#!/bin/bash | |
set -euo pipefail | |
BLE_DEV=hci0 | |
DEDUP_WINDOW=30 | |
MQTT_BROKER=broker.hivemq.com | |
MQTT_PORT=8883 | |
MQTT_QOS=2 | |
MQTT_TOPIC=blescan |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# vim:fileencoding=utf-8 | |
""" [NAME] script or package easy description | |
[DESCRIPTION] script or package description | |
""" | |
from datetime import datetime | |
from argparse import ArgumentParser | |
import pprint |
rhcloud.com | |
freepornfull.com | |
justmysize.com | |
kompoz.me | |
allwomenstalk.com | |
lindamedic.com | |
maximonline.ru | |
planetromeo.com | |
www.net.cn | |
javjunkies.com |
In case there's already a DHCP config for netplan for the private IP address:
File: /etc/netplan/50-cloud-init.yaml
Contents:
# This file is generated from information provided by
# the datasource. Changes to it will not persist across an instance.
# To disable cloud-init's network configuration capabilities, write a file
# /etc/cloud/cloud.cfg.d/99-disable-network-config.cfg with the following:
HTTPPort 8090 | |
HTTPBindAddress 0.0.0.0 | |
MaxHTTPConnections 200 | |
MaxClients 100 | |
MaxBandWidth 500000 | |
CustomLog - | |
<Feed camera.ffm> | |
File /tmp/camera.ffm | |
FileMaxSize 200M |
-- Create a group | |
CREATE ROLE readaccess; | |
-- Grant access to existing tables | |
GRANT USAGE ON SCHEMA public TO readaccess; | |
GRANT SELECT ON ALL TABLES IN SCHEMA public TO readaccess; | |
-- Grant access to future tables | |
ALTER DEFAULT PRIVILEGES IN SCHEMA public GRANT SELECT ON TABLES TO readaccess; |
FROM golang:1.5.2 | |
MAINTAINER Lucas Käldström <lucas.kaldstrom@hotmail.co.uk> | |
# Enable cgo cross-compilation for armel | |
RUN echo "deb http://emdebian.org/tools/debian/ jessie main" > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/crosstools.list \ | |
&& curl -s http://emdebian.org/tools/debian/emdebian-toolchain-archive.key | apt-key add - \ | |
&& dpkg --add-architecture armel \ | |
&& apt-get update \ | |
&& apt-get install -y build-essential crossbuild-essential-armel rsync upx |
Unless you are using Safari on OSX, most browsers will have some kind of free plugin that you can use to export the browser's history. So that's probably the easiest way. The harder way, which seems to be what Safari wants is a bit more hacky but it will also work for other browsers. Turns out that most of them, including Safari, have their history saved in some kind of sqlite database file somewhere in your home directory.
The OSX Finder cheats a little bit and doesn't show us all the files that actually exist on our drive. It tries to protect us from ourselves by hiding some system and application-specific files. You can work around this by either using the terminal (my preferred method) or by using the Cmd+Shft+G in Finder.
Once you locate the file containing the browser's history, copy it to make a backup just in case we screw up.