(Also see [remarkable][], the markdown parser created by the author of this cheatsheet)
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# ------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
# use nocorrect alias to prevent auto correct from "fixing" these | |
# ------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
alias foobar='nocorrect foobar' | |
alias g8='nocorrect g8' | |
# ------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
# Ruby stuff | |
# ------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
alias ri='ri -Tf ansi' # Search Ruby documentation |
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# 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) |
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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- | |
""" | |
pep492 aiter using queue before pep 525 | |
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0492 | |
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0525 | |
""" | |
import asyncio | |
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#!/usr/bin/env bash | |
# | |
# This is sp, the command-line Spotify controller. It talks to a running | |
# instance of the Spotify Linux client over dbus, providing an interface not | |
# unlike mpc. | |
# | |
# Put differently, it allows you to control Spotify without leaving the comfort | |
# of your command line, and without a custom client or Premium subscription. | |
# |
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echo iptables-persistent iptables-persistent/autosave_v4 boolean true | sudo debconf-set-selections | |
echo iptables-persistent iptables-persistent/autosave_v4 boolean true | sudo debconf-set-selections | |
sudo apt-get -y install iptables-persistent |
Accessing a subnet that is behind a WireGuard client using a site-to-site setup
We want to access a local subnet remotely, but it is behind a NAT firewall and we can't setup port forwarding. Outgoing connections work, but all incoming connections get DROPPED by the ISP's routing policy.
/!\ Be very carrefull in your setup : any misconfiguration make all the git config to fail silently ! Go trought this guide step by step and it should be fine 😉
- Generate your SSH keys as per your git provider documentation.
- Add each public SSH keys to your git providers acounts.
- In your
~/.ssh/config
, set each ssh key for each repository as in this exemple:
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.