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Linux clear restrictions of a user's password
Command that clears the expiration restrictions of a user's password

Remove all files but one starting with a letter(s)
Remove everything in current directory except files starting with "ca".

list files recursively by size

Watch the size of a directory using figlet
You can substitute /home/$USER with any path you like.

Check if a string is into a variable
Returns true (0) if the string is into $var, or false (1) if not.

Use colordiff in side-by-side mode, and with automatic column widths.
Barely worth posting because it is so simple, but I use it literally all the time. I was always frustrated by the limitations that a non-gui environment imposes on diff'ing files. This fixes some of those limitations by colourising the output (you'll have to install colordiff, but it is just a wrapper for diff itself), using side-by-side mode for clearer presentation, and of course, the -W parameter, using tput to automatically insert you terminal width. Note that the double quotes aren't necessary if typed into terminal as-is. I included them for safety sake,

Create a mirror of a local folder, on a remote server
Create a exact mirror of the local folder "/root/files", on remote server 'remote_server' using SSH command (listening on port 22) (all files & folders on destination server/folder will be deleted)

get the ascii number with bash builtin printf

Print a monthly calendar with today's date highlighted
The cal command is handy, but sometimes you want to quickly see today's date highlighted. That's why I came up with this quick command. Much like http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/view/1342/show-this-months-calendar-with-todays-date-highlighted but cleaner and more succinct.

Remove space and/or tab characters at the end of line
The command removes all space and/or tabulation characters preceding new line


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