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ls not pattern
I've been looking for a way to do this for a while, get a not pattern for shell globs. This works, I'm using to grab logs from a remote server via scp.

The command used by applications in OS X to determine whether a plist is "good". from Ed Marczak.
The check an entire folder is a one-liner: plutil -lint * | grep -v OK$ from Ed Marczak

Decode a MIME message
will decode a mime message. usefull when you receive some email and file attachment that cant be read.

Find broken symlinks in the current directory and its subdirectories.
This is best run as root to avoid permission denials that can produce false positives. Obviously you can specify a directory in the usual way: $ find -L dirname -type l I can't remember where I read about this or who deserves the credit for it. The find(1) manual page hints strongly toward it, however.

Which processes are listening on a specific port (e.g. port 80)
swap out "80" for your port of interest. Can use port number or named ports e.g. "http"

invoke MATLAB functions from command line
`-r script.m` also possible

Rsync two directories with filtered extensions

pid of manually selecting window

Extract all 404 errors from your apache accesslog (prefix lines by occurrences number)

Show complete URL in netstat output
This takes all of the tab spaces, and uses column to put them into the appropriately sized table.


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