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Decode base64-encoded file in one line of Perl
Another option is openssl.

Using json.tool from the shell to validate and pretty-print

List process in unkillable state D (iowait)

get the top 10 longest filenames

detect the fastest ldap server on a intranet
This command line detect ldap hosts, by mandatory dns entry, then ping them to detect response average. based on ping response average it sorts and print the faster server in first output line

add all files not under version control to repository
This should handle whitespaces well and will not get confused if your filenames have "?" in them

New files from parts of current buffer
On command mode in Vim you can save parts of the current buffer in another file. * The 'n' value represents the first line of the new file. * The 'm' value represents the last line of the new file. * newfile.txt is the newfile. The results are similar to this command in perl: $ perl -ne 'print if n..m' in.sql > out.sql

Outputs files with ascii art in the intended form.
Files containing ascii art (e.g. with .nfo extension) are typically not correctly reproduced at the command line when using cat. With iconv one can easily write a wrapper to solve this: $ #!/bin/bash $ if [ -z "$@" ]; then echo "Usage: $(basename $0) file [file] ..." $ else iconv -f437 -tutf8 "$@"; fi $ exit 0

Command line progress bar
This command tar?s up a directory and sends the output to gzip, showing a rate of 223MB/s. This may require you installing the pv command. For debian based users out there: $ sudo aptitude install pv

Convert CSV to JSON
Replace 'csv_file.csv' with your filename.


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