Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

View tensorfields's full-sized avatar
🍵

David Palma tensorfields

🍵
View GitHub Profile
@grugq
grugq / gist:03167bed45e774551155
Last active April 6, 2024 10:12
operational pgp - draft

Operational PGP

This is a guide on how to email securely.

There are many guides on how to install and use PGP to encrypt email. This is not one of them. This is a guide on secure communication using email with PGP encryption. If you are not familiar with PGP, please read another guide first. If you are comfortable using PGP to encrypt and decrypt emails, this guide will raise your security to the next level.

@dpc
dpc / gist:3055236
Created July 5, 2012 17:58
This is how it should look
#!/bin/bash
# Easy drive encryption script
# using LUKS
DEVICE="$1"
NAME="$2"
KEYDIR="/keys"
KEYFILE="/keys/$NAME.key"
HEADERFILE="/keys/$NAME.luks.header"
MOUNTPOINT="/mnt/$NAME"
@bhenerey
bhenerey / ideal ops.md
Created May 23, 2012 19:40
ideal ops checklist

In a perfect world, where things are done well, not just quickly, I would expect to find the following when joining the company:

Documentation

  • Accurate / up-to-date systems architecture diagram

  • Accurate / up-to-date network diagram

  • Out-of-hours support plan

  • Incident management plan

@jstorimer
jstorimer / hilong.rb
Last active July 30, 2020 06:52
hilong -- A simply utility to show character counts for each line of input and highlight lines longer than 80 characters.
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
# A simply utility to show character counts for each line of input and
# highlight lines longer than 80 characters.
#
# Written as an example for http://jstorimer.com/2011/12/12/writing-ruby-scripts-that-respect-pipelines.html
#
# Examples:
#
# $ hilong Gemfile
@KentaroAOKI
KentaroAOKI / aws_usage.py
Created September 7, 2011 09:02 — forked from noneal/aws_usage.py
A script to query the AWS usage reports programmatically.
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""
A script to query the Amazon Web Services usage reports programmatically.
Ideally this wouldn't exist, and Amazon would provide an API we can use
instead, but hey - that's life.
Basically takes your AWS account username and password, logs into the
website as you, and grabs the data out. Always gets the 'All Usage Types'