busybox
marcel
busybox | marcel | |
---|---|---|
14 | 13 | |
375 | 332 | |
1.9% | - | |
7.7 | 9.3 | |
3 days ago | 18 days ago | |
Dockerfile | Python | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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busybox
- The Awk Programming Language, Second Edition
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This would have made my life so much easier in the beginning....
A majority of routers are already based on the Linux kernel. Many are just BusyBox. The most common Linux firewalls are iptables and nftables. With the latter being the most popular one due to being around longer. They are really fine grained and powerful.
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kubectl run --command vs -- arguments
As Busybox DockerFile does not contain any EntryPoint(https://github.com/docker-library/busybox/blob/master/musl/Dockerfile), so arguments specified in the kubectl command will only be used, so the command will look like:
- Emacs standing alone on a Linux Kernel
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So Im working on making my own OS from scratch. Im using a linux based os for reverse engineering but I need help in understanding how to use the tools that are in rar/zip files. If anyone can direct me to some tutorials or resources to read that would be a big help.
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/arm64/booting.rst This was my guiding light for a project a while back. It describes what Linux expects "time zero" looks like for the system; whatever operating system is going to boot needs that kind of contract between the boot environment and its own entry point. You can develop a lightweight linux-based OS with that document and a package like https://busybox.net/
- The amount of times I have accidentally done this...
- BusyBox 1.36.0
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MIT
UUTILS, musl libc, BusyBox , etc.
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Do you think Linux will become more supported and eventually be able to play every game that windows can? If so, how far in the future?
For libc, we have musl as an alternate implementation. For most coreutils, we have busybox and the BSD coreutils. For desktop environments, you can use something like xfce.
marcel
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Generating graphs from the marcel command line
Marcel is one of the pipe-objects-instead-of-strings shells (https://marceltheshell.org).
Here's a blog post showing how to use marcel to generate graphs directly from the command line.
https://www.marceltheshell.org/post/generating-graphs-from-t...
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Xonsh: Python-powered, cross-platform, Unix-gazing shell
Check out marcel (https://marceltheshell.org). It's yet another pipe-objects-instead-of-strings shell (like nushell). Unlike nushell, you pipe Python values. Marcel has no sublanguages (like awk, sed, ...). Instead, when logic is needed, you write Python code, delimited by parens. So:
(USER)
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Marcel the Shell
It is a useful correction. This project predates the release of the movie: https://github.com/geophile/marcel/commit/bb6adacbb6b3a683ce...
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Object SHell
Check out marcel: https://marceltheshell.org, and https://github.com/geophile/marcel. Both marcel and nushell start with the idea of piping structured data instead of strings, which is incredibly powerful. (This also applies to osh. I am the author of osh and marcel.)
Marcel (and osh) rely on Python types and language where typical shells have sublanguages. So instead of awk or find and their sublanguages, you just use Python. Instead of piping strings, you pipe streams of Python values.
Marcel lets you use Python on the commmand line. It also has an API which allows you to use shell-like commands inside of Python programs.
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Shshsh is a bridge connects Python and shell
I wrote a shell, marcel, that pipes Python values instead of strings: https://marceltheshell.org.
It also does the inverse, allowing you to run marcel commands from Python, e.g. https://www.marceltheshell.org/scripting-1
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The Case for Nushell
Check out my entry, marcel: https://marceltheshell.org.
E.g., find the newest vlc instance and kill it (a command that an acquaintance needs frequently, for some reason):
ps | select (p: p.name == 'vlc') | sort (p: p.create_time) | tail 1 | (p: p.signal(9))
- The Awk Programming Language, Second Edition
What are some alternatives?
hush - Hush is a unix shell based on the Lua programming language
awk-vm - A virtual machine and assembler written in AWK.
u-boot - "Das U-Boot" Source Tree
asm - scriptable runtime-writable livecd / hardware wrangler
toybox - toybox
busybox-w32 - WIN32 native port of BusyBox.
buildroot - Buildroot, making embedded Linux easy. Note that this is not the official repository, but only a mirror. The official Git repository is at http://git.buildroot.net/buildroot/. Do not open issues or file pull requests here.
iterable-subprocess - Python context manager to communicate with a subprocess using iterables: for when data is too big to fit in memory and has to be streamed
cage - A Wayland kiosk
ioccc-obfuscated-c-contest - IOCCC International Obfuscated C code contest entries
barebox - The barebox bootloader - Mirror of ssh://[email protected]/barebox
carbon - :black_heart: Create and share beautiful images of your source code