Commands using cat (514)

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rsync directory tree including only files that match a certain find result.
'-mtime -10' syncs only files newer 10 days (-mtime is just one example, use whatever find expressions you need) printf %P: File's name with the name of the command line argument under which it was found removed. this way, you can use any src directory, no need to cd into your src directory first. using \\0 in printf and a corresponding --from0 in rsync ensures that even filenames with newline characters work (thanks syssyphus for #3808). both, #1481 and #3808 just work if you either copy the current directory (.) , or the filesystem root (/), otherwise the output from find and the source dir from rsync just don't match. #7685 works with an arbitrary source directory.

Find usb device in realtime
Using this command you can track a moment when usb device was attached.

password recovery on debian
Appended to grub boot parameters ... gives shell ... password recovery

Get your internal IP address and nothing but your internal IP address
Will return your internal IP address.

Generate password

Calculate N!
Same as the seq/bc solution but without bc.

Show log message including which files changed for a given commit in git.

Perl oneliner to print access rights in octal format
This prints file access rights in octal - useful when "stat" is unavailable.

check open ports without netstat or lsof

Download an entire ftp directory using wget
If the username includes an @ you can use this one: wget -r --user=username_here --password=pass_here ftp://ftp.example.com


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