Commands using wc (172)

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Which processes are listening on a specific port (e.g. port 80)
swap out "80" for your port of interest. Can use port number or named ports e.g. "http"

Find inside files two different patterns in the same line and for matched files show number of matched lines
The option -print0 for find and -0 for grep help prevent issue with weird characters or spaces in filenames. Furthermore with xargs there is no limited number of arguments that find can throw.

resolve short urls
since the most url shorteners respond with a header containing the Location: ... this works with most common shorteners

create thumbnail of pdf

Advanced python tracing
Trace python statement execution and syscalls invoked during that simultaneously

Run command in an ftp session
By putting ! in front of a command, we are able to run it from an ftp session.

List bash functions defined in .bash_profile or .bashrc

get all Google ipv4/6 subnets for a iptables firewall for example (updated version)
google has added 2 more netblocks...

Most used command

Functions to display, save and restore $IFS
You can display, save and restore the value of $IFS using conventional Bash commands, but these functions, which you can add to your ~/.bashrc file make it really easy. To display $IFS use the function ifs shown above. In the sample output, you can see that it displays the characters and their hexadecimal equivalent. This function saves it in a variable called $saveIFS: $ sifs () { saveIFS=$IFS; } Use this function to restore it $ rifs () { IFS=$saveIFS; } Add this line in your ~/.bashrc file to save a readonly copy of $IFS: $ declare -r roIFS=$IFS Use this function to restore that one to $IFS $ rrifs () { IFS=$roIFS; }


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