With zsh.
This command list all CPU technical infos. Show Sample Output
Hides some entries from listing.
Works only if modules are installed "the right way"
Show active calls as the happen on an Asterisk server. Note that the Asterisk command (in single quotes) is formatted for Asterisk 1.6. Use the -n flag on the watch command to modify the refresh period (in seconds - default is 2 seconds). Show Sample Output
Place this in your .bash_profile and you can use it two different ways. If you issue 'h' on its own, then it acts like the history command. If you issue:
h cd
Then it will display all the history with the word 'cd'
Allows you to connect to an SMTP server over TLS, which is useful for debugging SMTP sessions. (Much like telnet to 25/tcp). Once connected you can manually issue SMTP commands in the clear (e.g. EHLO) Show Sample Output
This allows the output to be sorted from largest to smallest in human readable format.
I've used technicalpickles command a lot, but this one handles whitespaces in filenames. I'm sure you want to create an alias for it :) Show Sample Output
order the files by modification (thanks stanishjohnd) time, one file per output line and filter first 10
This command is much quicker than the alternative of "sort | uniq -c | sort -n". Show Sample Output
Shows all block devices in a tree with descruptions of what they are.
swap out "80" for your port of interest. Can use port number or named ports e.g. "http"
say, someone has aliased ls to 'ls --color=always' and you want to temporarily override the alias (it does not override functions) Show Sample Output
useful to use after with the --load-cookies option of wget
Run this before you run a command in order to see what the command does as it starts. The -c flag is useful here as the PID is unknown before startup. All config files, libraries, logs, ports, etc used by the command as it starts up, (and shuts down) will be captured at 1s intervals and written to a file. Useful for debugging etc. Show Sample Output
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