Vim Bootstrap makes it easy to learn a new editor, focus on learning how to use it and leave the configuration to us. Pick languages or frameworks to enable specific syntax support for, pick a visual theme, pick an editor (vim or neovim), click the button, and you have a .vimrc file ready to use.
How to configure and use the virtual modem in DOSbox. Rather than dialing phone numbers, you dial IPv4 address/port pairs.
We found other Neovim configurations either being powerful out of the box but hard to customize, or easy to customize but minimal out of the box functionality. AstroNvim aims to find the middle ground with a great out of the box experience while empowering the user to make tweaks where they want. Getting started is super easy! Head over to the Getting Started Guide which will step you through setting up the user template. From there you can start playing around with AstroNvim, but be sure to look through the rest of the documentation to see how to customize it further. Out of the box AstroNvim doesn't provide direct support for any one language, but provides a base for setting up any language easily. AstroCommunity is a community repository for sharing configuration snippets such as language support. AstroCommunity has >40 language packs that can be added to your configuration to get state of the art language support.
The missing UI extensions for Vim 8.2 (and NeoVim 0.4)!!
There are many keymaps defined in my .vimrc. Getting tired from checking .vimrc time to time when I forget some, based on the latest +popup feature (vim 8.2), I created this vim-quickui plugin to introduce some basic UI components to enrich vim's interactive experience: Well designed and carefully colored Borland/Turbo C++ flavor ui system, combined with vim's productivity. Can be accessed by keyboard only while mouse is also supported. Navigate with the usual Vim keys like h/j/k/l, confirm with ENTER/SPACE and cancel with ESC/Ctrl+[. Tip for each entry can display in the cmdline when you are moving the cursor around. Multiple TUI widgets available. Fully customizable. Compatible with vim and neovim. Written in pure vimscript, no other languages required.
As AWS security professionals we are often asked by customers to validate their use of AWS security services and to give tips and tricks on how to use these services and how others use AWS security services. With this guide we have the goal of more broadly sharing this knowledge with the user community and at the same time give the ability for others outside of AWS to contribute.
Simply, we will be covering best practices for configuring AWS security services. This is NOT overall AWS security best practices. This documentation is not simply a numbered list of best practices. Instead this documentation is meant to walk you through what you need to know before deploying an AWS security service to what you should be doing after enablement and through fully operationalizing the service. Often this is done through discussing different use cases and different factors associated with specific use cases that can help in making design decisions. Following this guide you should feel confident that you have the ability configure and use an AWS security service effectively.
This guide will explain some ways to set up a VoIP ATA so that you can place calls between computers with modems (although any other pair of telephone devices will work.) When done, you will be able to:
Note that this does NOT involve setting up Asterisk!
This article, Stupid .htaccess Tricks, covers just about every .htaccess “trick” in the book, and easily is the site’s most popular resource. I hope that you find it useful, and either way thank you for visiting :)
Fill out the forms and it'll generate a .plist file for Mac OS X, suitable for autostarting not-desktop stuff. A bit like systemfail, but more annoying because it uses XML. Even gives you commands for installing the file to ~/Library/LaunchAgents/.
Generate a .vimrc file by checking and unchecking boxes to enable features.
An easy to use graphical builder for .vimrc files. Drag and drop the options you want and it generates the configuration options for you. Copy and paste into your ~/.vimrc file.
Automatic CPU speed & power optimizer for Linux based on active monitoring of laptop's battery state, CPU usage, CPU temperature and system load. Ultimately allowing you to improve battery life without making any compromises.
One of the problems with Linux today on laptops is that CPU will run in unoptimized manner which will negatively reflect on battery life. For example, CPU will run using "performance" governor with turbo boost enabled regardless if it's plugged in to power or not.
Issue can be mitigated by using tools like indicator-cpufreq or cpufreq, but these still require manual action from your side which can be daunting and cumbersome.
Using tools like TLP can help in this situation with extending battery life but it also might come with its own set of problems, like losing turbo boost. With that said, I needed a simple tool which would automatically make "cpufreq" related changes, save battery like TLP, but let Linux kernel do most of the heavy lifting. That's how auto-cpufreq was born.
Please note: auto-cpufreq aims to replace TLP in terms of functionality and after you install auto-cpufreq it's recommended to remove TLP. If both are used for same functionality, i.e: to set CPU frequencies it'll lead to unwanted results like overheating. Hence, only use both tools in tandem if you know what you're doing.
In the AUR.
Nginxpwner is a simple tool to look for common Nginx misconfigurations and vulnerabilities. Give it a list of URLs (Burp Suite is namechecked here) and turn it loose, and it'll look for misconfigurations.
Pick a keyboard that you're configuring from the drop-down. Drag and drop keys onto your keymap. Delete or add layers to the keymap. Bake a firmware .hex image to flash onto your keyboard.
Somebody put together a very helpful list of all of the PIC microcontrollers out there, their specifics, and most importantly what their configuration bits (fuses) mean and what the constants map to. For example, MCLRE=off is 0xfdf.
A utility to automate the installation, maintenance, and debugging of Asterisk/DAHDI, while integrating additional patches to provide the richest telephony experience. Useful for: Automating installation and maintenance of Asterisk, Asterisk Test Suite, Asterisk Test Framework, DAHDI Linux, DAHDI Tools, and related resources; validating Asterisk configuration; finding common syntax errors in dialplan code; finding missing audio files referenced by the Playback, BackGround, and Read applications; suggesting optimizations that can be made to dialplan code to make it more readable and efficient; generating Asterisk user documentation; debugging Asterisk configuration; generating core dumps, automating PhreakNet boilerplate dialplan installation.
Primarily supported on Debian-based Linux systems. Support has also been added for FreeBSD. Pull requests to add support for other Linux distros or BSD are welcome.
ssh-audit is a tool for ssh server and client configuration auditing. Analyzes client and server configuration, connection negotiation parameters, and cryptographic settings and outputs a security report. Has no dependencies.
Someone built a list of all of Pelican's configuration settings and variables, and what they mean. Useful as a reference to the templating language.
How to configure later-generation nVidia drivers to do their own power management now that it's supported on some models.
Applicable to Turing GPUs and Coffee Lake CPUs. Windbringer does not have the former (the GTX 1050Ti is a Pascal architecture, not a Turing architecture). Still, there are options.
Edit your ~/.gitconfig
file and add the following:
[alias]
pushall = !git remote | xargs -L1 -P0 git push --all --follow-tags
To use it in a Git repository, git pushall
after committing changes to your local copy.
Prefer using SSH over HTTP(S) for git.
In your ~/.gitconfig file:
[url "git@github.com:"]
insteadOf = http://github.com/
insteadOf = https://github.com/