, err := d.vaultClient.NewRenewer(&vaultapi.RenewerInput{ | |
Secret: &vaultapi.Secret{ | |
Auth: &vaultapi.SecretAuth{ | |
ClientToken: d.vaultClient.Token(), |
I recently installed Ubuntu server on a laptop with a 4K display. While the installer appears to be in text, it apparently uses a graphical mode, and setting vga=799 in the kernl boot parameters did not work. | |
To decrease the resolution, you have to pass a kernel boot parameter with the monitor "name" as seen by edid. | |
You can do this to list monitors without xrandr | |
find /sys/devices -name "edid" | |
That will produce a listing like this: |