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191 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
8ec51d3194 v2.3.0
Version-bump to `v2.3.0`.
2018-10-15 10:51:11 -04:00
500dbbbd4a Merge pull request #399 from tculp/case-insensitive-search
Changed search behavior to lower the search term and the lines being …
2018-10-15 10:44:57 -04:00
66ebae4ed5 Merge pull request #398 from ticky/patch-1
Add `tee /dev/tty` mid-pipeline example to tee
2018-10-09 11:22:43 -04:00
5a83a22888 Merge pull request #400 from dufferzafar/patch-1
Update pacman: command to view top recently installed packages
2018-10-09 11:19:47 -04:00
62a2bf3c2d Update pacman 2018-10-01 12:34:46 +05:30
4b6dc22c0a Changed search behavior to lower the search term and the lines being searched, thus providing case-insensitive search 2018-09-20 13:53:22 -04:00
cd46559250 Add tee /dev/tty mid-pipeline example to tee 2018-09-19 17:53:19 -07:00
03fb44159a Merge pull request #394 from davidrea/patch-1
Add strikethrough to formatting
2018-09-17 09:33:35 -04:00
f0bd3ba4e6 Merge pull request #393 from mirekfranc/for-loop-extended
for: add few more for examples, the last two are probably bash specific
2018-09-17 09:32:48 -04:00
72f8c88394 Merge pull request #395 from eterps/patch-1
Added insert/add line examples
2018-09-17 09:31:43 -04:00
2fcc808e63 Added insert/add line examples
Added insert/add line examples.
2018-09-11 09:22:21 +02:00
4aef22f457 Add strikethrough to formatting
(this is the one I always forget!)
2018-09-04 10:13:55 -04:00
146b671412 add few more for examples, the last two are probably bash specific 2018-09-03 15:54:56 +02:00
feab7a9706 Merge pull request #387 from idarlund/patch-1
Update rsync
2018-08-20 12:40:36 -04:00
a5b0132b08 Merge pull request #385 from dsalaj/master
Add cheatsheet slurm
2018-08-20 12:21:10 -04:00
ce1f4a099c Merge pull request #386 from navarroaxel/lsblk
Add cheatsheet for lsblk
2018-08-20 12:16:34 -04:00
0e84cae79e Merge pull request #374 from bu6hunt3r/devel
Added sheet for r2 disassembler/debugger/hex editor
2018-08-20 12:14:16 -04:00
93180c3852 Merge pull request #375 from shigemk2/zip
Added one more zip cheat
2018-08-20 11:50:27 -04:00
795bcaffcb Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/gigovich/cheat into gigovich-master 2018-08-20 11:40:34 -04:00
d6f12c4397 Merge pull request #373 from kevinawoo/patch-1
new cheat for mv: moving many files into a dir
2018-08-20 11:37:14 -04:00
8ccc8bd546 Merge pull request #388 from pondrejk/patch-1
minor typo in nmcli command name
2018-08-20 10:48:43 -04:00
c29a3dfdc1 Merge pull request #368 from cedric-dufour/master
New Sheet Added: ZFS (on Linux)
2018-08-20 10:45:46 -04:00
7e94f1e0ba Changed mutt cheatsheet 2018-08-16 09:50:47 +02:00
ff1227bca8 minor typo in command name 2018-07-24 10:05:25 +02:00
b0aa272b49 Add cheatsheet for lsblk 2018-07-12 07:03:34 -03:00
130cf1d830 Update rsync
added rsync over ssh cheat
2018-07-11 14:56:55 +02:00
f93ca8f7ce Add cheatsheet slurm 2018-07-04 23:04:18 +02:00
b210fbca5f Changed r2 cheatsheet 2018-06-05 16:25:39 +02:00
45c0dad364 Changed r2 cheatsheet 2018-05-22 09:37:17 +02:00
544d11aebc Add nmcli import example. Fix typos in nmcli add command. 2018-03-12 13:17:22 +03:00
51f7a42ece Started mutt mail client ch-sh 2018-03-09 18:26:10 +01:00
cd6826d5d4 Added one more zip cheat 2018-03-08 20:39:41 +09:00
c09f0b0c6c Added sheet for r2 disassembler/debugger/hex editor 2018-03-04 20:30:27 +01:00
3fe72a03cc new cheat for mv: moving many files into a dir 2018-02-04 18:57:25 -08:00
0c0d924df6 New Sheet Added: ZFS (on Linux) 2017-12-24 16:33:37 +01:00
aa1e12625e Version bump to 2.2.3. 2017-12-19 12:42:07 -05:00
d09353bfca Merge pull request #363 from shigemk2/shigemk2-patch-1
Add cheatsheet perl
2017-12-19 12:38:25 -05:00
81e80c87a1 Merge pull request #358 from byxor/emacs
Add cheat for running emacs in terminal
2017-12-19 12:37:04 -05:00
3d498d5ce7 Merge pull request #354 from rognan/add-cheat-for-youtube-dl-extract-audio
Add cheat for downloading audio with youtube-dl
2017-12-19 12:35:11 -05:00
d90d509702 Merge pull request #365 from shigemk2/check_function_mysql
Add cheatsheet for mysql
2017-12-19 12:34:05 -05:00
b46f5b2c34 Merge pull request #359 from Dgc2002/master
Adds cheatsheet for rcs
2017-12-19 12:33:01 -05:00
e2d63e7603 Minor edits to #357 2017-12-19 12:29:52 -05:00
67f52f8317 Merge branch 'patch-1' of https://github.com/zrongh90/cheat into zrongh90-patch-1 2017-12-19 12:29:26 -05:00
67134b9240 Merge pull request #360 from nitsnatsnok/patch-1
sizes and typo corrected
2017-12-19 12:27:29 -05:00
c67adb1422 Minor edits to #367. 2017-12-19 12:25:40 -05:00
c2aa5e0148 Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/Sim4n6/cheat into Sim4n6-master 2017-12-19 12:24:19 -05:00
332f0bd4ee Merge pull request #364 from navjotjsingh/master
Cheatsheet for cd
2017-12-19 12:21:37 -05:00
b303bc0028 added support for Got-Your-Back for backup from Gmail 2017-12-14 15:38:08 +00:00
02f79ddd13 Merge pull request #1 from chrisallenlane/master
learning amigo
2017-12-14 16:09:24 +01:00
71680c6586 Add cheatsheet for mysql
check stored procedure or stored function in mysql
2017-11-28 22:12:20 +09:00
a240413eb9 Merge pull request #1 from navjotjsingh/navjotjsingh-patch-cd
Cheatsheet for cd
2017-11-27 11:53:39 +05:30
cde64e3ea4 Cheatsheet for cd 2017-11-27 11:52:05 +05:30
0b0bc441c6 Add cheatsheet perl 2017-11-20 21:20:22 +09:00
2aa37432cb Merge pull request #356 from shigemk2/xargs-no-run-if-empty
Add cheatsheet for xargs --no-run-if-empty
2017-11-19 08:13:07 -05:00
89de3705b0 Merge pull request #355 from shigemk2/curl-only-status-code
Add cheatsheet for cp backup file with date
2017-11-19 08:11:35 -05:00
d12718b8c4 cp edit
Appended missing newline to end of `cp` cheatsheet.
2017-11-19 08:09:37 -05:00
900e083b99 Merge branch 'cp-backup' of git://github.com/shigemk2/cheat into shigemk2-cp-backup 2017-11-19 08:07:10 -05:00
837e0b5b71 sizes and typo corrected
`-size +20000k` actually matches files bigger than 20,000*1,024=20,480,000 Bytes, not 20,000,000 Bytes as in “2 Megabytes”.
2017-11-12 00:50:30 +01:00
30d2a77a6c Adds cheatsheet for rcs 2017-11-02 11:53:08 -05:00
1a8cdf84f4 Add instructions for running emacs in terminal 2017-11-01 16:16:49 +00:00
181403e7ac create iconv
add new iconv for code convert
2017-10-31 16:00:16 +08:00
2c10955690 Add cheatsheet for xargs --no-run-if-empty 2017-10-27 00:12:36 +09:00
4319b8e699 Add curl cheatsheet: Get only the HTTP status code
curl -o /dev/null -w '%{http_code}\n' -s -I URL
2017-10-24 22:23:36 +09:00
57dff86a44 Add cheat for downloading audio with youtube-dl 2017-10-13 14:37:07 +02:00
aa4f6daf77 Add cheatsheet for cp backup file with date 2017-10-04 23:47:33 +09:00
d7272c50c4 v2.2.2
Added new cheatsheets.
2017-09-16 23:15:15 -04:00
cdf573a725 Merge pull request #318 from shanahanjrs/new-misc-cheatsheets
Created cheatsheets for alias, cat, cp, export, kill, mv, pwd, and wc
2017-09-16 23:01:08 -04:00
eb6dfaad39 Merge pull request #350 from iamatacos/patch-1
Update dd
2017-09-16 22:58:17 -04:00
f8d2ce516e Update dd
There is a small error in this sample :

**bs=BYTES** --> read and write up to BYTES bytes at a time

**count=N** --> copy only N input blocks

just inverse please
2017-09-16 22:04:10 +01:00
e5bf9146fe Fixed cheat sheets to conform to the standard style more closely 2017-09-12 23:11:38 -04:00
d6dc39c687 v2.2.1
Version bump to 2.2.1. (Release contains new default cheatsheets.)
2017-09-05 14:23:10 -04:00
fb5ec798fa CONTRIBUTING.md
Made minor additions to the `CONTRIBUTING.md` file.
2017-09-05 13:48:06 -04:00
866eb68d64 emacs cheatsheet
Minor whitespace edits on the emacs cheatsheet.
2017-09-05 13:26:23 -04:00
e17f60e4d5 Deleted accidental file
Deleted a file that seems to have been created accidentally. (It
contained nothing useful.)
2017-09-05 13:20:36 -04:00
ed2ef113f0 Merge branch 'emacs' of git://github.com/ndebuhr/cheat into ndebuhr-emacs 2017-09-05 13:19:19 -04:00
432379d1e6 Merge pull request #336 from yafp/master
Adding a first version of a pkill cheatsheet
2017-09-04 20:06:23 -04:00
7089bef7cc Merge pull request #337 from VHarisop/pip_latest
Updated pip sheet with upgrade for newer versions
2017-09-04 20:04:25 -04:00
aa57371819 Trivial whitespace changes to pgrep cheatsheet. 2017-09-04 20:01:25 -04:00
921db35400 Merge branch 'pgrep' of git://github.com/shigemk2/cheat into shigemk2-pgrep 2017-09-04 20:00:38 -04:00
852db958a4 Merge branch 'develop' 2017-09-04 19:57:28 -04:00
d58bbba1f8 Merge pull request #333 from npit/master
Update emacs cheatsheet
2017-09-04 19:55:33 -04:00
e5ffcf65e4 Merge pull request #328 from fpob/master
Add zsh cheatsheet
2017-09-04 19:54:49 -04:00
d59ac66f1c Merge pull request #340 from Asta1986/postgres
added psql commands
2017-09-04 19:52:54 -04:00
f4f8592933 Merge pull request #344 from Daoctor/master
fix crontab command
2017-09-04 19:50:45 -04:00
c540a600b2 Merge pull request #343 from Mic92/patch-13
openssl: add fingerprint method
2017-09-04 19:47:49 -04:00
9224216581 Merge pull request #330 from shigemk2/curl-ip
Get your global IP with curl
2017-09-04 19:45:15 -04:00
2da5c2b710 Merge pull request #327 from Mic92/patch-12
add cryptsetup cheatsheat
2017-09-04 19:41:03 -04:00
e468f8d0a0 Merge pull request #323 from henrikq/patch-1
Add install to Cheatsheet/deb
2017-09-04 19:39:58 -04:00
cdee0e44cd Merge pull request #324 from dypublic/tar-add-destination-1
Update tar
2017-09-04 19:38:41 -04:00
efcd687070 fix crontab command 2017-08-30 00:15:53 +08:00
ae309c7dc4 openssl: add fingerprint method 2017-07-30 09:26:56 +01:00
86ba22e7b8 +html output 2017-06-30 21:34:32 -03:00
2a6ec9cef5 added psql commands 2017-06-29 20:23:47 -03:00
2d59026b0d Add f option 2017-06-10 01:43:11 +09:00
bcb0d71dd3 Updated pip sheet with an upgrade option for newer versions 2017-06-02 13:09:48 +03:00
d1526ede16 Adding a first version of a pkill cheatsheet 2017-06-01 21:31:27 +02:00
374d381c00 Update emacs 2017-05-28 23:46:22 +03:00
1f3f9828c3 Add pgrep cheatsheat 2017-05-15 23:14:30 +09:00
5d3f89924c Get your global IP with curl 2017-05-15 23:08:21 +09:00
74808845a5 Add zsh cheatsheet 2017-04-07 14:41:10 +02:00
517bf9599b add cryptsetup cheatsheat 2017-04-04 09:05:49 +02:00
7716827dfc Minor fixes and additions to emacs 2017-03-12 10:19:47 -04:00
c65fde1b3a Update tar
Add extract a .tar in specified Directory
2017-03-09 18:50:36 +08:00
bb3c4105cb Add install to Cheatsheet/deb 2017-03-07 09:50:37 +01:00
edd7b5e806 Minor revisions on #244
- When using GFM code fences, strip the last line in addition to the
  first
- Updated `README.md` to mention the new feature
- `minor` version-bump to `2.2.0`.
2017-02-28 18:59:27 -05:00
7abb663bf4 Merge branch 'more_lexers' of git://github.com/cnicolov/cheat into cnicolov-more_lexers 2017-02-28 18:22:58 -05:00
f6f1233b12 Deleted CHANGELOG
Deleted `CHANGELOG`. It was never used.
2017-02-28 17:46:23 -05:00
b9241efab1 CONTRIBUTING.md
Put some useful information in `CONTRIBUTING.md`.
2017-02-28 17:45:53 -05:00
8019325f1e README edit
The sheilds.io badge displaying downloads per month has been broken for
some time now (seemingly across all python projects), so I removed it.
2017-02-28 09:32:00 -05:00
7209f2c929 docopt
Made revisions to the content of the docopt template.
2017-02-27 23:09:51 -05:00
068d117bef patch version bump. 2017-02-27 23:02:23 -05:00
9ead66461d Resolving merge conflict. 2017-02-27 23:01:30 -05:00
d00bd87dd1 Merge pull request #312 from shanahanjrs/feature-cheat-cheat
Added a cheatsheet for cheat itself
2017-02-27 19:36:45 -05:00
dd8b20a17a Merge pull request #317 from shanahanjrs/fix-7z-typo
Fixed typo in 7z cheatsheet
2017-02-27 19:29:58 -05:00
84e42e7f2f Merge pull request #314 from shanahanjrs/pushd-popd
Added cheatsheets for pushd and popd commands
2017-02-27 19:29:12 -05:00
a59e91ead7 Merge pull request #320 from tupaschoal/master
Add cheatsheet for hg, shutdown, su
2017-02-27 19:26:58 -05:00
f495a4dfd9 Add cheatsheet for su
Useful for running commands as another user.
2017-02-16 01:25:24 -02:00
10dd0e9a8b Add cheatsheet for shutdown
Adding help for shutdown, useful for rebooting the system,
2017-02-16 01:22:45 -02:00
d06e5bab6f Add cheatsheet for hg
Mercurial is extensively used as a version control system, as an option to Git, so I'm adding its cheatsheet.
2017-02-16 00:04:18 -02:00
aa9403d432 Created cheatsheets for alias, cat, cp, export, kill, mv, pwd, and wc 2017-02-12 22:11:45 -05:00
75b2555710 Fixed typo in 7z cheatsheet 2017-01-25 18:52:25 -05:00
632da2024a Added cheatsheets for pushd and popd commands 2017-01-08 17:11:51 -05:00
1baa6d39c0 Added a cheatsheet for cheat itself 2017-01-01 22:44:48 -05:00
8cad76943a v2.1.27
`patch` version bump.
2016-11-27 11:10:05 -05:00
a6ec02c296 Support multi-word EDITOR values
When the value of EDITOR was more than one words (e.g. emacsclient -c),
it wasn't properly split in an array for subprocess.call and cheat would
fail to launch it.
This commit fixes that.

Closes #301
2016-11-27 10:53:10 -05:00
7392787e31 Merge branch 'patch-1' of https://github.com/brutus/cheat into brutus-patch-1 2016-11-27 10:42:46 -05:00
208dd24a0c Minor cheatsheet edits. 2016-11-27 10:31:49 -05:00
df34774a7a Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/notklaatu/cheat into notklaatu-master 2016-11-27 08:57:54 -05:00
8d65424ffb README edit
Modified the README with regards to the environment variable changes
made in #294.
2016-11-27 08:54:33 -05:00
597acec6ac cheat now honors CHEAT_EDITOR and VISUAL environment variables in
addition to `EDITOR`.
2016-11-27 08:54:33 -05:00
7d4150b937 Merge pull request #291 from proinsias/patch-1
Create MANIFEST.in
2016-11-27 08:53:45 -05:00
5df5b1ab49 Merge pull request #299 from jonlabelle/patch-1
Fix uninstall typo.
2016-11-27 08:46:55 -05:00
f1c8017342 Merge pull request #304 from dufferzafar/sheets
Add aria2c sheet
2016-11-27 08:45:50 -05:00
8f2912e5da Fix grammar of lsof 2016-11-27 08:43:37 -05:00
3139796524 Update lsof sheet 2016-11-27 08:43:37 -05:00
bcd4563bf3 Add npm cheatsheet 2016-11-27 08:43:37 -05:00
5cd5387a47 Add cheery-pick to git cheat 2016-11-27 08:43:37 -05:00
c8f0e6295b Add revert in git cheat 2016-11-27 08:43:37 -05:00
31e442d7f9 Add git stash cheat 2016-11-27 08:43:37 -05:00
05400a92ed Added support for ~ and environment variables in DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR
If the `DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR` environment variable contains the `~` — as shortcut for the users home directory — or environment variables like `$HOME`, the program bails. This change allows the usage of both.
2016-11-24 16:14:37 +01:00
034c1a2415 Add aria2c sheet 2016-10-15 00:02:45 +05:30
dab8645394 Fix uninstall type. 2016-10-02 16:23:42 -05:00
352a760561 README edit
Modified the README with regards to the environment variable changes
made in #294.
2016-10-01 14:08:58 -04:00
6be87e2d42 cheat now honors CHEAT_EDITOR and VISUAL environment variables in
addition to `EDITOR`.
2016-10-01 13:55:50 -04:00
403d715127 Merge pull request #292 from rahulkavale/master
Add stash, cherry-pick, revert in git cheat
2016-09-30 20:40:20 -04:00
0edd1450dc Merge pull request #293 from nagromc/npm-cheat
Add npm cheatsheet
2016-09-30 20:38:15 -04:00
d87a26ce4f Merge pull request #297 from dufferzafar/sheets
Update lsof sheet
2016-09-30 20:37:20 -04:00
cdf240b70e Fix grammar of lsof 2016-09-27 22:43:54 +05:30
809c6d77bc Update lsof sheet 2016-09-27 21:23:39 +05:30
be543450c7 Merge branch 'master' of github.com:notklaatu/cheat 2016-09-21 22:25:27 +12:00
9889d77adb xmlto cheatsheet 2016-09-21 22:24:47 +12:00
354376340f Missing man page #272 2016-09-10 14:17:01 +12:00
d82eee726c Add npm cheatsheet 2016-09-09 10:05:22 +02:00
9a23458a2d ffmpeg combine, add sqlite3 2016-09-09 12:05:08 +12:00
32802c2907 patch cheat 2016-09-04 09:48:01 +12:00
2a6d34de35 diff addition 2016-09-02 09:44:19 +12:00
f1253031f2 bzip2 2016-09-01 22:28:28 +12:00
76fa9cfc23 urpm* mageia open mandriva 2016-09-01 22:01:01 +12:00
0a54b2a2ff updated emacs, ffmpeg. branched org-mode. added slack. 2016-09-01 12:10:21 +12:00
6a1742984c Add cheery-pick to git cheat 2016-08-28 08:26:55 +05:30
80d2a09456 Add revert in git cheat 2016-08-28 08:19:20 +05:30
5121fece91 Add git stash cheat 2016-08-28 08:13:08 +05:30
e8d32102cb Create MANIFEST.in
I'm working on submitting this package to conda-forge. As part of this, I would like to include the license files in the MANIFEST.in for this project.
2016-08-25 20:31:13 -04:00
eff042d50b patch version bump 2016-08-05 15:18:52 -04:00
f000756f2c Resolved merge-conflict. 2016-08-05 15:15:22 -04:00
ef1dfb2168 Merge pull request #286 from poohzrn/master
Fix #281: Consistent description styles
2016-08-05 15:03:49 -04:00
3c1b5c5860 Merge pull request #274 from ImmortalPC/master
[CHANGE] Add cheats for DD and SSH
2016-08-05 15:01:14 -04:00
3494827403 Merge pull request #288 from rski/remove_prompt_function
Remove prompt_yes_or_no
2016-08-05 14:58:27 -04:00
f0879831c5 Merge pull request #284 from dufferzafar/ansi
Add ANSI Color Chart
2016-08-05 14:57:18 -04:00
8c056d09e9 Merge pull request #285 from dufferzafar/less
Update less cheatsheet
2016-08-05 14:56:14 -04:00
dd8d0ae58b Merge pull request #282 from dufferzafar/master
Update git cheatsheet
2016-08-05 14:54:24 -04:00
6cc99a2b6a Merge pull request #283 from dufferzafar/cpdf
Add cpdf cheatsheet
2016-08-05 14:52:47 -04:00
70ad22c12e git: Undo parts of last commit
Added from: http://stackoverflow.com/a/4248269/2043048
2016-07-20 14:34:29 +05:30
b28e6a84ac Remove prompt_yes_or_no
This function is not used anywhere in the code.
2016-07-19 15:16:12 +03:00
bf4f1c80ca Style fixes
Don't use * imports, fix indentations, other small fixes
2016-07-19 14:50:51 +03:00
9cf1a5761d Fix #281: Consistent description styles 2016-07-18 17:25:06 +02:00
13fdcec332 Add cheat on how to dump content of less to file 2016-07-16 18:47:19 +05:30
b2feeab4e8 Add ANSI Color Chart 2016-07-16 18:41:17 +05:30
c4b7fd507f Add cpdf cheatsheet
cpdf is a tool to slice and dice PDFs

I created this sheet on a boring day by copying text from
[here](http://www.coherentpdf.com/usage-examples.html) and then
cleaning things up a bit.
2016-07-16 18:37:12 +05:30
b77aa0974b Update git cheatsheet 2016-07-16 18:21:07 +05:30
3be95142ed v2.1.25 2016-05-29 21:47:22 -04:00
bb324e94a4 Issue #278
Fixed a technical innacuracy in the `crontab` cheatsheet.
2016-05-29 21:03:58 -04:00
7084ce2f45 Merge pull request #277 from caorong/master
origin Convert Unix timestamp to Date only works on Linux, add cheat which works on Mac
2016-05-29 21:00:57 -04:00
905006f09c Merge pull request #280 from ybudimirov/ncdu
Ncdu cheatsheet
2016-05-29 20:59:16 -04:00
06a368fb1f Merge pull request #276 from oliworx/patch-1
add cheatsheet for subversion (svn)
2016-05-29 20:58:16 -04:00
6a9422502a Ncdu cheatsheet 2016-05-26 13:21:20 +03:00
41332f1d8a update timestamp convert cheat 2016-04-27 10:57:44 +08:00
b6d54b135c [CHANGE & ADD] Removing typo from SSH. Adding tip for emacs and ssh. Adding cheat for xxd 2016-04-19 13:45:47 +02:00
a3c682729e add cheatsheet for subversion (svn) 2016-04-13 17:27:37 +02:00
f38da23741 [CHANGE] Add cheats for DD and SSH 2016-04-05 17:09:49 +02:00
c1fbeffde5 Adds support for more lexers
If you use cheat to save some programming snippets this might be useful.

For example if you have a long list of SQL Query cheats, you can do the
following:

Enter ```sql in the beginning of the file containing the cheats content.

Example file: sql
```sql

SELECT 17 & 16 = 16;
SELECT 2+4+8+16 & 1 = 0;
2015-12-02 14:47:13 +02:00
84 changed files with 2229 additions and 128 deletions

View File

@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
Changelog
=========

View File

@ -1,17 +1,29 @@
Contributing
============
If you would like to contribute cheetsheets or program functionality, please
fork this repository, make your changes, and submit a pull request.
fork this repository, make your changes, and submit a pull request against the
`master` branch.
## Python standards ##
Python code should conform to [PEP 8][].
Licensing
---------
By contributing to the project, you agree to license your work under the same
licenses as `cheat` itself. `cheat` is currently dual-licensed under the GPL3
and MIT licenses, though that could change without notice in the future.
`cheat`, however, will always remain free software (as in both "free as in
freedom" and "free as in beer") and shall always be licensed accordingly.
## Cheatsheet Format ##
Please pattern your cheatsheets after the following:
```sh
# To extract an uncompressed archive:
tar -xvf /path/to/foo.tar
# To create an uncompressed archive:
tar -cvf /path/to/foo.tar /path/to/foo/
# To extract a .gz archive:
tar -xzvf /path/to/foo.tgz
```
If you are submitting a cheatsheet that contains side-by-side columns of text,
please align the columns using spaces rather than tabs.
[PEP 8]: http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/

6
MANIFEST.in Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
include CHANGELOG
include CONTRIBUTING.md
include LICENSE
include README.md
include licenses/gpl-3.txt
include licenses/mit.txt

View File

@ -1,5 +1,4 @@
[![PyPI](https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/cheat.svg)](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/cheat/)
[![PyPI](https://img.shields.io/pypi/dm/cheat.svg)](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/cheat/)
cheat
=====
@ -67,14 +66,14 @@ Cheatsheets are stored in the `~/.cheat/` directory, and are named on a
per-keyphrase basis. In other words, the content for the `tar` cheatsheet lives
in the `~/.cheat/tar` file.
Provided that you have an `EDITOR` environment variable set, you may edit
cheatsheets with:
Provided that you have a `CHEAT_EDITOR`, `VISUAL`, or `EDITOR` environment
variable set, you may edit cheatsheets with:
```sh
cheat -e foo
```
If the 'foo' cheatsheet already exists, it will be opened for editing.
If the `foo` cheatsheet already exists, it will be opened for editing.
Otherwise, it will be created automatically.
After you've customized your cheatsheets, I urge you to track `~/.cheat/` along
@ -110,13 +109,32 @@ export CHEATPATH="$CHEATPATH:/path/to/more/cheats"
You may view which directories are on your `CHEATPATH` with `cheat -d`.
### Enabling Syntax Highlighting ###
`cheat` can apply syntax highlighting to your cheatsheets if so desired. To
enable this feature, set a `CHEATCOLORS` environment variable:
`cheat` can optionally apply syntax highlighting to your cheatsheets. To enable
syntax highlighting, export a `CHEATCOLORS` environment variable:
```sh
export CHEATCOLORS=true
```
#### Specifying a Syntax Highlighter ####
You may manually specify which syntax highlighter to use for each cheatsheet by
wrapping the sheet's contents in a [Github-Flavored Markdown code-fence][gfm].
Example:
<pre>
```sql
-- to select a user by ID
SELECT *
FROM Users
WHERE id = 100
```
</pre>
If no syntax highlighter is specified, the `bash` highlighter will be used by
default.
See Also:
---------
- [Enabling Command-line Autocompletion][autocompletion]
@ -125,5 +143,6 @@ See Also:
[autocompletion]: https://github.com/chrisallenlane/cheat/wiki/Enabling-Command-line-Autocompletion
[dotfiles]: http://dotfiles.github.io/
[gfm]: https://help.github.com/articles/creating-and-highlighting-code-blocks/
[installing]: https://github.com/chrisallenlane/cheat/wiki/Installing
[related-projects]: https://github.com/chrisallenlane/cheat/wiki/Related-Projects

View File

@ -2,6 +2,8 @@
"""cheat
Create and view cheatsheets on the command line.
Usage:
cheat <cheatsheet>
cheat -e <cheatsheet>
@ -10,35 +12,37 @@ Usage:
cheat -d
cheat -v
cheat allows you to create and view interactive cheatsheets on the
command-line. It was designed to help remind *nix system
administrators of options for commands that they use frequently,
but not frequently enough to remember.
Examples:
To look up 'tar':
cheat tar
To create or edit the cheatsheet for 'foo':
cheat -e foo
Options:
-d --directories List directories on CHEATPATH
-e --edit Edit cheatsheet
-l --list List cheatsheets
-s --search Search cheatsheets for <keyword>
-v --version Print the version number
Examples:
To view the `tar` cheatsheet:
cheat tar
To edit (or create) the `foo` cheatsheet:
cheat -e foo
To list all available cheatsheets:
cheat -l
To search for "ssh" among all cheatsheets:
cheat -s ssh
"""
# require the dependencies
from cheat import *
from cheat.utils import *
from cheat import sheets, sheet
from cheat.utils import colorize
from docopt import docopt
if __name__ == '__main__':
# parse the command-line options
options = docopt(__doc__, version='cheat 2.1.24')
options = docopt(__doc__, version='cheat 2.3.0')
# list directories
if options['--directories']:

View File

@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ u update
x extract with full paths
Example:
7z a -t7z -m0-lzma -mx=9 -mfb=64 -md=32m -ms=on archive.7z dir1
7z a -t7z -m0=lzma -mx=9 -mfb=64 -md=32m -ms=on archive.7z dir1
-t7z 7z archive
-m0=lzma lzma method

5
cheat/cheatsheets/alias Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
# Show a list of your current shell aliases
alias
# Map `ll` to `ls -l` (Can be used per session or put inside a shell config file)
alias ll='ls -l'

72
cheat/cheatsheets/ansi Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,72 @@
# Reset
Color_Off='\e[0m' # Text Reset
# Regular Colors
Black='\e[0;30m' # Black
Red='\e[0;31m' # Red
Green='\e[0;32m' # Green
Yellow='\e[0;33m' # Yellow
Blue='\e[0;34m' # Blue
Purple='\e[0;35m' # Purple
Cyan='\e[0;36m' # Cyan
White='\e[0;37m' # White
# Bold
BBlack='\e[1;30m' # Black
BRed='\e[1;31m' # Red
BGreen='\e[1;32m' # Green
BYellow='\e[1;33m' # Yellow
BBlue='\e[1;34m' # Blue
BPurple='\e[1;35m' # Purple
BCyan='\e[1;36m' # Cyan
BWhite='\e[1;37m' # White
# Underline
UBlack='\e[4;30m' # Black
URed='\e[4;31m' # Red
UGreen='\e[4;32m' # Green
UYellow='\e[4;33m' # Yellow
UBlue='\e[4;34m' # Blue
UPurple='\e[4;35m' # Purple
UCyan='\e[4;36m' # Cyan
UWhite='\e[4;37m' # White
# Background
On_Black='\e[40m' # Black
On_Red='\e[41m' # Red
On_Green='\e[42m' # Green
On_Yellow='\e[43m' # Yellow
On_Blue='\e[44m' # Blue
On_Purple='\e[45m' # Purple
On_Cyan='\e[46m' # Cyan
On_White='\e[47m' # White
# High Intensity
IBlack='\e[0;90m' # Black
IRed='\e[0;91m' # Red
IGreen='\e[0;92m' # Green
IYellow='\e[0;93m' # Yellow
IBlue='\e[0;94m' # Blue
IPurple='\e[0;95m' # Purple
ICyan='\e[0;96m' # Cyan
IWhite='\e[0;97m' # White
# Bold High Intensity
BIBlack='\e[1;90m' # Black
BIRed='\e[1;91m' # Red
BIGreen='\e[1;92m' # Green
BIYellow='\e[1;93m' # Yellow
BIBlue='\e[1;94m' # Blue
BIPurple='\e[1;95m' # Purple
BICyan='\e[1;96m' # Cyan
BIWhite='\e[1;97m' # White
# High Intensity backgrounds
On_IBlack='\e[0;100m' # Black
On_IRed='\e[0;101m' # Red
On_IGreen='\e[0;102m' # Green
On_IYellow='\e[0;103m' # Yellow
On_IBlue='\e[0;104m' # Blue
On_IPurple='\e[0;105m' # Purple
On_ICyan='\e[0;106m' # Cyan
On_IWhite='\e[0;107m' # White

12
cheat/cheatsheets/aria2c Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
# Just download a file
# The url can be a http(s), ftp, .torrent file or even a magnet link
aria2c <url>
# To prevent downloading the .torrent file
aria2c --follow-torrent=mem <url>
# Download 1 file at a time (-j)
# continuing (-c) any partially downloaded ones
# to the directory specified (-d)
# reading urls from the file (-i)
aria2c -j 1 -c -d ~/Downloads -i /path/to/file

11
cheat/cheatsheets/bzip2 Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
# compress foo -> foo.bz2
bzip2 -z foo
# decompress foo.bz2 -> foo
bzip2 -d foo.bz2
# compress foo to stdout
bzip2 -zc foo > foo.bz2
# decompress foo.bz2 to stdout
bzip2 -dc foo.bz2

8
cheat/cheatsheets/cat Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
# Display the contents of a file
cat /path/to/foo
# Display contents with line numbers
cat -n /path/to/foo
# Display contents with line numbers (blank lines excluded)
cat -b /path/to/foo

11
cheat/cheatsheets/cd Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
#Go to the given directory
cd path/to/directory
#Go to home directory of current user
cd
#Go up to the parent of the current directory
cd ..
#Go to the previously chosen directory
cd -

14
cheat/cheatsheets/cheat Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
# To see example usage of a program:
cheat <command>
# To edit a cheatsheet
cheat -e <command>
# To list available cheatsheets
cheat -l
# To search available cheatsheets
cheat -s <command>
# To get the current `cheat' version
cheat -v

11
cheat/cheatsheets/cp Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
# Create a copy of a file
cp ~/Desktop/foo.txt ~/Downloads/foo.txt
# Create a copy of a directory
cp -r ~/Desktop/cruise_pics/ ~/Pictures/
# Create a copy but ask to overwrite if the destination file already exists
cp -i ~/Desktop/foo.txt ~/Documents/foo.txt
# Create a backup file with date
cp foo.txt{,."$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S)"}

132
cheat/cheatsheets/cpdf Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
# Read in.pdf, select pages 1, 2, 3 and 6, and write those pages to
# out.pdf
cpdf in.pdf 1-3,6 -o out.pdf
# Select the even pages (2, 4, 6...) from in.pdf and write those pages
# to out.pdf
cpdf in.pdf even -o out.pdf
# Using AND to perform several operations in order, here merging two
# files together and adding a copyright stamp to every page.
cpdf -merge in.pdf in2.pdf AND -add-text "Copyright 2014" -o out.pdf
# Read control.txt and use its contents as the command line arguments
# for cpdf.
cpdf -control control.txt
# Merge in.pdf and in2.pdf into one document, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -merge in.pdf in2.pdf -o out.pdf
# Split in.pdf into ten-page chunks, writing them to Chunk001.pdf,
# Chunk002.pdf etc
cpdf -split in.pdf -o Chunk%%%.pdf -chunk 10
# Split in.pdf on bookmark boundaries, writing each to a file whose
# name is the bookmark label
cpdf -split-bookmarks 0 in.pdf -o @N.pdf
# Scale both the dimensions and contents of in.pdf by a factor of two
# in x and y directions.
cpdf -scale-page "2 2" in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Scale the pages in in.pdf to fit the US Letter page size, writing to
# out.pdf
cpdf -scale-to-fit usletterportrait in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Shift the contents of the page by 26 pts in the x direction, and 18
# millimetres in the y direction, writing to out.pdf
cpdf -shift "26pt 18mm" in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Rotate the contents of the pages in in.pdf by ninety degrees and
# write to out.pdf.
cpdf -rotate-contents 90 in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Crop the pages in in.pdf to a 600 pts by 400 pts rectangle.
cpdf -crop "0 0 600pt 400pt" in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Encrypt using 128bit PDF encryption using the owner password 'fred'
# and the user password 'joe'
cpdf -encrypt 128bit fred joe in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Decrypt using the owner password, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -decrypt in.pdf owner=fred -o out.pdf
# Compress the data streams in in.pdf, writing the result to out.pdf.
cpdf -compress in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Decompress the data streams in in.pdf, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -decompress in.pdf -o out.pdf
# List the bookmarks in in.pdf. This would produce:
cpdf -list-bookmarks in.pdf
# Outputs:
# Add bookmarks in the same form from a prepared file bookmarks.txt to
# in.pdf, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -add-bookmarks bookmarks.txt in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Use the Split style to build a presentation from the PDF in.pdf,
# each slide staying 10 seconds on screen unless manually advanced.
# The first page, being a title does not move on automatically, and
# has no transition effect.
cpdf -presentation in.pdf 2-end -trans Split -duration 10 -o out.pdf
# Stamp the file watermark.pdf on to each page of in.pdf, writing the
# result to out.pdf.
cpdf -stamp-on watermark.pdf in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Add a page number and date to all the pages in in.pdf using the
# Courier font, writing to out.pdf
cpdf -topleft 10 -font Courier -add-text "Page %Page\nDate %d-%m-%Y" in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Two up impose the file in.pdf, writing to out.pdf
cpdf -twoup-stack in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Add extra blank pages after pages one, three and four of a document.
cpdf -pad-after 1,3,4 in.pdf -o out.pdf
# List the annotations in a file in.pdf to standard output.
cpdf -list-annotations in.pdf
# Might Produce:
# -- # Annotation text content 1 # -- # -- # Annotation text content 2
# --
# Copy the annotations from from.pdf to in.pdf, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -copy-annotations from.pdf in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Set the document title of in.pdf. writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -set-title "The New Title" in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Set the document in.pdf to open with the Acrobat Viewer's toolbar
# hidden, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -hide-toolbar true in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Set the metadata in a PDF in.pdf to the contents of the file
# metadata.xml, and write the output to out.pdf.
cpdf -set-metadata metadata.xml in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Set the document in.pdf to open in Acrobat Viewer showing two
# columns of pages, starting on the right, putting the result in
# out.pdf.
cpdf -set-page-layout TwoColumnRight in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Set the document in.pdf to open in Acrobat Viewer in full screen
# mode, putting the result in out.pdf.
cpdf -set-page-mode FullScreen in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Attach the file sheet.xls to in.pdf, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -attach-file sheet.xls in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Remove any attachments from in.pdf, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -remove-files in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Blacken all the text in in.pdf, writing to out.pdf.
cpdf -blacktext in.pdf -o out.pdf
# Make sure all lines in in.pdf are at least 2 pts wide, writing to
# out.pdf.
cpdf -thinlines 2pt in.pdf -o out.pdf

View File

@ -14,7 +14,9 @@ SHELL=/bin/bash
# example entries
# every 15 min
*/15 * * * * /home/user/command.sh
# every midnight
0 * * * * /home/user/command.sh
0 0 * * * /home/user/command.sh
# every Saturday at 8:05 AM
5 8 * * 6 /home/user/command.sh

View File

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
# open encrypted partition /dev/sdb1 (reachable at /dev/mapper/backup)
cryptsetup open --type luks /dev/sdb1 backup
# open encrypted partition /dev/sdb1 using a keyfile (reachable at /dev/mapper/hdd)
cryptsetup open --type luks --key-file hdd.key /dev/sdb1 hdd
# close luks container at /dev/mapper/hdd
cryptsetup close hdd

View File

@ -33,3 +33,9 @@ curl http://ifconfig.me/all/json
# Limit the rate of a download
curl --limit-rate 1000B -O http://path.to.the/file
# Get your global IP
curl httpbin.org/ip
# Get only the HTTP status code
curl -o /dev/null -w '%{http_code}\n' -s -I URL

View File

@ -1,5 +1,8 @@
# Print date in format suitable for affixing to file names
date +"%Y%m%d_%H%M%S"
# Convert Unix timestamp to Date
# Convert Unix timestamp to Date(Linux)
date -d @1440359821
# Convert Unix timestamp to Date(Mac)
date -r 1440359821

View File

@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
# Read from {/dev/urandom} 2*512 Bytes and put it into {/tmp/test.txt}
# Note: At the first iteration, we read 512 Bytes.
# Note: At the second iteration, we read 512 Bytes.
dd if=/dev/urandom of=/tmp/test.txt count=512 bs=2
dd if=/dev/urandom of=/tmp/test.txt count=2 bs=512
# Watch the progress of 'dd'
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null bs=4KB &; export dd_pid=`pgrep '^dd'`; while [[ -d /proc/$dd_pid ]]; do kill -USR1 $dd_pid && sleep 1 && clear; done
@ -17,3 +17,6 @@ dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null bs=128M status=progress
# DD with "graphical" return
dcfldd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null bs=500K
# This will output the sound from your microphone port to the ssh target computer's speaker port. The sound quality is very bad, so you will hear a lot of hissing.
dd if=/dev/dsp | ssh -c arcfour -C username@host dd of=/dev/dsp

7
cheat/cheatsheets/deb Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,7 @@
# Extract contents of a .deb file
$ ar vx foo.deb # -> data.tar.gz
$ tar xf data.tar.gz
# Install .deb file to a debian like system, e.g. ubuntu
$ sudo dpkg -i foo.deb
$ sudo apt-get install -f

View File

@ -21,3 +21,6 @@ diff -s version1 version2
# To diff the output of two commands or scripts:
diff <(command1) <(command2)
# Generate a patch file from two files
diff -Naur version1 version2 > version.patch

View File

@ -1,21 +1,28 @@
# Running emacs
GUI mode $ emacs
Terminal mode $ emacs -nw
# Basic usage
Indent Select text then press TAB
Cut CTRL-w
Copy ALT-w
Paste CTRL-y
Paste ("yank") CTRL-y
Begin selection CTRL-SPACE
Search/Find CTRL-s
Replace ALT-% (ALT-SHIFT-5)
Save CTRL-x CTRL-s
Save as CTRL-x CTRL-w
Load/Open CTRL-x CTRL-f
Undo CTRL-x u
Highlight all text CTRL-x h
Directory listing CTRL-x d
Cancel a command ESC ESC ESC
Cancel a command CTRL-g
Font size bigger CTRL-x CTRL-+
Font size smaller CTRL-x CTRL--
# Buffers
# Buffers
Split screen vertically CTRL-x 2
Split screen vertically with 5 row height CTRL-u 5 CTRL-x 2
@ -23,11 +30,21 @@
Split screen horizontally with 24 column width CTRL-u 24 CTRL-x 3
Revert to single screen CTRL-x 1
Hide the current screen CTRL-x 0
Kill the current screen CTRL-x k
Move to the next buffer CTRL-x O
Move to the next screen CTRL-x o
Kill the current buffer CTRL-x k
Select a buffer CTRL-x b
Run command in the scratch buffer CTRL-x CTRL-e
# Navigation ( backward / forward )
Character-wise CTRL-b , CTRL-f
Word-wise ALT-b , ALT-f
Line-wise CTRL-p , CTRL-n
Sentence-wise ALT-a , ALT-e
Paragraph-wise ALT-{ , ALT-}
Function-wise CTRL-ALT-a , CTRL-ALT-e
Line beginning / end CTRL-a , CTRL-e
# Other stuff
Open a shell ALT-x eshell
@ -39,32 +56,9 @@
Compile some code ALT-x compile
List packages ALT-x package-list-packages
# Sudoing within eshell
By default when using the sudo command within eshell you'll just
get "permission denied" messages. To overcome that type:
alias sudo '*sudo $*'
# Line numbers
To add line numbers and enable moving to a line with CTRL-l:
(global-set-key "\C-l" 'goto-line)
(add-hook 'find-file-hook (lambda () (linum-mode 1)))
# Org-mode
To begin org-mode ALT-x org-mode
Table column separator Vertical/pipe character
Reorganize table TAB
Section heading *
Open/collapse section TAB
Open/collapse All CTRL-TAB
Export in other file formats (eg HTML,PDF) CTRL-c CTRL-e
To make org-mode automatically wrap lines:
(add-hook 'org-mode-hook
'(lambda ()
(visual-line-mode 1)))

5
cheat/cheatsheets/export Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
# Calling export with no arguments will show current shell attributes
export
# Create new environment variable
export VARNAME="value"

View File

@ -2,7 +2,17 @@
ffmpeg -i path/to/file.ext
# Convert all m4a files to mp3
for f in *.m4a; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -acodec libmp3lame -ab 320k "${f%.m4a}.mp3"; done
for f in *.m4a; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -acodec libmp3lame -vn -b:a 320k "${f%.m4a}.mp3"; done
# Convert video from .foo to .bar
# -g : GOP, for searchability
ffmpeg -i input.foo -vcodec bar -acodec baz -b:v 21000k -b:a 320k -g 150 -threads 4 output.bar
# Convert image sequence to video
ffmpeg -r 18 -pattern_type glob -i '*.png' -b:v 21000k -s hd1080 -vcodec vp9 -an -pix_fmt yuv420p -deinterlace output.ext
# Combine video and audio into one file
ffmpeg -i video.ext -i audio.ext -c:v copy -c:a copy output.ext
# Listen to 10 seconds of audio from a video file
#
@ -10,3 +20,4 @@ for f in *.m4a; do ffmpeg -i "$f" -acodec libmp3lame -ab 320k "${f%.m4a}.mp3"; d
# -t : seconds to cut
# -autoexit : closes ffplay as soon as the audio finishes
ffmpeg -ss 00:34:24.85 -t 10 -i path/to/file.mp4 -f mp3 pipe:play | ffplay -i pipe:play -autoexit

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@ -19,11 +19,11 @@ find ./path/ -name '*.txt' -exec rm '{}' \;
# To find files with extension '.txt' and look for a string into them:
find ./path/ -name '*.txt' | xargs grep 'string'
# To find files with size bigger than 5 Mb and sort them by size:
# To find files with size bigger than 5 Mebibyte and sort them by size:
find . -size +5M -type f -print0 | xargs -0 ls -Ssh | sort -z
# To find files bigger thank 2 MB and list them:
find . -type f -size +20000k -exec ls -lh {} \; | awk '{ print $9 ": " $5 }'
# To find files bigger than 2 Megabyte and list them:
find . -type f -size +200000000c -exec ls -lh {} \; | awk '{ print $9 ": " $5 }'
# To find files modified more than 7 days ago and list file information
find . -type f -mtime +7d -ls

View File

@ -10,8 +10,26 @@ do
echo $var
done
# loop over all the JPG files in the current directory
for jpg_file in *.jpg
do
echo $jpg_file
done
# loop specified number of times
for i in `seq 1 10`
do
echo $i
done
# loop specified number of times: the C/C++ style
for ((i=1;i<=10;++i))
do
echo $i
done
# loop specified number of times: the brace expansion
for i in {1..10}
do
echo $i
done

View File

@ -11,6 +11,24 @@ git config --global color.ui true
# To stage all changes for commit:
git add --all
# To stash changes locally, this will keep the changes in a separate changelist
# called stash and the working directory is cleaned. You can apply changes
# from the stash anytime
git stash
# To stash changes with a message
git stash save "message"
# To list all the stashed changes
git stash list
# To apply the most recent change and remove the stash from the stash list
git stash pop
# To apply any stash from the list of stashes. This does not remove the stash
# from the stash list
git stash apply stash@{6}
# To commit staged changes
git commit -m "Your commit message"
@ -104,3 +122,30 @@ git clone --depth 1 <remote-url>
# To unshallow a clone
git pull --unshallow
# Create a bare branch (one that has no commits on it)
git checkout --orphan branch_name
# Checkout a new branch from a different starting point
git checkout -b master upstream/master
# Remove all stale branches (ones that have been deleted on remote)
# So if you have a lot of useless branches, delete them on Github and then run this
git remote prune origin
# The following can be used to prune all remotes at once
git remote prune $(git remote | tr '\n' ' ')
# Revisions can also be identified with :/text
# So, this will show the first commit that has "cool" in their message body
git show :/cool
# Undo parts of last commit in a specific file
git checkout -p HEAD^ -- /path/to/file
# Revert a commit and keep the history of the reverted change as a separate revert commit
git revert <commit SHA>
# Pich a commit from a branch to current branch. This is different than merge as
# this just applies a single commit from a branch to current branch
git cherry-pick <commit SHA1>

12
cheat/cheatsheets/gyb Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
# To estimate the number and the size of all mails on youremail@gmail.com
gyb --email youremail@gmail.com --action estimate
# To backup from youremail@gmail.com to your local-folder
gyb --email youremail@gmail.com --action backup --local-folder "~/MyLocalFolder/"
# To backup from youremail@gmail.com only important or starred emails to the
# default local folder GYB-GMail-Backup-youremail@gmail.com
gyb --email youremail@gmail.com --search "is:important OR is:starred"
# To restore from your local-folder to youremail@gmail.com
gyb --email youremail@gmail.com --action restore --local-folder "~/MyLocalFolder/"

20
cheat/cheatsheets/hg Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
# Clone a directory
hg clone
# Add files to hg tracker
hg add filename
# Add all files in a folder to hg tracker
hg add folder/
# Create a commit with all tracked changes and a message
hg commit -m "message"
# Push commits to source repository
hg push
# Pull changes from source repository
hg pull
# Rebase local commits to disambiguate with remote repository
hg pull --rebase

3
cheat/cheatsheets/iconv Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
# To convert file (iconv.src) from iso-8859-1 to utf-8 and save to
# /tmp/iconv.out
iconv -f iso-8859-1 -t utf-8 iconv.src -o /tmp/iconv.out

5
cheat/cheatsheets/kill Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
# Kill a process gracefully
kill -15 <process id>
# Kill a process forcefully
kill -9 <process id>

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@ -1,2 +1,9 @@
# To disable the terminal refresh when exiting
less -X
less -X
# To save the contents to a file
# Method 1 - Only works when the input is a pipe
s <filename>
# Method 2 - This should work whether input is a pipe or an ordinary file.
Type g or < (g or less-than) | $ (pipe then dollar) then cat > <filename> and Enter.

21
cheat/cheatsheets/lsblk Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
# Show all available block devices along with their partitioning schemes
lsblk
# To show SCSI devices:
lsblk --scsi
# To show a specific device
lsblk /dev/sda
# To verify TRIM support:
# Check the values of DISC-GRAN (discard granularity) and DISC-MAX (discard max bytes) columns.
# Non-zero values indicate TRIM support
lsblk --discard
# To featch info about filesystems:
lsblk --fs
# For JSON, LIST or TREE output formats use the following flags:
lsblk --json
lsblk --list
lsblk --tree # default view

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@ -4,20 +4,34 @@ sudo lsof -i4
# List all IPv6 network files
sudo lsof -i6
# To find listening ports:
# List all open sockets
lsof -i
# List all listening ports
lsof -Pnl +M -i4
# To find which program is using the port 80:
# Find which program is using the port 80
lsof -i TCP:80
# List all connections to a specific host
lsof -i@192.168.1.5
# List all processes accessing a particular file/directory
lsof </path/to/file>
# List all files open for a particular user
lsof -u <username>
# List all files/network connections a given process is using
# List all files/network connections a command is using
lsof -c <command-name>
# List all files a process has open
lsof -p <pid>
# List all files open mounted at /mount/point.
# Particularly useful for finding which process(es) are using a
# mounted USB stick or CD/DVD.
lsof +f -- </mount/point>
# See this primer: http://www.danielmiessler.com/study/lsof/
# for a number of other useful lsof tips

View File

@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ This is [an example](http://example.com "Title") inline link.
# image
![Alt Text](/path/to/file.png)
# emphasis
# formatting
*em* _em_
**strong** __strong__
~~strikethrough~~

22
cheat/cheatsheets/mutt Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
# Create new mailbox in IMAP
+ When located in mailbox list (c)
shift + C
# Move multiple messages to folder (bulk operations)
1. Select/tag them with alt+'t'
2. ;s in mail inbox overview for bulk operation
# Deleting / Undeleting all messages in mutt
1. In mutts index, hit D (UPPERCASE D)
2. It will prompt you with “Delete messages matching: “
+ enter this string:
~A
3. It should mark all for deletion!
4. Conversely, you can do the same thing with UPPERCASE U to undelete multiple messages.

17
cheat/cheatsheets/mv Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
# Move a file from one place to another
mv ~/Desktop/foo.txt ~/Documents/foo.txt
# Move a file from one place to another and automatically overwrite if the destination file exists
# (This will override any previous -i or -n args)
mv -f ~/Desktop/foo.txt ~/Documents/foo.txt
# Move a file from one place to another but ask before overwriting an existing file
# (This will override any previous -f or -n args)
mv -i ~/Desktop/foo.txt ~/Documents/foo.txt
# Move a file from one place to another but never overwrite anything
# (This will override any previous -f or -i args)
mv -n ~/Desktop/foo.txt ~/Documents/foo.txt
# Move listed files to a directory
mv -t ~/Desktop/ file1 file2 file3

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@ -28,4 +28,10 @@ INSERT INTO tbl_name (col1,col2) VALUES(15,col1*2);
UPDATE tbl_name SET col1 = "example";
# Basic DELETE Statement
DELETE FROM tbl_name WHERE user = 'jcole';
DELETE FROM tbl_name WHERE user = 'jcole';
# To check stored procedure
SHOW PROCEDURE STATUS;
# To check stored function
SHOW FUNCTION STATUS;

11
cheat/cheatsheets/ncdu Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
# Save results to file
ncdu -o ncdu.file
# Read from file
ncdu -f ncdu.file
# Save results to compressed file
ncdu -o-| gzip > ncdu.file.gz
# Read from compressed file
zcat ncdu.file.gz | ncdu -f-

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@ -34,7 +34,10 @@ nmcli dev status
# Add a dynamic ethernet connection - parameters:
# <name> -- the name of the connection
# <iface_name> -- the name of the interface
ncmli con add type ethernet con-name <name> ifname <iface_name>
nmcli con add type ethernet con-name <name> ifname <iface_name>
# Import OpenVPN connection settings from file:
nmcli con import type openvpn file <path_to_ovpn_file>
# Bring up the ethernet connection
nmcli con up <name>

22
cheat/cheatsheets/npm Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
# Every command shown here can be used with the `-g` switch for global scope
# Install a package in the current directory
npm install <package>
# Install a package, and save it in the `dependencies` section of `package.json`
npm install --save <package>
# Install a package, and save it in the `devDependencies` section of `package.json`
npm install --save-dev <package>
# Show outdated packages in the current directory
npm outdated
# Update outdated packages
npm update
# Update `npm` (will override the one shipped with Node.js)
npm install -g npm
# Uninstall a package
npm uninstall <package>

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@ -15,6 +15,9 @@ openssl req -text -noout -in server.csr
# To show certificate information for generated certificate
openssl x509 -text -noout -in server.crt
# To get the sha256 fingerprint of a certificate
openssl x509 -in server.crt -noout -sha256 -fingerprint
# To view certificate expiration:
echo | openssl s_client -connect <hostname>:443 2> /dev/null | \
awk '/-----BEGIN/,/END CERTIFICATE-----/' | \

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@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
Begin org-mode ALT-x org-mode
Save CTRL-x CTRL-s
Export in other file formats (eg HTML,PDF) CTRL-c CTRL-e
# Outline
Section heading *
New headline ALT-return
Move headline up or down ALT-up_arrow/down_arrow
Adjust indent depth of headline ALT-left_arrow/right_arrow
Open/collapse section TAB
Open/collapse All CTRL-TAB
# To-Do Lists
Mark list item as TODO ** TODO
Cycle through workflow SHIFT-left_arrow/right_arrow
Show only outstanding TODO items CTRL-c CTRL-v
# Tables
Table column separator Vertical/pipe character
Reorganize table TAB
Move column ALT-left_arrow/right_arrow
Move row ALT-up_arrow/down_arrow
# Styles
*bold*
/italic/
_underlined_
=code=
~verbatim~
+strike-through+
# Heading
Header -*- mode: org -*-
# .emacs
To make org-mode automatically wrap lines:
(add-hook 'org-mode-hook
'(lambda ()
(visual-line-mode 1)))

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@ -27,6 +27,9 @@ pacman -Ql <package name> | sed -n -e 's/.*\/bin\///p' | tail -n +2
# To list explicitly installed packages
pacman -Qe
# To list the top-most recent explicitly installed packages (not in the base groups)
expac --timefmt='%Y-%m-%d %T' '%l\t%n' $(comm -23 <(pacman -Qeq|sort) <(pacman -Qqg base base-devel|sort)) | sort -r | head -20
# To list orphan packages (installed as dependencies and not required anymore)
pacman -Qdt

13
cheat/cheatsheets/patch Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
# Patch one file
patch version1 < version.patch
# Reverse a patch
patch -R version1 < version.patch
# Patch all files in a directory, adding any missing new files
# -p strips leading slashes
$ cd dir
$ patch -p1 -i ../big.patch
# Patch files in a directory, with one level (/) offset
patch -p1 -r version1/ < version.patch

8
cheat/cheatsheets/perl Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
# To view the perl version:
perl -v
# Replace string "\n" to newline
echo -e "foo\nbar\nbaz" | perl -pe 's/\n/\\n/g;'
# Replace newline with multiple line to space
cat test.txt | perl -0pe "s/test1\ntest2/test1 test2/m"

5
cheat/cheatsheets/pgrep Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
# Get a list of PIDs matching the pattern
pgrep example
# Kill all PIDs matching the pattern
pgrep -f example | xargs kill

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@ -23,5 +23,8 @@ pip list --outdated
# Upgrade all outdated packages, thanks to http://stackoverflow.com/a/3452888
pip freeze --local | grep -v '^\-e' | cut -d = -f 1 | xargs -n1 pip install -U
# Upgrade outdated packages on latest version of pip
pip list --outdated --format=freeze | cut -d = -f 1 | xargs -n1 pip install -U
# Install specific version of a package
pip install -I SomePackage1==1.1.0 'SomePackage2>=1.0.4'

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@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
# Create a Slackware package from a structured directory and sub-tree
$ cd /path/to/pkg/dir
$ su - c 'makepkg --linkadd y --chown n $foo-1.0.3-x86_64-1_tag.tgz'
# Install a Slackware package
installpkg foo-1.0.3-x86_64-1.tgz
# Install a Slackware package to non-standard location
ROOT=/path/to/dir installpkg foo-1.0.4-noarch-1.tgz
# Create backup of files that will be overwritten when installing
tar czvf /tmp/backup.tar.gz $(installpkg --warn foo-1.0.4-noarch-1.tgz)
# Upgrade a Slackware package including files only in new version
upgradepkg --install-new foo-1.0.6-noarch-1.tgz
# Upgrade a Slackware package even if version is the same
upgradepkg --reinstall foo-1.0.4-noarch-1.tgz
# Remove a Slackware package
removepkg foo-0.2.8-x86_64-1
# Remove a Slackware package, retaining a backup (uninstalled) copy
removepkg -copy foo-0.2.8-x86_64-1 # -> /var/log/setup/tmp/preserved_packages/foo...

5
cheat/cheatsheets/pkill Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
# To kill a process using it's full process name
pkill <processname>
# To kill a process by it's partial name
pkill -f <string>

2
cheat/cheatsheets/popd Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
# Returns to the directory at the top of the `pushd' stack
popd

26
cheat/cheatsheets/psql Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
# psql is the PostgreSQL terminal interface. The following commands were tested on version 9.5.
# Connection options:
# -U username (if not specified current OS user is used).
# -p port.
# -h server hostname/address.
# Connect to a specific database:
psql -U postgres -h serverAddress -d dbName
# Get databases on a server:
psql -U postgres -h serverAddress --list
# Execute sql query and save output to file:
psql -U postgres -d dbName -c 'select * from tableName;' -o fileName
# Execute query and get tabular html output:
psql -U postgres -d dbName -H -c 'select * from tableName;'
# Execute query and save resulting rows to csv file:
psql -U postgres -d dbName -t -A -P fieldsep=',' -c 'select * from tableName;' -o fileName.csv
# Read commands from file:
psql -f fileName
# Restore databases from file:
psql -f fileName.backup postgres

5
cheat/cheatsheets/pushd Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
# Pushes your current directory to the top of a stack while changing to the specified directory
pushd <directory>
# To return use popd
popd

2
cheat/cheatsheets/pwd Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
# Show the absolute path of your current working directory on the filesystem
pwd

936
cheat/cheatsheets/r2 Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,936 @@
# Command Line options
-L: List of supported IO plugins
-q: Exit after processing commands
-w: Write mode enabled
-i: Interprets a r2 script
-A: Analize executable at load time (xrefs, etc)
-n: Bare load. Do not load executable info as the entrypoint
-c'cmds': Run r2 and execute commands (eg: r2 -wqc'wx 3c @ main')
-p: Creates a project for the file being analyzed (CC add a comment when opening a file as a project)
-: Opens r2 with the malloc plugin that gives a 512 bytes memory area to play with (size can be changed); Similar to r2 malloc://512
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Configuration properties
e: Returs configuration properties
e <property>: Checks a specific property:
e asm.tabs => false
e <property>=<value>: Change property value
e asm.arch=ppc
e? help about a configuration property
e? cmd.stack
# Show comments at right of disassembly if they fit in screen
e asm.cmtright=true
# Shows pseudocode in disassembly. Eg mov eax, str.ok = > eax = str.ok
e asm.pseudo = true
# Display stack and register values on top of disasembly view (visual mode)
e cmd.stack = true
# Solarized theme
eco solarized
# Use UTF-8 to show cool arrows that do not look like crap :)
e scr.utf8 = true
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Basic Commands
; Command chaining: x 3;s+3;pi 3;s+3;pxo 4;
| Pipe with shell commands: pd | less
! Run shell commands: !cat /etc/passwd
!! Escapes to shell, run command and pass output to radare buffer
Note: The double exclamation mark tells radare to skip the plugin list to find an IO plugin handling this
command to launch it directly to the shell. A single one will walk through the io plugin list.
` Radare commands: wx `!ragg2 -i exec`
~ grep
~! grep -v
~[n] grep by columns afl~[0]
~:n grep by rows afl~:0
<command>~.. less/more mode
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
pi~mov,eax ; lines with mov or eax
pi~mov&eax ; lines with mov and eax
pi~mov,eax:6 ; 6 first lines with mov or eax
pd 20~call[0]:0 ; grep first column of the first row matching 'call'
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
.cmd Interprets command output
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
is* prints symbolos
.is* interprets output and define the symbols in radare (normally they are already loaded if r2 was not invoked with -n)
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
.. repeats last commands (same as enter \n)
( Used to define and run macros
$ Used to define alias
$$: Resolves to current address
Offsets (@) are absolute, we can use $$ for relative ones @ $$+4
? Evaluate expression
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
[0x00000000]> ? 33 +2
35 0x23 043 0000:0023 35 00100011 35.0 0.000000
Note: | and & need to be escaped
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
?$? Help for variables used in expressions
$$: Here
$s: File size
$b: Block size
$l: Opcode length
$j: When $$ is at a jmp, $j is the address where we are going to jump to
$f: Same for jmp fail address
$m: Opcode memory reference (e.g. mov eax,[0x10] => 0x10)
??? Help for ? command
?i Takes input from stdin. Eg ?i username
?? Result from previous operations
?s from to [step]: Generates sequence from to every
?p: Get physical address for given virtual address
?P: Get virtual address for given physical one
?v Show hex value of math expr
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
?v 0x1625d4ca ^ 0x72ca4247 = 0x64ef968d
?v 0x4141414a - 0x41414140 = 0xa
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
?l str: Returns the length of string
@@: Used for iteractions
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
wx ff @@10 20 30 Writes ff at offsets 10, 20 and 30
wx ff @@`?s 1 10 2` Writes ff at offsets 1, 2 and 3
wx 90 @@ sym.* Writes a nop on every symbol
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
# Positioning
s address: Move cursor to address or symbol
s-5 (5 bytes backwards)
s- undo seek
s+ redo seek
# Block Size
b size: Change block size
# Analyze
aa: Analyze all (fcns + bbs) same that running r2 with -A
ahl <length> <range>: fake opcode length for a range of bytes
ad: Analyze data
ad@rsp (analize the stack)
+ Normal mode
af: Analyze functions
afl: List all functions
number of functions: afl~?
afi: Returns information about the functions we are currently at
afr: Rename function: structure and flag
afr off: Restore function name set by r2
afn: Rename function
afn strlen 0x080483f0
af-: Removes metadata generated by the function analysis
af+: Define a function manually given the start address and length
af+ 0xd6f 403 checker_loop
axt: Returns cross references to (xref to)
axf: Returns cross references from (xref from)
+ Visual mode
d, f: Function analysis
d, u: Remove metadata generated by function analysis
+ Opcode analysis
ao x: Analize x opcodes from current offset
a8 bytes: Analize the instruction represented by specified bytes
# Information
iI: File info
iz: Strings in data section
izz: Strings in the whole binary
iS: Sections
iS~w returns writable sections
is: Symbols
is~FUNC exports
il: Linked libraries
ii: Imports
ie: Entrypoint
+ Mitigations
i~pic : check if the binary has position-independent-code
i~nx : check if the binary has non-executable stack
i~canary : check if the binary has canaries
# Print
psz n @ offset: Print n zero terminated String
px n @ offset: Print hexdump (or just x) of n bytes
pxw n @ offset: Print hexdump of n words
pxw size@offset prints hexadecimal words at address
pd n @ offset: Print n opcodes disassambled
pD n @ offset: Print n bytes disassembled
pi n @ offset: Print n instructions disassambeled (no address, XREFs, etc. just instrunctions)
pdf @ offset: Print disassembled function
pdf~XREF (grep: XREFs)
pdf~call (grep: calls)
pcp n @ offset: Print n bytes in python string output.
pcp 0x20@0x8048550
import struct
buf = struct.pack ("32B",
0x55,0x89,0xe5,0x83,0xzz,0xzz,0xzz,0xzz,0xf0,0x00,0x00,
0x00,0x00,0xc7,0x45,0xf4,0x00,0x00,0x00,0x00,0xeb,0x20,
0xc7,0x44,0x24,0x04,0x01,0x00,0x00,0x00,0xzz,0xzz)
p8 n @ offset: Print n bytes (8bits) (no hexdump)
pv: Print file contents as IDA bar and shows metadata for each byte (flags , ...)
pt: Interpret data as dates
pf: Print with format
pf.: list all formats
p=: Print entropy ascii graph
# Write
wx: Write hex values in current offset
wx 123456
wx ff @ 4
wa: Write assembly
wa jnz 0x400d24
wc: Write cache commit
wv: Writes value doing endian conversion and padding to byte
wo[x]: Write result of operation
wow 11223344 @102!10
write looped value from 102 to 102+10
0x00000066 1122 3344 1122 3344 1122 0000 0000 0000
wox 0x90
XOR the current block with 0x90. Equivalent to wox 0x90 $$!$b (write from current position, a whole block)
wox 67 @4!10
XOR from offset 4 to 10 with value 67
wf file: Writes the content of the file at the current address or specified offset (ASCII characters only)
wF file: Writes the content of the file at the current address or specified offset
wt file [sz]: Write to file (from current seek, blocksize or sz bytes)
Eg: Dump ELF files with wt @@ hit0* (after searching for ELF headers: \x7fELF)
woO 41424344 : get the index in the De Bruijn Pattern of the given word
# Flags
f: List flags
f label @ offset: Define a flag `label` at offset
f str.pass_len @ 0x804999c
f -label: Removes flag
fr: Rename flag
fd: Returns position from nearest flag (looking backwards). Eg => entry+21
fs: Show all flag spaces
fs flagspace: Change to the specified flag space
fe loop and create numbered flags:
1. fs demo_flagspace
2. fe demo_flagspace @@=`pdf~jne[1]`
# Yank & Paste
y n: Copies n bytes from current position
y: Shows yank buffer contentent with address and length where each entry was copied from
yp: Prints yank buffer
yy offset: Paste the contents of the yank buffer at the specified offset
yt n target @ source: Yank to. Copy n bytes fromsource to target address
# Visual Mode
q: Exits visual mode
hjkl: move around (or HJKL) (left-down-up-right)
o: go/seek to given offset
?: Help
.: Seek EIP
<enter>: Follow address of the current jump/call
:cmd: Enter radare commands. Eg: x @ esi
d[f?]: Define cursor as a string, data, code, a function, or simply to undefine it.
dr: Rename a function
df: Define a function
v: Get into the visual code analysis menu to edit/look closely at the current function.
p/P: Rotate print (visualization) modes
hex, the hexadecimal view
disasm, the disassembly listing
Use numbers in [] to follow jump
Use "u" to go back
debug, the debugger
words, the word-hexidecimal view
buf, the C-formatted buffer
annotated, the annotated hexdump.
c: Changes to cursor mode or exits the cursor mode
select: Shift+[hjkl]
i: Insert mode
a: assembly inline
A: Assembly in visual mode
y: Copy
Y: Paste
f: Creates a flag where cursor points to
<tab> in the hexdump view to toggle between hex and strings columns
V: View ascii-art basic block graph of current function
W: WebUI
x, X: XREFs to current function. ("u" to go back)
t: track flags (browse symbols, functions..)
gG: Begging or end of file
HUD
_ Show HUD
backspace: Exits HUD
We can add new commands to HUD in: radare2/shlr/hud/main
;[-]cmt: Add/remove comment
m<char>: Define a bookmark
'<char>: Go to previously defined bookmark
# ROP
/R opcodes: Search opcodes
/R pop,pop,ret
/Rl opcodes: Search opcodes and print them in linear way
/Rl jmp eax,call ebx
/a: Search assembly
/a jmp eax
pda: Returns a library of gadgets that can be use. These gadgets are obtained by disassmbling byte per byte instead of obeying to opcode leng
e search.roplen = 4 (change the depth of the search, to speed-up the hunt)
# Searching
/ bytes: Search bytes
\x7fELF
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
push ebp
mov ebp, esp
Opcodes: 5589e5
/x 5589e5
[# ]hits: 54c0f4 < 0x0804c600 hits = 1
0x08049f70 hit0_0 5589e557565383e4f081ec
0x0804c31a hit0_1 5589e583ec18c704246031
0x0804c353 hit0_2 5589e583ec1889442404c7
0x0804c379 hit0_3 5589e583ec08e87cffffff
0x0804c3a2 hit0_4 5589e583ec18c70424302d
pi 5 @@hit* (Print 5 first instructions of every hit)
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
Its possible to run a command for each hit. Use the cmd.hit property:
e cmd.hit=px
# Comments and defines
Cd [size]: Define as data
C- [size]: Define as code
Cs [size]: Define as String
Cf [size]: Define as struct
We can define structures to be shown in the disassmbly
CC: List all comments or add a new comment in console mode
C* Show all comments/metadata
CC <comment> add new comment
CC- remove comment
# Magic files
pm: Print Magic files analysis
[0x00000000]> pm
0x00000000 1 ELF 32-bit LSB executable, Intel 80386, version 1
/m [magicfile]: Search magic number headers with libmagic
search.align
search.from (0 = beginning)
search.to (0 = end)
search.asmstr
search.in
# Yara
:yara scan
# Zignatures
zg <language> <output file>: Generate signatures
eg: zg go go.z
Run the generated script to load signatures
eg: . go.z
z: To show signatures loaded:
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
r2-(pid2)> pd 35 @ 0x08049adb-10
| 0x08049adb call fcn.0805b030
| fcn.0805b030(unk, unk, unk, unk) ; sign.sign.b.sym.fmt.Println
| 0x08049ae0 add esp, 0xc
| 0x08049ae3 call fcn.08095580
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
# Compare Files
r2 -m 0xf0000 /etc/fstab ; Open source file
o /etc/issue ; Open file2 at offset 0
o ; List both files
cc offset: Diff by columns between current offset address and "offset"
# Graphs
+ Basic block graphs
af: Load function metadata
ag $$ > a.dot: Dump basic block graph to file
ag $$ | xdot: Show current function basic block graph
+ Call graphs
af: Load function metadata
agc $$ > b.dot: Dump basic block graph to file
+ Convert .dot in .png
dot -Tpng -o /tmp/b.png b.dot
+ Generate graph for file
radiff2 -g main crackme.bin crackme.bin > /tmp/a
xdot /tmp/a
# Debugger
+ Start r2 in debugger mode. r2 will fork and attach
r2 -d [pid|cmd|ptrace] (if command contains spaces use quotes: r2 -d "ls /")
ptrace://pid (debug backend does not notice, only access to mapped memory)
+ Pass arguments
r2 -d rarun2 program=pwn1 arg1=$(python exploit.py)
+ Pass stdin
r2 -d rarun2 program=/bin/ls stdin=$(python exploit.py)
+ Commands
do: Reopen program
dp: Shows debugged process, child processes and threads
dc: Continue
dcu <address or symbol>: Continue until symbol (sets bp in address, continua until bp and remove bp)
dc[sfcp]: Continue until syscall(eg: write), fork, call, program address (To exit a library)
ds: Step in
dso: Step out
dss: Skip instruction
dr register=value: Change register value
dr(=)?: Show register values
db address: Sets a breakpoint at address
db sym.main add breakpoint into sym.main
db 0x804800 add breakpoint
db -0x804800 remove breakpoint
dsi (conditional step): Eg: "dsi eax==3,ecx>0"
dbt: Shows backtrace
drr: Display in colors and words all the refs from registers or memory
dm: Shows memory map (* indicates current section)
[0xb776c110]> dm
sys 0x08048000 - 0x08062000 s r-x /usr/bin/ls
sys 0x08062000 - 0x08064000 s rw- /usr/bin/ls
sys 0xb776a000 - 0xb776b000 s r-x [vdso]
sys 0xb776b000 * 0xb778b000 s r-x /usr/lib/ld-2.17.so
sys 0xb778b000 - 0xb778d000 s rw- /usr/lib/ld-2.17.so
sys 0xbfe5d000 - 0xbfe7e000 s rw- [stack]
+ To follow child processes in forks (set-follow-fork-mode in gdb)
dcf until a fork happen then use dp to select what process you want to debug.
+ PEDA like details
drr;pd 10@-10;pxr 40@esp
+ Debug in visual mode
toggl breakpoints with F2
single-step with F7 (s)
step-over with F8 (S)
continue with F9
# WebGUI
=h: Start the server
=H: Start server and browser
# rax2 - Base Conversion
-e: Change endian
-k: random ASCII art to represent a number/hash. Similar to how SSH represents keys
-s: ASCII to hex
rax2 -S hola (from string to hex)
rax2 -s 686f6c61 (from hex to string)
-S: binary to hex (for files)
-N: pack an integer
rax2 -N 0x1234 # \x34\x12\x00\x00
# rahash2 - Entropy, hashes and checksums
-a: Specify the algorithm
-b XXX: Block size
-B: Print all blocks
-a entropy: Show file entropy or entropy per block (-B -b 512 -a entropy)
+ Rot13 with rahash2
rahash2 -E rot -S s:13 -s Hello\n
# radiff2 - File diffing
-s: Calculate text distance from two files.
-d: Delta diffing (For files with different sizes. Its not byte per byte)
-C: Code diffing (instead of data)
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
Diff original and patched on x86_32, using graphdiff algorithm
radiff2 -a x86 -b32 -C original patched
Show differences between original and patched on x86_32
radiff2 -a x86 -b32 original patched :
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
# rasm2 - Assembly/Disasembly
-L: Supported architectures
-a arch instruction: Sets architecture
rasm2 -a x86 'mov eax,30' => b81e000000
-b tam: Sets block size
-d: Disassembly
rasm2 -d b81e000000 => mov eax, 0x1e
-C: Assembly in C output
rasm2 -C 'mov eax,30' => "\xb8\x1e\x00\x00\x00"
-D: Disassemble showing hexpair and opcode
rasm2 -D b81e0000 => 0x00000000 5 b81e000000 mov eax, 0x1e
-f: Read data from file instead of ARG.
-t: Write data to file
+ Disassemble shellcode from hex stdin
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
echo -n "31c048bbd19d9691d08c97ff48f7db53545f995257545eb03b0f05" | rasm2 -a x86 -b 64 -d -
xor eax, eax
movabs rbx, 0xff978cd091969dd1
neg rbx
push rbx
push rsp
pop rdi
cdq
push rdx
push rdi
push rsp
pop rsi
mov al, 0x3b
syscall
+-------------------------------------------------------------------
# rafind2 - Search
-Z: Look for Zero terminated strings
-s str: Look for specifc string
-X: Hex dump around output
+ Search "/bin/sh" in libc
rafind2 -X -s "/bin/sh" /usr/lib/libc.so.6
# ragg2 - Shellcode generator, C/opcode compiler
P: Generate De Bruijn patterns
ragg2 -P 300 -r
-a arch: Configure architecture
-b bits: Specify architecture bits (32/64)
-i shellcode: Specify shellcode to generate
-e encoder: Specify encoder
+ ragg2-cc: Generate shellcode from c
+ Generate a x86, 32 bits exec shellcode
ragg2 -a x86 -b 32 -i exec
# rabin2 - Executable analysis: symbols, imports, strings
-I: Executable information
-C: Returns classes. Useful to list Java Classes
-l: Dynamic linked libraries
-s: Symbols
-z: Strings
# rarun2 - Launcher to run programs with different environments, args, stdin, permissions, fds
r2 -b 32 -d rarun2 program=pwn1 arg1=$(ragg2 -P 300 -r) : runs pwn1 with a De Bruijn Pattern as first argument, inside radare2's debugger, and force 32 bits
r2 -d rarun2 program=/bin/ls stdin=$(python exploit.py) : runs /bin/ls with the output of exploit.py directed to stdin
# ESIL emulation
1) aei: Initialize ESIL VM
2) aeim: Assign ESIL stack
aeim 0xffffd000 0x1000 stack
3) aeip: Program counter to current seek
4) e io.cache=true: Enable caching read/write of virtual memory (Important if self modifying code)
5) aes: Single stepping in emulation mode
+ Toggle IL representation via O in Visual Mode
# ESIL Linear emulation
Find all references to curr. address using linear esil emulation on all imports.
/re$$@@ sym.imp.*
# ESIL IL Representation
op esil
------------
mov =
mul *
div /
and &
neg !
read []
if ?{
add +
sub -
xor ^
or |
cmp ==
write =[]
+ prefix is %
+ carry from bit x -> %cx
+ borrow from bit x -> %bx
+ zero-flag -> %z
+ parity of dst -> %p
+ sign-flag -> %s
+ overflow-flag -> %o
+ BREAK - Stop parsing and emulate next instruction
+ LOOP - restart emulation of instruction
+ GOTO n - jump to n
+ TODO - stop emulation and eprintf("TDOD %s", ins)
x86 ESIL
------------------------------------------------------
mov eax, ebx ebx,eax,=
jz 0xaabbccdd zf,?{,0xaabbccdd,eip,=,}
cmp ecx,edx edx,ecx,==,%z,zf,=,%b32,cf,=,%p,pf,=,%s,sf,=
push ebp 4,esp,-=ebp,esp,=[4]
+ ESIL Doc
https://github.com/radare/radare2book/blob/master/esil.md
# r2pipe commands
+ Invoke r2pipe script via r2 cmdline
[0x00000000]> #!pipe node script.js
[0x00000000]> #!pipe python script.py
+ Good collection:
https://radare.org/get/r2pipe-nn2015.pdf
https://github.com/jpenalbae/r2-scripts
# Parsing ELF
!!! open with r2 -nn
+ Parse 9 program headers (elf_phdr) from curr. seek plus offset 0x40 with temporary block size 0x200 in less mode (~..)
[0x00000000]> pf 9? (elf_phdr)phdr @ $$+0x40!0x200~..
# pf Templates
+ Generate templates for structs/enums with td command
"td enum elf_class {ELFCLASSNONE=0, ELFCLASS32=1, ELFCLASS64=2};"
https://github.com/Maijin/r2-pf-templates/
+ Cast data @ <addr> to <type> and print it
tp <type> = <address>
# r2scapy
r2 -i r2scapy.py dump.bin
[0x00000000]> scapy DNS 0x81de3c 48
DNS(aa=1L, qr=1L, an=DNSRR(rclass=32769, ttl=120, rrname='flashair.local.', rdata='192.168.0.1', type=1), ad=0L, nscount=0, qdcount=1, ns=None, tc=0L, rd=1L, arcount=0, ar=None, opcode=0L, ra=0L, cd=0L, z=0L, rcode=0L, id=0, ancount=1, qd=DNSQR(qclass=32769, qtype=255, qname='flashair.local.'))
+ generate packets with scapy
>>> from scapy.all import *
>>> sr1(IP(dst="8.8.8.8")/UDP(dport=53)/DNS(rd=1,qd=DNSQR(qname="www.thepacketgeek.com")),verbose=0)
# r2m2 -Miasm Intermediate Representation Plugin
+ Assemble and disassemble MIPS32 using rasm2
r2m2$ export R2M2_ARCH=mips32l; rasm2 -a r2m2 'addiu a0, a1, 2' |rasm2 -a r2m2 -d -
ADDIU A0, A1, 0x2
+ Disassemble random MSP430 instructions in r2
r2m2$ R2M2_ARCH=msp430 r2 -a r2m2 -qc 'woR; pd 5' -
0x00000000 07fa and.w R10, R7
0x00000002 47ad dadd.b R13, R7
0x00000004 f05e0778 add.b @R14+, 0x7807(PC)
0x00000008 f46d81ed addc.b @R13+, 0xED81(R4)
0x0000000c 3fdc bis.w @R12+, R15
+ Assemble MIPS32 using rasm2 and display the call graph using r2
r2m2$ R2M2_ARCH=mips32b rasm2 -a r2m2 'j 0x4; nop' -B > j_nop.bin
r2m2$ R2M2_ARCH=mips32b r2 -a r2m2 -qc 'pd 2' j_nop.bin
,=< 0x00000000 0c000001 JAL 0x4
`-> 0x00000004 00000000 NOP
# bin carving with r2
+ Open raw dump
r2 -n dump.bin
+ Searching for magic
[0x00000000]> / \x7fELF
Searching 4 bytes from 0x00000000 to 0x0000002d: 7f 45 4c 46
0x00001340 hit0_0
0x00001744 hit0_1
...
+ Dump 1M with at several hits
[0x00000000]> b 1M
[0x00000000]> wt @@ hit0*
+ Automate it
$ for a in dump.* ; do
sz=`rabin2 -Z $a` # get RBin.filesize
r2 -wnqc"r $sz" $a # resize file
done
http://radare.today/posts/carving-bins/
# r4ge - symbolic execution
+ https://github.com/gast04/r4ge
Usage: https://asciinema.org/a/155856
# r2wiki -Macro for using wiki in commandline
+ https://github.com/securisec/r2wiki
$wiki "query string"

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# Initial check-in of file (leaving file active in filesystem)
ci -u <filename>
# Check out with lock
co -l <filename>
# Check in and unlock (leaving file active in filesystem)
ci -u <filename>
# Display version x.y of a file
co -px.y <filename>
# Undo to version x.y (overwrites file active in filesystem with the specified revision)
co -rx.y <filename>
# Diff file active in filesystem and last revision
rcsdiff <filename>
# Diff versions x.y and x.z
rcsdiff -rx.y -rx.z <filename>
# View log of check-ins
rlog <filename>
# Break an RCS lock held by another person on a file
rcs -u <filename>

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@ -0,0 +1,5 @@
# List contents of RPM
rpm2cpio foo.rpm | cpio -vt
# Extract contents of RPM
rpm2cpio foo.rpm | cpio -vid

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@ -12,3 +12,6 @@ rsync -auv /src/foo /dest
# Explicitly copy /src/foo to /dest/foo
rsync -auv /src/foo/ /dest/foo
# Copy file from local to remote over ssh with non standard port 1234 to destination folder in remoteuser's home directory
rsync -avz -e "ssh -p1234" /source/file1 remoteuser@X.X.X.X:~/destination/

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@ -15,3 +15,9 @@ sed '/^$/d' file.txt
# To replace newlines in multiple lines
sed ':a;N;$!ba;s/\n//g' file.txt
# Insert a line before a matching pattern:
sed '/Once upon a time/i\Chapter 1'
# Add a line after a matching pattern:
sed '/happily ever after/a\The end.'

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@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
# Reboot the system immediately
shutdown -r now
# Shut system down immediately
shutdown -h now
# Reboot system after 5 minutes
shutdown -r +5

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@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
# Submit a new job:
sbatch job.sh
# List all jobs for a user:
squeue -u user_name
# Cancel a job by id or name:
scancel job_id
scancel --name job_name
# List all information for a job:
scontrol show jobid -dd job_id
# Status info for currently running job:
sstat --format=AveCPU,AvePages,AveRSS,AveVMSize,JobID -j job_id --allsteps

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# Sync to newest SlackBuild.org tree
sport r
# Search (fuzzy) SlackBuild tree for packages foo and BaR
sport s foo bar
# Operate from alternate build tree
SBOPATH=/path/to/tree sport s foo
# View info and README of BaR (not fuzzy)
sport c foo BaR
# Build a package
sport i --build-only foo
# Build and install package foo and BaR
sport i foo BaR
# Build and install package from current directory
sport i .
# Upgrade instead of install
INSTALLER=upgradepkg sport i foo
# Build dependency list for baz
echo "foo BaR" >> /tmp/baz.list
# Install list of packages from file
sport i $(< /tmp/baz.list)
# Check if package is installed
sport k foo

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@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
# create database and launch interactive shell
sqlite3 example.db
# create table
sqlite3 example.db "CREATE TABLE Os(ID INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, Name TEXT, Year INTEGER);"
# insert data
sqlite3 example.db "INSERT INTO 'Os' VALUES(1,'Linux',1991);"
# list tables
sqlite3 example.db ".tables"
# view records in table
sqlite3 example.db "SELECT * FROM 'Os';"
# view records in table conditionally
sqlite example.db "SELECT * FROM 'Os' WHERE Year='1991';"
# view records with fuzzy matching
sqlite3 ~/example.db "SELECT * FROM 'Os' WHERE Year like '19%';"

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@ -32,3 +32,12 @@ ssh user@example.com -C -c blowfish -X
# Copy files and folders through ssh from remote host to pwd with tar.gz compression
# when there is no rsync command available
ssh user@example.com "cd /var/www/Shared/; tar zcf - asset1 asset2" | tar zxf -
# Mount folder/filesystem through SSH
# Install SSHFS from https://github.com/libfuse/sshfs
# Will allow you to mount a folder securely over a network.
sshfs name@server:/path/to/folder /path/to/mount/point
# Emacs can read file through SSH
# Doc: http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Remote-Files.html
emacs /ssh:name@server:/path/to/file

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@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
# Switch to another user account
su USERNAME

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# update working copy from repository
svn update "/path"
# show changed files in working copy
svn status
# show what changed in local file
svn diff "/path/filename"
# add files or folders
svn add "path/item"
# revert local uncommited changes
svn revert "/path/file"
# commit changes to repo
svn commit -m "message" "/path"
# show help for 'svn diff'
svn help diff

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@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ tar -xjvf /path/to/foo.tgz
# To create a .bz2 archive:
tar -cjvf /path/to/foo.tgz /path/to/foo/
# To extract a .tar in specified Directory:
tar -xvf /path/to/foo.tar -C /path/to/destination/
# To list the content of an .bz2 archive:
tar -jtvf /path/to/foo.tgz

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@ -3,3 +3,6 @@ ls | tee outfile.txt
# To tee stdout and append to a file:
ls | tee -a outfile.txt
# To tee stdout to the terminal, and also pipe it into another program for further processing:
ls | tee /dev/tty | xargs printf "\033[1;34m%s\033[m\n"

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@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
# Trash foo and bar
trash foo bar
# Trash "foo bar"
trash foo\ bar
# List files in trash
trash -v --list
# Restore foo from trash
trash --restore foo
# Empty trash
trash --empty

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# search (fuzzy) for package foo
urpmq -Y foo
# check if foo is installed
rpm -q foo
# install package foo
urpmi foo
# download but don't install foo
urpmi --no-install foo
# uninstall package foo
urpme foo

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@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
# Count the number of words (file or STDIN)
wc -w /path/to/foo.txt
cat /path/to/foo.txt | wc -w
# Count the number of lines (file or STDIN)
wc -l /path/to/foo.txt
cat /path/to/foo.txt | wc -l
# Count the number of bytes (file or STDIN)
wc -c /path/to/foo.txt
cat /path/to/foo.txt | wc -c
# Count files and directories at a given location
ls -l | wc -l
# If you ever use `wc` in a shell script and need to compare the output with an int you can
# clean the output (wc returns extra characters around the integer) by using xargs:
ls -l | wc -l | xargs

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@ -10,3 +10,7 @@ find -name *.pdf | xargs -I{} rm -rf '{}'
# -n1 => One file by one file. ( -n2 => 2 files by 2 files )
find -name *.pdf | xargs -I{} -n1 echo '&{}='
# If find returns no result, do not run rm
# This option is a GNU extension.
find -name "*.pdf" | xargs --no-run-if-empty rm

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# DocBook XML to PDF
xmlto pdf mydoc.xml
# DocBook XML to HTML
xmlto -o html-dir html mydoc.xml
# DocBook XML to single HTML file
xmlto html-nochunks mydoc.xml
# modify output with XSL override
xmlto -m ulink.xsl pdf mydoc.xml
# use non-default xsl
xmlto -x mystylesheet.xsl pdf mydoc.xml

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# Convert bin/string to hex.
# Result: 34322069732074686520736f6c7574696f6e0a
echo '42 is the solution' | xxd -p
# Convert hex to bin/string.
# Result: 42 is the solution
echo '34322069732074686520736f6c7574696f6e0a' | xxd -r -p

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@ -16,5 +16,8 @@ youtube-dl --playlist-start 5 example.com/watch?v=id&list=listid
# To simulate a download with youtube-dl:
youtube-dl -s example.com/watch?v=id
# To download audio in mp3 format with best quality available
youtube-dl --extract-audio --audio-format mp3 --audio-quality 0 example.com/watch?v=id
# For all video formats see
# http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YouTube#Quality_and_codecs

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# WARNING:
# In order to avoid headaches when moving ZFS physical devices around,
# one will be much better served to reference devices by their *immutable*
# ID - as in /dev/disk/by-id/* - rather than their block device name -
# as in /dev/{sd,nvme}* - which is bound to change as per PCI enumeration
# order.
# For the sake of briefness, we'll use the following variables:
# ${device} device (/dev/disk/by-id/${device})
# ${part} partition (/dev/disk/by-id/${part=${device}-part${N}})
# ${pool} ZFS pool (name)
# ${fs_vol} ZFS file system or volume (name)
# ${snapshot} ZFS snapshot (name)
## Pools
# Create a new "RAID-5" (raidz1) pool
# Recommended: use entire devices rather than partitions
zpool create ${pool} raidz1 ${device} ${device} ${device} [...]
# Add 2nd-level "RAID-1" (mirror) ZFS Intent Log (ZIL; synchronous write cache)
# Recommended: use separate, fast, low-latency devices (e.g. NVMe)
zpool add ${pool} log mirror ${part} ${part}
# Add 2nd-level "RAID-0" Adaptive Replacement Cache (ARC; read cache)
# Recommended: use separate, fast, low-latency devices (e.g. NVMe)
zpool add ${pool} cache ${part} ${part} [...]
# Remove log or cache components
zpool remove zfs ${part} [...]
# Import (enable) existing pool from newly connected devices
# Note: this will create the /etc/zfs/zpool.cache devices cache
zpool import -d /dev/disk/by-id -aN
# Import (enable) existing pool using the devices cache
zpool import -c /etc/zfs/zpool.cache -aN
# Export (disable) pool (e.g. before shutdown)
zpool export -a
# List all (imported) pools
zpool list
# See pool status
zpool status ${pool}
# See detailed pool I/O statistics
zpool iostat ${pool} -v
# Verify pool integrity (data checksums)
# (watch progress with 'zpool status')
zpool scrub ${pool}
# Remove a failing device from a pool
# Note: redundant pools (mirror, raidz) will continue working in degraded state
zpool detach ${pool} ${device}
# Replace a failed device in a pool
# Note: new device will be "resilvered" automatically (parity reconstruction)
# (watch progress with 'zpool status')
zpool replace ${pool} ${failed-device} ${new-device}
# Erase zpool labels ("superblock") from a device/partition
# WARNING: MUST do before reusing a device/partition for other purposes
zpool labelclear ${device}
# Query pool configuration (properties)
zpool get all ${pool}
# Change pool configuration (property)
zpool set <property>=<value> ${pool}
# Dump the entire pool (commands) history
zpool history ${pool}
# More...
man zpool
## File systems / Volumes
# Create a new file system
zfs create ${pool}/${fs_vol}
# Create a new volume ("block device")
# Note: look for it in /dev/zvol/${pool}/${fs_vol}
zfs create -V <size> ${pool}/${fs_vol}
# List all file systems / volumes
zfs list
# Mount all file systems
# Note: see 'zfs get mountpoint ${pool}' for mountpoint root path
zfs mount -a
# Create a snapshot
zfs snapshot ${pool}/${fs_vol}@${snapshot}
# Delete a snapshot
zfs destroy ${pool}/${fs_vol}@${snapshot}
# Full backup
# Note: pipe (|) source to destination through netcat, SSH, etc.
# ... on source:
zfs send -p -R ${pool}/${fs_vol}@${snapshot}
# ... on destination:
zfs receive -F ${pool}/${fs_vol}
# Incremental backup
# Note: pipe (|) source to destination through netcat, SSH, etc.
# ... on source:
zfs send -p -R -i ${pool}/${fs_vol}@${snapshot-previous} ${pool}/${fs_vol}@${snapshot}
# ... on destination:
zfs receive -F ${pool}/${fs_vol}
# Query file system / volume configuration (properties)
zfs get all ${pool}
zfs get all ${pool}/${fs_vol}
# Change file system / volume configuration (property)
zfs set <property>=<value> ${pool}/${fs_vol}
# More...
man zfs

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@ -1,5 +1,8 @@
# Create zip file
zip archive.zip file1 directory/
# Create zip file with password
zip -P password archive.zip file1
# To list, test and extract zip archives, see unzip
cheat unzip

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# A plain old glob
print -l *.txt
print -l **/*.txt
# Show text files that end in a number from 1 to 10
print -l **/*<1-10>.txt
# Show text files that start with the letter a
print -l **/[a]*.txt
# Show text files that start with either ab or bc
print -l **/(ab|bc)*.txt
# Show text files that don't start with a lower or uppercase c
print -l **/[^cC]*.txt
# Show only directories
print -l **/*(/)
# Show only regular files
print -l **/*(.)
# Show empty files
print -l **/*(L0)
# Show files greater than 3 KB
print -l **/*(Lk+3)
# Show files modified in the last hour
print -l **/*(mh-1)
# Sort files from most to least recently modified and show the last 3
print -l **/*(om[1,3])
# `.` show files, `Lm-2` smaller than 2MB, `mh-1` modified in last hour,
# `om` sort by modification date, `[1,3]` only first 3 files
print -l **/*(.Lm-2mh-1om[1,3])
# Show every directory that contain directory `.git`
print -l **/*(e:'[[ -d $REPLY/.git ]]':)
# Return the file name (t stands for tail)
print -l *.txt(:t)
# Return the file name without the extension (r stands for remove_extension)
print -l *.txt(:t:r)
# Return the extension
print -l *.txt(:e)
# Return the parent folder of the file (h stands for head)
print -l *.txt(:h)
# Return the parent folder of the parent
print -l *.txt(:h:h)
# Return the parent folder of the first file
print -l *.txt([1]:h)
# Parameter expansion
files=(*.txt) # store a glob in a variable
print -l $files
print -l $files(:h) # this is the syntax we saw before
print -l ${files:h}
print -l ${files(:h)} # don't mix the two, or you'll get an error
print -l ${files:u} # the :u modifier makes the text uppercase
# :s modifier
variable="path/aaabcd"
echo ${variable:s/bc/BC/} # path/aaaBCd
echo ${variable:s_bc_BC_} # path/aaaBCd
echo ${variable:s/\//./} # path.aaabcd (escaping the slash \/)
echo ${variable:s_/_._} # path.aaabcd (slightly more readable)
echo ${variable:s/a/A/} # pAth/aaabcd (only first A is replaced)
echo ${variable:gs/a/A/} # pAth/AAAbcd (all A is replaced)
# Split the file name at each underscore
echo ${(s._.)file}
# Join expansion flag, opposite of the split flag.
array=(a b c d)
echo ${(j.-.)array} # a-b-c-d

View File

@ -1,10 +1,8 @@
from cheat import sheets
from cheat import utils
from cheat.utils import *
import os
import shutil
import subprocess
from cheat import sheets
from cheat.utils import die, open_with_editor
def copy(current_sheet_path, new_sheet_path):
""" Copies a sheet to a new path """
@ -16,7 +14,7 @@ def copy(current_sheet_path, new_sheet_path):
# fail gracefully if the cheatsheet cannot be copied. This can happen if
# DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR does not exist
except IOError:
die ('Could not copy cheatsheet for editing.')
die('Could not copy cheatsheet for editing.')
def create_or_edit(sheet):
@ -40,22 +38,12 @@ def create_or_edit(sheet):
def create(sheet):
""" Creates a cheatsheet """
new_sheet_path = os.path.join(sheets.default_path(), sheet)
try:
subprocess.call([editor(), new_sheet_path])
except OSError:
die('Could not launch ' + editor())
open_with_editor(new_sheet_path)
def edit(sheet):
""" Opens a cheatsheet for editing """
try:
subprocess.call([editor(), path(sheet)])
except OSError:
die('Could not launch ' + editor())
open_with_editor(path(sheet))
def exists(sheet):
@ -84,5 +72,5 @@ def read(sheet):
if not exists(sheet):
die('No cheatsheet found for ' + sheet)
with open (path(sheet)) as cheatfile:
return cheatfile.read()
with open(path(sheet)) as cheatfile:
return cheatfile.read()

View File

@ -1,12 +1,14 @@
from cheat import cheatsheets
from cheat.utils import *
import os
from cheat import cheatsheets
from cheat.utils import die
def default_path():
""" Returns the default cheatsheet path """
# determine the default cheatsheet dir
default_sheets_dir = os.environ.get('DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR') or os.path.join(os.path.expanduser('~'), '.cheat')
default_sheets_dir = os.environ.get('DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR') or os.path.join('~', '.cheat')
default_sheets_dir = os.path.expanduser(os.path.expandvars(default_sheets_dir))
# create the DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR if it does not exist
if not os.path.isdir(default_sheets_dir):
@ -22,7 +24,7 @@ def default_path():
if not os.access(default_sheets_dir, os.R_OK):
die('The DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR (' + default_sheets_dir +') is not readable.')
if not os.access(default_sheets_dir, os.W_OK):
die('The DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR (' + default_sheets_dir +') is not writeable.')
die('The DEFAULT_CHEAT_DIR (' + default_sheets_dir +') is not writable.')
# return the default dir
return default_sheets_dir
@ -77,14 +79,15 @@ def list():
def search(term):
""" Searches all cheatsheets for the specified term """
result = ''
lowered_term = term.lower()
for cheatsheet in sorted(get().items()):
match = ''
for line in open(cheatsheet[1]):
if term in line:
match += ' ' + line
if lowered_term in line:
match += ' ' + line
if not match == '':
if match != '':
result += cheatsheet[0] + ":\n" + match + "\n"
return result

View File

@ -1,6 +1,7 @@
from __future__ import print_function
import os
import sys
import subprocess
def colorize(sheet_content):
@ -12,14 +13,23 @@ def colorize(sheet_content):
try:
from pygments import highlight
from pygments.lexers import BashLexer
from pygments.lexers import get_lexer_by_name
from pygments.formatters import TerminalFormatter
# if pygments can't load, just return the uncolorized text
except ImportError:
return sheet_content
return highlight(sheet_content, BashLexer(), TerminalFormatter())
first_line = sheet_content.splitlines()[0]
lexer = get_lexer_by_name('bash')
if first_line.startswith('```'):
sheet_content = '\n'.join(sheet_content.split('\n')[1:-2])
try:
lexer = get_lexer_by_name(first_line[3:])
except Exception:
pass
return highlight(sheet_content, lexer, TerminalFormatter())
def die(message):
@ -30,34 +40,30 @@ def die(message):
def editor():
""" Determines the user's preferred editor """
if 'EDITOR' not in os.environ:
# determine which editor to use
editor = os.environ.get('CHEAT_EDITOR') \
or os.environ.get('VISUAL') \
or os.environ.get('EDITOR') \
or False
# assert that the editor is set
if editor == False:
die(
'In order to create/edit a cheatsheet you must set your EDITOR '
'environment variable to your editor\'s path.'
'You must set a CHEAT_EDITOR, VISUAL, or EDITOR environment '
'variable in order to create/edit a cheatsheet.'
)
elif os.environ['EDITOR'] == "":
die(
'Your EDITOR environment variable is set to an empty string. It must '
'be set to your editor\'s path.'
)
else:
return os.environ['EDITOR']
return editor
def prompt_yes_or_no(question):
""" Prompts the user with a yes-or-no question """
# Support Python 2 and 3 input
# Default to Python 2's input()
get_input = raw_input
# If this is Python 3, use input()
if sys.version_info[:2] >= (3, 0):
get_input = input
print(question)
return get_input('[y/n] ') == 'y'
def open_with_editor(filepath):
""" Open `filepath` using the EDITOR specified by the environment variables """
editor_cmd = editor().split()
try:
subprocess.call(editor_cmd + [filepath])
except OSError:
die('Could not launch ' + editor())
def warn(message):

BIN
man1/cheat.1.gz Normal file

Binary file not shown.

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@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ import os
setup(
name = 'cheat',
version = '2.1.24',
version = '2.3.0',
author = 'Chris Lane',
author_email = 'chris@chris-allen-lane.com',
license = 'GPL3',