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Count lines in a file with grep
Returns the number of lines in a file, emulates "wc -l" behavior with grep.

Flush and then immediately start watching a file
This is useful for keeping an eye on an error log while developing. The !^ pulls the first arg from the previous command (which needs to be run in a sub-shell for this shortcut to work).

List all authors of a particular git project
Gets the authors, sorts by number of commits (as a vague way of estimating how much of the project is their work, i.e. the higher in the list, the more they've done) and then outputs the results.

dd with progress bar
piping through 'pv' shows a simple progress/speed bar for dd. This is a replacement for my otherwise favorite 'while :;do killall -USR1 dd;sleep 1;done'

Kill all processes belonging to a user

Rename files in batch

Fibonacci numbers with awk
Another combination of seq and awk. Not very efficient, but sufficiently quick.

Advanced python tracing
Trace python statement execution and syscalls invoked during that simultaneously

Recursively grep for string and format output for vi(m)
This is a big time saver for me. I often grep source code and need to edit the findings. A single highlight of the mouse and middle mouse click (in gnome terminal) and I'm editing the exact line I just found. The color highlighting helps interpret the data.

list any Linux files without users or groups
suspicious/anomalous ownership may indicate system breach; should return no results


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