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Generate a random password 30 characters long
According to the gpg(1) manual: --gen-random 0|1|2 count Emit count random bytes of the given quality level 0, 1 or 2. If count is not given or zero, an endless sequence of random bytes will be emitted. If used with --armor the output will be base64 encoded. PLEASE, don't use this command unless you know what you are doing; it may remove precious entropy from the system! If your entropy pool is critical for various operations on your system, then using this command is not recommended to generate a secure password. With that said, regenerating entropy is as simple as: $ du -s / This is a quick way to generate a strong, base64 encoded, secure password of arbitrary length, using your entropy pool (example above shows a 30-character long password).

Pulls total current memory usage, including SWAP being used, by all active processes.

List the most recent dates in reverse-chronological order
bash brace expansion, sequence expression

grep -v with multiple patterns.
If you wanted to do all in one command, you could go w/ sed instead

Rename files in batch

convert uppercase filenames in current directory to lowercase
as commented by Urk...

Re-emerge all ebuilds with missing files (Gentoo Linux)
Revised approach to and3k's version, using pipes and read rather than command substitution. This does not require fiddling with IFS when paths have whitespace, and does not risk hitting command-line size limits. It's less verbose on the missing files, but it stops iterating at the first file that's missing, so it should be definitely faster. I expanded all the qlist options to be more self-describing.

preserve disk; keep OS clean
if you use disk-based swap then it can defeat the purpose of this function.

Watch the progress of 'dd'
dcfldd is a forensic version of dd that shows a process indicator by default.

Go to directory or creat it and go to
For use in scripts this command is very usefull


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