146 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
146 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
# Scripts
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## Description:
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Some useful scripts (for me) that can be added to $PATH :)
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## List:
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* apt-fast: Script for faster package downloading with 'axel'.
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* bash_quote: Get a random quote from http://danstonchat.com
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* droopy: Small webserver to allow upload on your machine.
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* firewall: A script shell to set some iptables rules.
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* update-dynmotd.d/: scripts to update the motd (via the /etc/update-motd.d directory).
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* flac_to_mp3: convert all flac files of a directory into mp3.
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* num_circle: Transform a number into a digit with a circle.
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* pomodoro: Print a task and a timer in a file. Try to apply Pomodoro Technique!
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* snapsend.sh: Send a ZFS snapshot to a remote host.
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* tag_photo.sh : Add an exif tag to images.
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* test_ssl3: Test if a website supportes the SSLV3 protocol.
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* veille.sh: Kill every sensitive process and files then lock the screen.
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* vimmanpager: Tiny script can be used as PAGER, it will call VIM!
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* weblink: Tiny Python script that run a small webserver to share files.
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* wol: Send WakeOnLan/magic packets to remote host.
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* zenity_generator: Script to generate zenity window.
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* zfSnap.sh: Take snapshot of a ZFS pool.
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### Apt-fast
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Speed-up APT packages downloading with 'axel' (light command line download accelerator). Juste use it like aptitude/apt/apt-get.
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```sh
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sudo apt-fast full-upgrade
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```
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### Bash_quote
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Get a random quote from http://danstonchat.com with 'lynx'.
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### Droopy
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Run a small webserver and allow user to upload files to a local directory:wq
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### Firewall
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A shell script to apply some Iptables rules.
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* Rules are automatically apply only for the UP interfaces.
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* If it's detect some softwares (eg. Apache2), Iptables rules for ports 80/443 are automatically apply.
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* Special rules allow all traffic throught a VPN:
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```sh
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firewall vpn
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```
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* If a local file exists (firewall.local) it will also apply it. For personnal rules for example.
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### Flac_to_mp3
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Convert FLAC audio files to MP3 with 'avconv'.
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* Convert a directory:
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```sh
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flac_to_mp3 /media/data/bisounours_land_v2
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```
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* Convert a file:
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```sh
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flac_to_mp3 /media/data/makarena.flac
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```
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### Num_circle
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Tiny Bash script that take a number between 0 and 20 as argument and transform it into a digit with into a circle.
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```sh
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num_circle 18
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⑱
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```
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### Pomodoro
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My implementation of the Pomodoro Technique (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomodoro_Technique).
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You can simply launch it with:
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```sh
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pomodoro "Work my french kiss"
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```
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Then the script will:
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* Create a ~/.pomodoro directory to store current task (current.task) and a summary of each week (eg week-42-2015.txt).
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* First, it's put task name and a timer (for $WORK_TIME) to the current task file.
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* Once the $WORK_TIME has been reached:
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1. Log task name and worked time to the weekly log file
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2. Toggle the sound to mark a pause
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3. It's put a pause/break message for 5/20 minutes as current task
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4. Delete the current task file
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#### Disavantages
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* Must run the script every ~30 minutes
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* …?
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#### Advantages
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* I can display my current task and it's timer wherever i want (tmux, herbstluftwm, …)
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* Written to work with /bin/sh
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## rename_meurice_podcast
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I download some podcast from a RSS flux (http://www.franceinter.fr/emission-le-moment-meurice) but i don't like :
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* the filename
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* the title tag
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So it's a tiny script to correct this. I get the date and the "real" title from the "title" tag and :
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* The filename become "$date_$realtitle.mp3"
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* The title tag become "$date_$realtitle"
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"Le moment Meurice" : http://www.franceinter.fr/emission-le-moment-meurice
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The script manage both a directory and a file as first argument.
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## tag_photo.sh
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The main goal is to have a solution to know the "subject" of a picture without to open it and no really good name. It can happen if you delete your pictures and get it back with `photorec` or `foremost`. For this i use the Exif metadata.
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You can simply launch the script with your pictures directory :
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``` sh
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tag_photo.sh /tmp/Images
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```
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Then the script will :
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* List all subdirectories.
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* Get the basename of each directory and add it as the value of the Exif "description" tag for each images.
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To see the result, you can display the tags "File Name" and "Description" of you images :
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```sh
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find /tmp/Images -type f -iregex '.*\.\(jpg\|gif\|png\|jpeg\)$' -exec exiftool {} -FileName -Description \;
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```
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## Test_ssl3
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Redhat's script to test if an LDAP server support SSLv3.
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You could also use a nmap command:
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```sh
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nmap --script ssl-enum-ciphers -p 443 ldap.tld.org | grep "SSLv3: No supported ciphers found"
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```
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## Weblink
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Python program that run a small webserver (BaseHTTPServer) to easily share some files.
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* eg:
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```sh
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weblink /tmp/goodbye.file
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HTTP server running at http://localhost:8888/
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^C^C received, shutting down server
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```
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* With a password:
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```sh
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weblink --pass=die /tmp/kitty.file
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HTTP server running at http://localhost:8888/die
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```
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