zaterdag 13 april 2019

Deletion of make install files

Deletion of make install files

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1439950/whats-the-opposite-of-make-install-i-e-how-do-you-uninstall-a-li

sudo make uninstall

In a Debian based system, instead of (or after*) doing make install you can run sudo checkinstall to make a .deb file that gets automatically installed. You can then remove it using the system package manager (e.g. apt/synaptic/aptitude/dpkg). Checkinstall also supports creating other types of package, e.g. RPM.

zondag 7 april 2019

Pause subscription

You can pause a subscription by canceling your subscription and then opt for pausing your subscription.

zondag 17 maart 2019

How to make ssh key


# Steps to take to make sshkeys for github
1. ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -f github_file -C "example"
2. create a passphrase
3. eval "$(ssh-agent -s)" # runs ssh-agent in the background
4. add the public key to your github account
5. ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa # take the path of the private key
6. git remote set-url origin git@github.com:username/your-repository.git # use clone SSH of Gitlab and Github

zaterdag 16 februari 2019

vrijdag 1 februari 2019

SSH Key - Still asking for password and passphrase

Add Identity without Keychain

There may be times in which you don't want the passphrase stored in the keychain, but don't want to have to enter the passphrase over and over again.
You can do that like this:
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa 
This will ask you for the passphrase, enter it and it will not ask again until you restart.

Add Identity Using Keychain

As @dennis points out in the comments, to persist the passphrase through restarts by storing it in your keychain, you can use the -K option (-k for Ubuntu) when adding the identity like this:
ssh-add -K ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Once again, this will ask you for the passphrase, enter it and this time it will never ask again for this identity.

zondag 23 december 2018

PATH


You can skip the step of manually loading the library by letting Linux do it for you when you log in automatically.

Run below commands

echo ". $HOME/my_functions.lib" >> ~/.bashrc
echo ". $HOME/my_functions.lib" >> ~/.bash_profile
source ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bash_profile
That's it. You can directly execute your function from the command line without doing anything.

Enlarging Libreoffice window completely with command

 You can open the LibreOffice window completely by pressing the CTRL+Shift+J keys together.