Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View ryzs's full-sized avatar
🚀
Growing up!

Rizky Fathul ryzs

🚀
Growing up!
View GitHub Profile
@ryzs
ryzs / heroku-remote.md
Created April 19, 2022 05:59 — forked from randallreedjr/heroku-remote.md
Add a Heroku remote to an existing git repo

Working with git remotes on Heroku

Generally, you will add a git remote for your Heroku app during the Heroku app creation process, i.e. heroku create. However, if you are working on an existing app and want to add git remotes to enable manual deploys, the following commands may be useful.

Adding a new remote

Add a remote for your Staging app and deploy

Note that on Heroku, you must always use master as the destination branch on the remote. If you want to deploy a different branch, you can use the syntax local_branch:destination_branch seen below (in this example, we push the local staging branch to the master branch on heroku.

$ git remote add staging https://git.heroku.com/staging-app.git
@ryzs
ryzs / keychron_linux.md
Created January 26, 2022 15:58 — forked from andrebrait/keychron_linux.md
Keychron keyboards on Linux (+ Bluetooth fixes)

Here is the best setup (I think so :D) for Keychron + Linux

Make Fn + F-keys work

Keychron Keyboards on Linux use the hid_apple driver (even in Windows/Android mode), both in Bluetooth and Wired modes. By default, this driver uses the F-keys as multimedia shortcuts and you have to press Fn + the key to get the usual F1 through F12 keys.

In order to change this, you need to change the fnmode parameter for the hid_apple kernel module. Here's some documentation on it, but a quick summary can be found below: