I know that “Vanity Addresses” are a common thing for onion sites, and there are tools which generate tons of keys looking for prefixes. I haven’t seen such a tool for ssh host keys though.
I know that “Vanity Addresses” are a common thing for onion sites, and there are tools which generate tons of keys looking for prefixes. I haven’t seen such a tool for ssh host keys though.
I put newlines in my filenames to break both CLI tools and Windows filesystems
Taking courses which involve subjects that you will likely never encounter in the workforce is a thing in every discipline. Most engineers don’t need to manually solve differential equations in their day jobs, they just need to know that they exist and will often require numerical solutions.
Getting your hands dirty with the content provides a better understanding when dealing with higher level concepts.
zsh-syntax-highlighting
There’s also a fork called fast-syntax-highlighting, I use it.
manually call the others
Yeah, most distros will set up source
chains to make things nicer for users.
Yeah, I’d write this as a single update
script with options to update vimplugins
or update pkg
or update all
.
I see that you want it to be a function so you can get the chdir as a side effect, but mixing that with updating doesn’t make sense to me.
When in doubt, ~/.zshrc
. It’s the right choice 99% of the time. Otherwise, there’s a chance you fuck up scripts you’ve installed which assume no shell options have been changed in non-interactive contexts.
What kind of functions do you write which you share between your scripts? Generally if I’m wanting to reuse a non-trivial function, I extend the functionality of the first script instead.
Select the color which matches the steps before filenames ((non-)login and (non-)interactive), then follow that arrow the rest of the way. There’s more colors in Bash because Bash makes a distinction between remote and local shells.
Another way to look at the same data for Zsh (note: $ZDOTDIR
will be used instead of $HOME
if it’s defined at any step along the way):
File | neither | interactive | login | both |
---|---|---|---|---|
/etc/zshenv |
x | x | x | x |
${ZDOTDIR:-$HOME}/.zshenv |
x | x | x | x |
${ZDOTDIR:-$HOME}/.zprofile |
x | x | ||
${ZDOTDIR:-$HOME}/.zshrc |
x | x | ||
${ZDOTDIR:-$HOME}/.zlogin |
x | x | ||
${ZDOTDIR:-$HOME}/.zlogout |
x | x |
One confusion on the Bash side of the diagram is that you see branching paths into ~/.profile
, ~/.bash_profile
and ~/.bash_login
. Bash will use for ~/.bash_profile
, ~/.bash_login
, and ~/.profile
, in that order, and execute only the first one that exists and is readable.
Optional crash reporting was merged. Most of the backlash in the PR is about the significant dependencies (Google’s BreakPad) which were pulled in with it.
However, by default Audacity isn’t built with it, you need to specify a CMake with the URL to send data to. No distros that I know of enable reporting.
What about adding the flags last?
rm deletethisrepo -rf
It’s probably the biggest deal for games running in xwayland
That’s a latrine. They’re talking about a fancy light fixture.
How is it compared to wofi?
If you say “a 10d10”, I know what you mean, but “10d10” is definitely the sum of 10 10-sided dice.
More people should be like you.
Exact same. Sway’s 1.0 release was March of 2019, and it did everything I needed.
Even playing games on my desktop, Xwayland worked fine for me.
8GB memory + two Firefox profiles makes things difficult on my laptop.
Basically the Matrix Spec Change Proposal system, I like it. Opens the floor to more players, gives tool authors a list of protocols they could choose to build on, and hopefully compositors will choose to adopt or adapt one of these protocols before writing their own.