A while ago I made a tiny function in my ~/.zshrc to download a video from the link in my clipboard. I use this nearly every day to share videos with people without forcing them to watch it on whatever site I found it. What’s a script/alias that you use a lot?

# Download clipboard to tmp with yt-dlp
tmpv() {
  cd /tmp/ && yt-dlp "$(wl-paste)"
}
  • djblw@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    This tmux wrapper is remarkably convenient:

    Usage:

    # Usage: t [session-name]
    #
    # With no arguments:
    #   Lists existing tmux sessions, or prints "[No sessions]" if none exist.
    #
    # With a session name:
    #   Attempts to attach to the named tmux session.
    #   If the session does not exist, creates a new session with that name.
    #
    # Examples:
    #   t            # Lists all tmux sessions
    #   t dev        # Attaches to "dev" session or creates it if it doesn't exist
    
    function t {
    	if [[ -z $1 ]]; then
    		tmux ls 2> /dev/null || echo "[No sessions]"
    	else
    		tmux attach -t $@ 2> /dev/null
    		if [[ $? -ne 0 ]]; then
    			tmux new -s $@
    		fi
    	fi
    }
    
  • SuperiorOne@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    jmpd(jump directory): fuzzy finds and opens directory with fzf

    # fish shell
    function jmpd
        set _selection $(fzf --walker=dir);
        if test -n "$_selection"
            cd "$_selection";
        end
    end
    
  • jsomae@lemmy.ml
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    4 hours ago

    I wrote a script called please. You input please followed by any other command (e.g. please git clone, please wget blahblah) and a robotic voice will say “affirmative,” then the command will run, and when it completes, the robotic voice reads out the exit code (e.g. “completed successfully” or “failed with status 1” etc.)

    This is useful for when you have a command that takes a long time and you want to be alerted when it’s finished. And it’s a gentleman.

  • MangoCats@feddit.it
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    3 hours ago

    I have a collection of about 8 machines around the house (a lot of Raspberry Pi) that I ssh around to from various points.

    I have setup scripts named: ssp1 ssp2 ssba ss2p etc. to ssh into the various machines, and of course shared public ssh keys among them to skip the password prompt. So, yes, once you are “in” one machine in my network, if you know this, you are “in” all of them, but… it’s bloody convenient.

    • randy@lemmy.ca
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      3 hours ago

      I used to have scripts like that, but eventually switched to ssh aliases. You can set up an alias for each machine in ~/.ssh/config with lines like this:

      Host p1
          HostName 192.168.1.123
          Port 22
          User pi
      

      Then access with ssh p1. Slightly more typing, but avoids adding more commands to your $PATH. Also has the benefit of letting you use the same alias with other ssh-related commands like sftp.

  • data1701d (He/Him)@startrek.website
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    5 hours ago

    I use Clevis to auto-unlock my encrypted root partition with my TPM; this means when my boot partition is updated (E.G a kernel update), I have to update the PCR register values in my TPM. I do it with my little script /usr/bin/update_pcr:

    #!/bin/bash
    clevis luks regen -d /dev/nvme1n1p3 -s 1 tpm2
    

    I run it with sudo and this handles it for me. The only issue is I can’t regenerate the binding immediately after the update; I have to reboot, manually enter my password to decrypt the drive, and then do it.

    Now, if I were really fancy and could get it to correctly update the TPM binding immediately after the update, I would have something like an apt package shim with a hook that does it seamlessly. Honestly, I’m surprised that distributions haven’t developed robust support for this; the technology is clearly available (I’m using it), but no one seems to have made a user-friendly way for the common user to have TPM encryption in the installer.

    • notfromhere@lemmy.ml
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      40 minutes ago

      Is clevis using an attestation server or is it all on a single machine? I’m interested in getting this set up but the noted lack of batteries included for this in the common distros makes it a somewhat tall order.

  • JTskulk@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Hey OP, consider using $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR instead of /tmp. It’s now the more proper place for these kinds of things to avoid permission issues, although I’m sure you’re on a single user system like most people. I have clipboard actions set to download with yt-dlp :)

    My favorite aliases are:

    alias dff='findmnt -D -t nosquashfs,notmpfs,nodevtmpfs,nofuse.portal,nocifs,nofuse.kio-fuse'

    alias lt='ls -t | less'

  • kittenroar@beehaw.org
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    7 hours ago

    here we go:

    dedup:

    #!/usr/bin/awk -f
    !x[$0]++
    

    this removes duplicate lines, preserving line order

    iter:

    #!/usr/bin/bash
    if [[ "${@}" =~ /$ ]]; then
        xargs -rd '\n' -I {} "${@}"{}
    else
        xargs -rd '\n' -I {} "${@}" {}
    fi
    

    This executes a command for each line. It can also be used to compare two directories, ie:

    du -sh * > sizes; ls | iter du -sh ../kittens/ > sizes2
    

    fadeout:

    #!/bin/bash
    # I use this to fade out layered brown noise that I play at a volume of 130%
    # This takes about 2 minutes to run, and the volume is at zero several seconds before it's done.
    # ################
    # DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is needed so that playerctl can find the dbus to use MPRIS so it can control mpv
    export DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="unix:path=/run/user/1000/bus"
    # ################
    for i in {130..0}
    do
        volume=$(echo "scale=3;$i/100" | bc)
        sleep 2.3
        playerctl --player=mpv volume $volume
    done
    

    lbn:

    #!/bin/bash
    #lbn_pid=$(cat ~/.local/state/lbn.pid)
    if pgrep -fl layered_brown
    then
    	pkill -f layered_brown
    else
    	export DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS="unix:path=/run/user/1000/bus"
    	mpv -ao pulse ~/layered_brown_noise.mp3 >>lbn.log 2>&1 &
    	sleep 3
    	playerctl -p mpv volume 1.3 >>lbn.log 2>&1 &
    fi
    

    This plays “layered brown noise” by crysknife. It’s a great sleep aid.

    here are some aliases:

    alias m='mpc random off; mpc clear'
    alias mpcc='ncmpcpp'
    alias thesaurus='dict -d moby-thesaurus'
    alias wtf='dict -d vera'
    alias tvplayer='mpv -fs --geometry=768x1366+1366+0'
    
  • thingsiplay@beehaw.org
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    6 hours ago

    Here is on that I actually don’t use, but want to use it in scripts. It is meant to be used by piping it. It’s simple branch with user interaction. I don’t even know if there is a standard program doing exactly that already.

    # usage: yesno [prompt]
    # example:
    #   yesno && echo yes
    #   yesno Continue? && echo yes || echo no
    yesno() {
        local prompt
        local answer
        if [[ "${#}" -gt 0 ]]; then
            prompt="${*} "
        fi
        read -rp "${prompt}[y/n]: " answer
        case "${answer}" in
        [Yy0]*) return 0 ;;
        [Nn1]*) return 1 ;;
        *) return 2 ;;
        esac
    }
    
  • hallettj@leminal.space
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    10 hours ago

    One of favorites cds to the root of a project directory from a subdirectory,

    # Changes to top-level directory of git repository.
    alias gtop="cd \$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)"
    
  • spv.sh@lemmy.spv.sh
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    8 hours ago
    alias bat="batcat"
    alias msc="ncmpcpp"
    alias xcp="xclip -selection clipboard"
    alias wgq="sudo wg-quick"
    

    also a couple to easily power on/off my 4g modem

  • kibiz0r@midwest.social
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    12 hours ago

    I often want to know the status code of a curl request, but I don’t want that extra information to mess with the response body that it prints to stdout.

    What to do?

    Render an image instead, of course!

    curlcat takes the same params as curl, but it uses iTerm2’s imgcat tool to draw an “HTTP Cat” of the status code.

    It even sends the image to stderr instead of stdout, so you can still pipe curlcat to jq or something.

    #!/usr/bin/env zsh
    
    stdoutfile=$( mktemp )
    curl -sw "\n%{http_code}" $@ > $stdoutfile
    exitcode=$?
    
    if [[ $exitcode == 0 ]]; then
      statuscode=$( cat $stdoutfile | tail -1 )
    
      if [[ ! -f $HOME/.httpcat$statuscode ]]; then
        curl -so $HOME/.httpcat$statuscode https://http.cat/$statuscode
      fi
    
      imgcat $HOME/.httpcat$statuscode 1>&2
    fi
    
    cat $stdoutfile | ghead -n -1
    
    exit $exitcode
    

    Note: This is macOS-specific, as written, but as long as your terminal supports images, you should be able to adapt it just fine.