Check These Out
find all email addresses in a file, printing each match. Addresses do not have to be alone on a line etc. For example you can grab them from HTML-formatted emails or CSV files, etc. Use a combination of
$...|sort|uniq$
to filter them.
Generate a truly random password using noise from your microphone to seed the RNG. This will spit out 12 password with 12 characters each, but you can save this into a bash script and replace 'pwgen -ys 12 12' with 'pwgen $@' so you can pass any paramters to pwgen as you would normally do.
An NCurses version of the famous old 'du' unix command
Sometimes commands give you too much feedback.
Perhaps 1/100th might be enough. If so, every() is for you.
$ my_verbose_command | every 100
will print every 100th line of output.
Specifically, it will print lines 100, 200, 300, etc
If you use a negative argument it will print the *first* of a block,
$ my_verbose_command | every -100
It will print lines 1, 101, 201, 301, etc
The function wraps up this useful sed snippet:
$ ... | sed -n '0~100p'
don't print anything by default
$ sed -n
starting at line 0, then every hundred lines ( ~100 ) print.
$ '0~100p'
There's also some bash magic to test if the number is negative:
we want character 0, length 1, of variable N.
$ ${N:0:1}
If it *is* negative, strip off the first character ${N:1} is character 1 onwards (second actual character).
http://public-dns.info gives a list of online dns servers. you need to change the country in url (br in this url) with your country code. this command need some time to ping all IP in list.
swap out "80" for your port of interest. Can use port number or named ports e.g. "http"
Shows all configurations to apt and dpkg, rarely changed, you probably still have the default configuration. Go ahead and explore your configuration if you dare, perhaps change your apt-cache directory, Dir::Cache "var/cache/apt/"; or the names of the log files.