Check These Out
Maybe this will help you to monitor your load balancers or reverse proxies if you happen to use them. This is useful to discover TIME OUTS and this will let you know if one or more of your application servers is not connected by checking.
This command converts filenames with embedded spaces in the current directory replacing spaces with the underscore ("_") character.
Fetches the world population JSON data from the US census and parses it uses jshon
Same effect, only shell commands.
Tested with NTFS and found on this site:
http://forensicir.blogspot.com/2008/01/virtualbox-and-forensics-tools.html
The first 32256 bytes is the MBR
Replace all instances of "A" with "B" in file "source" saved as file "destination".
!! IF A/B is multi-byte, then separate bytes with spaces like so: "s/20\ 0A/00/g".
You must have PHP 5.4.0 or later to be able to run the built in server.
This web server is designed for developmental purposes only, and should not be used in production.
URI requests are served from the current working directory where PHP was started, unless the -t option is used to specify an explicit document root. If a URI request does not specify a file, then either index.php or index.html in the given directory are returned. If neither file exists, then a 404 response code is returned.
If a PHP file is given on the command line when the web server is started it is treated as a "router" script. The script is run at the start of each HTTP request. If this script returns FALSE, then the requested resource is returned as-is. Otherwise the script's output is returned to the browser.
Standard MIME types are returned for files with extensions: .css, .gif, .htm, .html, .jpe, .jpeg, .jpg, .js, .png, .svg, and .txt. The .htm and .svg extensions are recognized from PHP 5.4.4 onwards.
More information here: http://php.net/manual/en/features.commandline.webserver.php
I prefer the ip command to ifconfig as ifconfig is supposedly going to be deprecated. Certain IP address aliases can only be seen with the ip command (such as the ones applied by RHCS).
Converts any number of seconds into days, hours, minutes and seconds.
sec2dhms() {
declare -i SS="$1"
D=$(( SS / 86400 ))
H=$(( SS % 86400 / 3600 ))
M=$(( SS % 3600 / 60 ))
S=$(( SS % 60 ))
[ "$D" -gt 0 ] && echo -n "${D}:"
[ "$H" -gt 0 ] && printf "%02g:" "$H"
printf "%02g:%02g\n" "$M" "$S"
}
Shows all block devices in a tree with descruptions of what they are.