Using Python's built-in defaultdict we can easily define a tree data structure:
def tree(): return defaultdict(tree)
That's it!
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# | |
# Converts any integer into a base [BASE] number. I have chosen 62 | |
# as it is meant to represent the integers using all the alphanumeric | |
# characters, [no special characters] = {0..9}, {A..Z}, {a..z} | |
# | |
# I plan on using this to shorten the representation of possibly long ids, | |
# a la url shortenters | |
# |
import sys | |
from gevent import server | |
from gevent.baseserver import _tcp_listener | |
from gevent.monkey import patch_all; patch_all() | |
from multiprocessing import Process, current_process, cpu_count | |
def note(format, *args): | |
sys.stderr.write('[%s]\t%s\n' % (current_process().name, format%args)) |
Using Python's built-in defaultdict we can easily define a tree data structure:
def tree(): return defaultdict(tree)
That's it!
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
from ctypes import * | |
for ln in open('/proc/self/maps'): | |
if "[vdso]" in ln: | |
start, end = [int(x,16) for x in ln.split()[0].split('-')] | |
CDLL("libc.so.6").write(1, c_void_p(start), end-start) | |
break |
/var/log/supervisor/*.log { | |
weekly | |
rotate 52 | |
compress | |
delaycompress | |
notifempty | |
missingok | |
copytruncate | |
} |
package main | |
import ( | |
"fmt" | |
) | |
func decorator(f func(s string)) func(s string) { | |
return func(s string) { | |
fmt.Println("Started") |
based on rage-quit support for bash
Put the files below inside ~/.oh-my-zsh/custom/plugins/fuck
Also chmod a+x
the flip
command.
#!/bin/bash | |
# | |
# IMPORTANT! | |
# At the moment this script is forged only for Debian ( tested on 8.x release ). | |
# Although my efforts were put on building this also on Arch Linux or Alpine, at the moment only Debian seems to be able to build it. | |
# Also, not sure why these instructions where nowhere on the internet, therefore I leave them here for whoever need them. | |
# | |
########### | |
# Add Backports repo support |
Here are some concise instructions for getting OpenBSD 7.3-current running on a StarFive VisionFive 2 (v1.3B, though from other reports referenced below, it sounds like the v1.2 boards can also be made to work).
You will need: