A Freelance DevOps doing container stuff and automating unhealthy amounts of software.
Need something automated or containerized? Feel free to hit me up :)
I couldn't agree more.
If I look at the bashrc I crafted over the years, I couldn't live without it.
An alias to save a few keystrokes is probably peak lazyness.
Also ssh keys for passwordl-ess logins.
So much this, not only from a lazyness perspective, but also security. Forging a ssh-key is probably much harder than brute forcing a password (if you don't get banned after too many failures :p)
bash/python scripts are an amazing way to streamline repetitive tasks, and make huge problems quite small
Absolutely, though lately I prefer go, just for the benefit of not having to install a runtime anymore.
A couple of my favorites are the ls after cd script and this charm that I came up with that I insist be deployed everywhere that my app is running (along with a sensible multicolored prompt) what="echo `whoami`@`hostname`:`pwd`"
A Freelance DevOps doing container stuff and automating unhealthy amounts of software.
Need something automated or containerized? Feel free to hit me up :)
I couldn't agree more.
If I look at the bashrc I crafted over the years, I couldn't live without it.
An alias to save a few keystrokes is probably peak lazyness.
So much this, not only from a lazyness perspective, but also security. Forging a ssh-key is probably much harder than brute forcing a password (if you don't get banned after too many failures :p)
Absolutely, though lately I prefer go, just for the benefit of not having to install a runtime anymore.
A couple of my favorites are the
ls after cd
script and this charm that I came up with that I insist be deployed everywhere that my app is running (along with a sensible multicolored prompt)what="echo `whoami`@`hostname`:`pwd`"
I am absolutely going to steal that one!
A favorite of mine, even though it's absolutely useless
It's just to create fun bash histories :D