socat
- connect anything to anything
for example
socat - tcp-connect:remote-server:12345
socat tcp-listen:12345 -
socat tcp-listen:12345 tcp-connect:remote-server:12345
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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socat
- connect anything to anything
for example
socat - tcp-connect:remote-server:12345
socat tcp-listen:12345 -
socat tcp-listen:12345 tcp-connect:remote-server:12345
Not powerful, but often useful, column -t
aligns columns in all lines. EG
$ echo {a,bb,ccc}{5,10,9999,888} | xargs -n3
a5 a10 a9999
a888 bb5 bb10
bb9999 bb888 ccc5
ccc10 ccc9999 ccc888
$ echo {a,bb,ccc}{5,10,9999,888} | xargs -n3 | column -t
a5 a10 a9999
a888 bb5 bb10
bb9999 bb888 ccc5
ccc10 ccc9999 ccc888
Control+r == search through your bash history.
I used linux for ten years before finding out about that one.
I think a lot of people don't realise that yt-dlp works for many sites, not just YouTube
I used it recently for watching a video from tiktok without having to use their god awful web UI and it was amazing
It also supports ripping playlists. Fantastic to archive a set locally...
netstat -tunl
shows all open ports on the machine to help diagnose any firewall issues.
netstat is kind of deprecated, ss
is more modern (from the iproute2 package) and uses very similar parameters.
A few that I use every day:
nmap *your_local_ip_address*
for example
nmap 192.168.1.43/24
will show you what devices are connected to the local network, and what ports are open there. really useful, for example, when you forgot the address of your printer or raspi yet again.
you can also use it to understand what ports on your computer are open from an attacker's perspective, or simply to figure out what services are running (ssh service).
probably well known at this point but rsync is incredible and I use it all the time
yes
The most positive command you'll ever use.
Run it normally and it just spams 'y' from the keyboard. But when one of the commands above is piped to it, then it will respond with 'y'. Not every command has a true -y to automate acceptance of prompts and that's what this is for.
batcat
It's like cat but better. Great for when you just want to look at the contents of a file, without loading a whole text editor.
Oh also, tldr
My procedure for learning how to use a cli command goes tldr page -> --help if the tldr fails to help me -> THEN the full manpage
zoxide. It's a fabulous cd
replacement. It builds a database as you navigate your filesystem. Once you've navigated to a directory, instead of having to type cd /super/long/directory/path
, you can type zoxide path
and it'll take you right to /super/long/directory/path
.
I have it aliased to zd
. I love it and install it on every system
You can do things like using a partial directory name and it'll jump you to the closest match in the database. So zoxide pa
would take you to /super/long/directory/path
.
And you can do partial paths. Say you've got two directories named data
in your filesystem.
One at /super/long/directory/path1/data
And the other at /super/long/directory/path2/data
You can do zoxide path2 data
and you'll go to /super/long/directory/path2/data
losetup
it's useful for dealing with virtual disk images. like a real physical hard disk, but it's a file on the computer. you can mount it, format it, and write it to a real physical disk.
it's sometimes used with virtual machines, with iso images, or when preparing a bootable disk.
kde connect
I find myself using tldr a lot since finding out about it. It's just so useful for commands that I don't use enough to commit to memory.
tmux - makes managing remote SSH sessions a breeze.
tomb - A little FOSS encryption utility that runs in the CLI. Easy, cute, effective. Tomb Utility
nano was and still is vital to me learning and using linux, I will not learn how to use vim so if the distro forces it to be default im not using it.
Why is editing text so convoluted for seemingly no reason.. also hate that vim must be used for certain files.
I'm a big fan of screen
because it will let me run long-running processes without having to stay connected via SSH, and will log all the output.
I do a lot of work on customers' servers and having a full record of everything that happened is incredibly valuable for CYA purposes.
ddccontrol... it looks complicated on the surface but it's really not and being able to control monitor brightness without fcking around in some garbage monitor OSD is a god sent and should be the standard
I don't see anyone mentions htop
. So, I will:)
Just works, could be installed in any distro. Much more friendly than top but isn't bloated with features as some other alternatives are.