Comments:
Put: : <'COMMENTBLOCK_ORWHATEVERYOUWANTTOCALLME
'
before the block and put:
COMMENTBLOCK_ORWHATEVERYOUWANTTOCALLME
after the block
DISPLAY SETTINGS:
- xrandr example: xrandr –output HDMI1 –mode 1280×1024 –right-of eDP1
- change 1280×1024 display to 1600×1280:xrandr –output DP-1 –scale 1.25×1.25 –panning 1600×1280
- shift display down 1280 pixels: xrandr –output eDP-1 –mode 1920×1080 –pos 0x1280
FILE MANAGEMENT
Count # of files in a directory (recursively):
ll -R | grep -v "\(total \)" | grep -v "\.\?[/]$" | grep -v "^$" | wc -l
List files recursively by date:
find . -printf "%T@ %Tc %p\n" | sort -n printf arguments from man find: %Tk: File's last modification time in the format specified by k. @: seconds since Jan. 1, 1970, 00:00 GMT, with fractional part. c: locale's date and time (Sat Nov 04 12:02:33 EST 1989). %p: File's name.
Add symbolic link to file (~/www/elgg1.5/php.ini in example) to current directory and subdirectories:
for ELE in `find . -type d -print| awk 'NR > 1 {print}'`; do ln -s ~/www/elgg1.5/php.ini ${ELE}/php.ini ; done
change permissions of files recursively so group permissions match owner permissions:
chmod -R g=u name-of-folder
change permissions of directories or files only:
find -type d -exec chmod 775 {} \; find -type f -exec chmod 664 {} \;
copy files recursively, keeping permissions:
cd /source tar cf - * | ( cd /target; tar xfp -)
Rip Audio from application using Pulseaudio (no Jack):
get index number of application audio:
- pacmd
- list-sink-inputs
assuming index is $INDEX:
pactl load-module module-null-sink sink_name=steam
pactl move-sink-input $INDEX steam
parec -d steam.monitor | sox -t raw -r 44k -sLb 16 -c 2 - /tmp/testme.wav
Alternative: With ffmpeg
pactl list short sources
and copy the one that has the wordmonitor
in it- example:
alsa_output.pci-0000_00_1f.3.analog-stereo.monitor
- example cmd:
ffmpeg -f pulse -i alsa_output.pci-0000_00_1f.3.analog-stereo.monitor -ac 2 recording.m4a
VIDEO
transcode a video file so it is playable through Windows Media Player (Windows) and Quicktime (MacOS):
ffmpeg -i INPUT_FILE -b 1500 -ab 384k -cropleft 20 -cropright 20 OUTPUT.mpg
Record Desktop as Video:
The easy way is to use gtk-RecordMyDesktop,but functionality with gtk-RecordMyDesktopusing jackappears to be broken. So another way if you need jackis ffmpegwith x11grab:
ffmpeg -f jack -ac 2 -ab 128k -i ffmpeg -acodec pcm_s16le -f x11grab -r 30 -s 320x240 -i :0.0+0,76 -vcodec libx264 -vpre lossless_ultrafast -threads 0 /tmp/test.mkv
Notes:
- -f jack tells ffmpeg to use jack. You could also do -f alsa
- -i ffmpeg tells ffmpeg to name it's ports for jack ffmpeg
- -i :0.0+0,76 tells ffmpeg to use screen :0.0 with offset X=0 Y=76
- if the output file exists, ffmpeg will ask you if you want to overwrite the old file. That's nice, but somehow this throws off the synchronization between the audio and the video. So if you want to overwrite an existing file, delete it first.
Position of Mouse Cursor:
mousepos.py (linux only)
PRINTING
add PDF printer to ubuntu intrepid or jaunty (source):
- sudo apt-get install cups-pdf
- sudo chmod +s /usr/lib/cups/backend/cups-pdf
- mkdir ~/PDF/
bmeps seems to be the only way to make a transparent PDF from a PNG file. Directions for building here.
convert a grayscale PDF to B&W with Imagemagick:
convert -threshold 75% input.pdf output.pdf
determine resolution of images inside a pdf: pdfimages -list EXAMPLE.pdf
INTERNET
- ssh no password: follow these instructions
- vpn on Linux 64 bit: follow these instructions
- Remote Desktop (VNC through SSH tunnel)
- ssh -L 5901:localhost:5900 UserName@host.com
- (in a separate terminal): xtightvncviewer -encodings tight localhost:1
- ssh to a host through another (jump) host
- use
-J
i.e.ssh -J user@jumphost user@host
- also works for scp i.e.
scp -J user@jumphost file user@host
DHCP Server and Firestarter (on 12.04)
- sudo apt-get install dhcp3-server
- sudo ln -s /etc/dhcp/dhcpd.conf /etc/dhcpd.conf
- and one or more of:
- sudo ln -s /etc/dhcp3/dhcpd.conf /etc/dhcpd.conf
- sudo ln -s /usr/sbin/dhcpd3 /usr/sbin/dhcpd
- set wired (eth0 or whatever) to a manual IP address
Assign card a specific name:
Example: udevinfo -a -p /sys/class/sound/controlC1 udevinfo -p /sys/class/tty/ttyUSB2 -a ATTRS{modalias}=="usb:v067Bp2303d0300dc00dsc00dp00icFFisc00ip00", NAME="logochip", MODE="0666"
Backup (tar) directory and subdirectories:
tar -cvzf mytarfile.tgz mydir/
Backup database:
mysqldump --skip-lock-tables -h <hostname> -u <username> -p<password> <databaseName> > <filename>.sql
FONTS:
- add ttf fonts in xubuntu by copying them into ~/.fonts (add the directory if it doesn't exist) then running sudo fc-cache -f
- install Monaco: curl -kL https://raw.github.com/cstrap/monaco-font/master/install-font-ubuntu.sh | bash
SWAPPINESS:
- find current value: cat /proc/sys/vm/swappiness
- set on the fly: sudo sysctl vm.swappiness=10
- to change permanently edit /etc/sysctl.conf as root. Then, change or add this line to the file: vm.swappiness = 10
- The above content references this page
Convert File Ascii –> Hex: hexdump -e '16/1 “0x%02x, ” “\n”' <filename>
check if port is in use
sudo lsof -i:8078
Superuser
Execute sudo cmd without needing to type password
Staying Safe
- backup
/etc/sudoers
file i.e. copy to somewhere safe - leave at least one terminal window open as root
- edit
/etc/sudoers
withvisudo
notsudo
. It's a wrapper for your already configured editor (not necessarily vi)
The Magic
- create a wrapper script that does all your magic for you. Don't add sudo to the cmds in the wrapper script
- using
visudo
add to the end of your/etc/sudoers
fileUSERNAME ALL=(ALL:ALL) NOPASSWD: FULL_PATH_TO_SCRIPT
substituting in USERNAME and FULL_PATH_TO_SCRIPT as necessary - to execute the cmd without password type
sudo FULL_PATH_TO_THE_SCRIPT
Misc
- write to dmesg:
echo Some message > /dev/kmsg
- add timestamp to log entries that are piped. Add to pipe:
gawk '{ print strftime(), $0; fflush() }'
awk
is supposed to do this but at least when then piping togrep
onlygawk
worked.
- remove package with all its dependencies. As root:
apt-get purge `apt-get -s purge <PKG> | grep '^ ' | tr -d '*'`
- traverse through to see what is using disk space:
du -cha --max-depth=1 /var | grep -E "M|G"
- find out what app is on a particular port:
netstat -anpe | grep "1234" | grep "LISTEN"