On Linux substitute pbpaste with `xsel --clipboard --output` or `xclip -selection clipboard -o` (untested)
This script can be used to download enclosed files from a RSS feed. For example, it can be used to download mp3 files from a podcasts RSS feed. Show Sample Output
This lists the number of ogg/mp3/wav/flac files in each subdirectory of the current directory. The output can be sorted by piping it into "sort -n". Show Sample Output
Getting current wallpaper on nautilus file-managers
Maps block devices to the PCIe nodes
Caution: distructive overwrite of filenames Useful for concatenating pdfs in date order using pdftk
Google Cloud SDK comes with a package manager `gcloud components` but it needs a bit of `sed` to work. Modify the "^| Not" bit to change the package selection. (The gcloud --format option is currently broken) Show Sample Output
Find all books on my systems and move them into folder. The -0 switches are to handle spaces etc. in the filenames. Why would you need this? Locate uses an index, so it's super quick, and xargs is more elegant than a for loop.
Removes directories which are less than 1028KB total. This works for systems where blank directories are 4KB. If a directory contains 1 MB (1024KB) or less, it will remove the directory using a path relative to the directory where the command was initially executed (safer than some other options I found).
Adjust the 1028 value for your needs.
It would be helpful to test the results before proceeding with the removal. Simply run all but the last two commands to see a list of what will be removed:
du | awk '{if($1<1028)print;}' | cut -d $'\t' -f 2-
If you're unsure what size a blank folder is, test it like this:
mkdir test; du test; rmdir test
Works for Debian an sons distros. With a bad internet connection sometime I download the updateable packages in another place, but I can't be there all time takes upgrade every packages... so I execute this for update only packages that are in Debian's apt cache. Using the 'sudo bash -c' for no asking every time apt-get need sudo permition.
Just added a little url encoding with sed - urls with spaces don't work well - this also works against instead of enclosure and adds a sample to show that you can filter against links at a certain domain Show Sample Output
-name : base of filename -o : 'or' '*.c' : avoiding "paths must precede expression" error message -type f : only find file type --color: hightlight specific word with color -E : extended regexp Show Sample Output
Stat -c %n #list files. A find command is also useful Tee #use stdout, but reseend to next comand. Can be other Tee ad infinitum xargs #use de name of files to execute md5 and sha diggest.
Converts all the png files in a directory to a bunch of gifs - changing only the file extension. Converts them in parallel - simply change the '4' to match the number of CPUs you have, or the number you want to dedicate to the conversion process.
Compare the content of the files in the current directory with files of the same name in the duplicate directory.
Pop Quiz: You have a duplicate of a directory with files of the same name that might differ. What do you do?
You could use diff to compare the directories, but that's boring and it isn't as clever as find -print0 with xargs.
Note: You must omit stderr redirect 2>/dev/null to see the list of missing files from DUPDIR, if any.
Hint: Redirect stderr to a new file to produce a more readable list of files that are missing from DUPDIR.
Warning: This doesn't tell you if DUPDIR contains files not found in the current directory so don't delete DUPDIR.
Show Sample Output
Use xargs command to make one line.
an alternative to this one with only 2 processes https://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/view/25844/quickly-add-a-new-user-to-all-groups-the-default-user-is-in
Useful for download mulitple files Show Sample Output
xargs deals badly with special characters (such as space, ' and "). To see the problem try this: touch important_file touch 'not important_file' ls not* | xargs rm Parallel https://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/parallel/ does not have this problem.
You WILL have problems if the files have the same name.
Use cases: consolidate music library and unify photos (especially if your camera separates images by dates).
After running the command and verifying if there was no name issues, you can use
ls -d */ | sed -e 's/^/\"/g' -e 's/$/\"/g' | xargs rm -r
to remove now empty subdirectories.
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