101 private links
Some very useful examples for grep
KeyStore Explorer is an open source GUI replacement for the Java command-line utilities keytool and jarsigner. KeyStore Explorer presents their functionality, and more, via an intuitive graphical user interface.
Use Vim everywhere you've always wanted to. Contribute to cknadler/vim-anywhere development by creating an account on GitHub.
I use this to write everything in Vim and be safe when my browser doesn't submit the textboxes. I lost way too much content on webbased blog and wiki engines before.
Great tool work with hashed, encrypted or encoded strings
all thinkable manipulations are possible ;)
tweet.sh, a Twitter client written in simple Bash script
I switched to Kitty because it support font ligatures.
Archive your Firefox, Shaarli or delicious bookmarks - nodiscc/shaarchiver
Mailarchiver, OS
Useful tool to get passwords from Websphere configuration, if the documentation wasn't updated.
K9s is a terminal based UI to interact with your Kubernetes clusters. The aim of this project is to make it easier to navigate, observe and manage your deployed applications in the wild. K9s continually watches Kubernetes for changes and offers subsequent commands to interact with your observed resources.
Features
- Information At Your Finger Tips!
- Tracks in real-time activities of resources running in your Kubernetes cluster.
- Standard or CRD?
- Handles both Kubernetes standard resources as well as custom resource definitions.
- Cluster Metrics
- Tracks real-time metrics associates with resources such as pods, containers and nodes.
- Power Users Welcome!
- Provides standard cluster management commands such as logs, scaling, port-forwards, restarts…
- Define your own command shortcuts for quick navigation via command aliases and hotkeys.
- Plugin support to extend K9s to create your very own cluster commands.
- Powerful filtering mode to allow user to drill down and view workload related resources.
- Error Zoom
- Drill down directly to what’s wrong with your cluster’s resources.
- Skinnable and Customizable
- Define your very own look and feel via K9s skins.
- Customize/Arrange which columns to display on a per resource basis.
- Narrow or Wide?
- Provides toggles to view minimal or full resource definitions
- MultiResources Views
- Provides for an overview of your cluster resources via Pulses and XRay views.
- We’ve got your RBAC!
- Supports for viewing RBAC rules such as cluster/roles and their associated bindings.
- Reverse lookup to asserts what a user/group or ServiceAccount can do on your clusters.
- Built-in Benchmarking
- You can benchmark your HTTP services/pods directly from K9s to see how your application fare and adjust your resources request/limit accordingly.
- Resource Graph Traversals
- K9s provides for easy traversal of Kubernetes resources and their associated resources.
rlwrap is a 'readline wrapper', a small utility that uses the GNU
readline library to allow the editing of keyboard input for any
command. I couldn't find anything like it when I needed it, so I wrote
this one back in 1999. By now, there are (and, in hindsight, even
then there were) a number of good readline wrappers around, like rlfe,
distributed as part of the GNU readline library, and the amazing socat
(http://freecode.com/projects/socat). You should consider rlwrap
especially when you need user-defined completion (by way of completion word
lists) and persistent history, or if you want to program 'special
effects' using the filter mechanism. rlwrap compiles and runs on a
fairly wide range of Unix-like systems.