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Fdiff will run the command given by the first argument against the input files given as the second and third arguments, and diff the results.
It will use 'diff' as the default diff program, but this can be changed by setting $DIFFCMD, e.g.
$ export DIFFCMD=vimdiff;
$ fdiff zcat 0716_0020005.raw.gz 0716_0030005.raw.gz
...
This function will work under bash, but requires the use of command substitution, which is not available under a strict ANSI shell.
Run as root. Path may vary depending on laptop model and video card (this was tested on an Acer laptop with ATI HD3200 video).
$ cat /proc/acpi/video/VGA/LCD/brightness
to discover the possible values for your display.
If you want to create fast a very big file for testing purposes and you do not care about its content, then you can use this command to create a file of arbitrary size within less than a second. Content of file will be all zero bytes.
The trick is that the content is just not written to the disk, instead the space for it is somehow reserved on operating system level and file system level. It would be filled when first accessed/written (not sure about the mechanism that lies below, but it makes the file creation super fast).
Instead of '1G' as in the example, you could use other modifiers like 200K for kilobytes (1024 bytes), 500M for megabytes (1024 * 1024 bytes), 20G for Gigabytes (1024*1024*1024 bytes), 30T for Terabytes (1024^4 bytes). Also P for Penta, etc...
Command tested under Linux.
When your ssh session hanged (probably due to some network issues) you can "kill" it by hitting those 3 keys instead of closing the entire terminal.
swap out "80" for your port of interest. Can use port number or named ports e.g. "http"
Replace 12/31/1970 with your birth date.
You need to apt-get install python-sqlparse. This command simply formats a sql query and prints it out. It is very useful when you want to move a sql query from commandline to a shell script. Everything is done locally, so you don't need to worry about copying sql query to external websites.