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Will do the merge, but only apply changes to working copy and index; won't commit.
Format a password file for John the Ripper from Cisco configs (Level 5)
Pulled from http://www.openwall.com/lists/john-users/2006/05/14/8
For 'bash'
function ip4rev() { echo $@ | sed 's/^\([0-9]*\)\.\([0-9]*\)\.\([0-9]*\)\.\([0-9]*\)/\4.\3.\2.\1/'; }
Create a tgz archive of all the files containing local changes relative to a subversion repository.
Add the '-q' option to only include files under version control:
svn st -q | cut -c 8- | sed 's/^/\"/;s/$/\"/' | xargs tar -czvf ../backup.tgz
Useful if you are not able to commit yet but want to create a quick backup of your work. Of course if you find yourself needing this it's probably a sign you should be using a branch, patches or distributed version control (git, mercurial, etc..)
This is the setup I'm using for my largest project. It gives 357 lines per page (per side), which makes it fairly easy to carry around a significant amount of code on a few sheets of paper. Try it.
(I stick to the 80 column convention in my coding. For wider code, you'll have to adjust this.)
depends on libjpeg-progs
But how to display path to found comments?
`split -b 1k file` splits files into 1k chunks. Rejoin them with `cat x* > file`.
Optionally, one can use {1..50} instead of seq. E.g. for i in {1..50} ; do echo Iteration $i ; done
Similarly, if you want to print from 10 to the end of line you can use: sed -n '10,$p' filename
This is especially useful if you are dealing with a large file. Sometimes you just want to extract a sample without opening the entire file.
Credit goes to wbx & robert at the comments section of http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/view/348/get-line1000-from-text.#comment
This command would be useful when it is desirable to list only the directories. 'egrep' chooses only the lines that begin with 'd'.