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In order to do that, first you need to save a cookie file with your account info. These commands do it (maybe you need to create the '.cookies' dir before). Also, you need to check the "Direct downloads" option on the Premium Zone >> Settings tab.
You need to do this once (as long you maintain the file or your Rapidshare Premium account).
My key is the anonymous one, is good for 50 post an hour with a maximun number of uploads a day, probably will run out, if that happend you can get a free key at the site.
Running this code will execute dd in the background, and you'll grab the process ID with '$!' and assign it to the 'pid' variable. Now, you can watch the progress with the following:
$ while true; do kill -USR1 $pid && sleep 1 && clear; done
The important thing to grasp here isn't the filename or location of your input or output, or even the block size for that matter, but the fact that you can keep an eye on 'dd' as it's running to see where you are at during its execution.
or
echo '127.0.0.1 facebook.com' | sudo tee -a /etc/hosts
Do not execute this command if you don't know what you are doing.
Lists revisions in a Subversion repository with a timestamp that doesn't follow the revision numbering order. If everything is OK, nothing is displayed.
Will stop all running containers, then remove all containers
**This isn't for selectively handling containers, it removes everything**
Determines the flavor of a shared library by looking at the addresses of its exposed functions and seeing if they are 16 bytes or 8 bytes long. The command is written so the library you are querying is passed to a variable up font -- it would be simple to convert this to a bash function or script using this format.
Enter your ssh public key in the remote end for future key-based authentication. Just type your password one last time. The next time you should be able to login with the public key. If you don't have a key, generate one with ssh-keygen.
Requires Bourne-compatible shell in the remote end.
This does the same thing as many of the 'grep' based alternatives but allows a more finite control over the output. For example if you only wanted the process ID you could change the command:
$ ps -ef | awk '/mingetty/ && !/awk/ {print $2}'
If you wanted to kill the returned PID's:
$ ps -ef | awk '/mingetty/ && !/awk/ {print $2}' | xargs -i kill {}