git-fuzzy
ghidra
git-fuzzy | ghidra | |
---|---|---|
6 | 126 | |
2,282 | 47,857 | |
- | 1.9% | |
4.9 | 10.0 | |
6 months ago | 3 days ago | |
Shell | Java | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
git-fuzzy
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Ask HN: Best thing you've made in CLI
Mine: https://github.com/bigH/git-fuzzy
Bonus points if you have something you're currently working on.
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Lazygit: Simple terminal UI for Git commands
I found lazygit after building something of my own thay solves some of these problems for me - git-fuzzy [0].
I'd like to share some of my thoughts about the comparison.
lazygit is a TUI for git which can behave in a standalone fashion. It's also designed to be quick and easy to use to perform quite advanced actions but ones that a seasoned git user may really want when working with git history. Since I'm already a seasoned git user the main feature I like about lazygit is the ability to surgically work with patches.
All that said, a majority of my workflow is tightly bound to git-fuzzy. I use its CLI composability quite heavily in combination with aliases and functions - git-fuzzy excels in this particular way (`git fuzzy log $(git fuzzy branch)` which I invoke using `gl $(gb)` by way of aliases). git-fuzzy is better for working with git-log or git-reflog and interactively searching them.
I personally quite like what I made (for myself), though I wish there was a world where I could quickly and easily mash both of these projects together.
[0] https://github.com/bigH/git-fuzzy
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Ask HN: Most interesting tech you built for just yourself?
I'm slightly embarrassed that in terms of building personally relevant things, my proudest (digital) work is always shell scripts I use daily. Most of my personal projects are non-technical meat-space things like building with wood and the like. Here's some that I've open-sourced:
- A git interface using fzf that works pretty nicely and is very composable. https://github.com/bigH/git-fuzzy
- An interactive evaluator, perfect for interactive `sed`, `grep`, `jq`, etc. If properly configured, it'll keep history per command or using whatever key you give it. I find myself using it often with `jq`. https://github.com/bigH/interactively
There are many other shell functions/scripts that are interesting from my `dotfiles`. Particularly interesting snippets for anyone who wants them:
- A recursize `which` that follows symlinks and stops at a real file. https://github.com/bigH/dotfiles/blob/3d48792b4e910d2fc82504...
- A `watch` alternative that runs in the current shell. https://github.com/bigH/dotfiles/blob/3d48792b4e910d2fc82504...
- Ask HN: Have you created programs for only your personal use?
- Show HN: Surprising interactive `git log` search
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Zsh Plugins Commit TOP
git-fuzzy : ⌛ - A CLI interface to git that relies heavily on fzf.
ghidra
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TryHackMe- Compiled
Let's see what our beloved software reverse engineering framework Ghidra has to show.
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OpenAI is working with the US military now
Define war machinery. Contributing to Ghidra?
https://github.com/NationalSecurityAgency/ghidra
- Ghidra 11.0 Released
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Dogbolt Decompiler Explorer
Binary Ninja likewise is empty and keeps up just fine as well. It's not a coincidence that the two commercial products that are funding it are both confident enough to put their stuff online like this.
And it's no conspiracy theory or intentional sandbagging, you can see the implementation: https://github.com/decompiler-explorer/decompiler-explorer
and if anyone can improve the other tools performance we'd be happy to accept it. We reached out to the Ghidra devs: https://github.com/NationalSecurityAgency/ghidra/issues/5228 but they didn't have any silver bullets for us either.
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Show HN: Ghidra Plays Mario
Nice, I'll give it a closer look. My only concern so far is memory hooking (still needed for hardware registers), which on Java side was called by FilteredMemoryState [1]. In memstate.cc it looks like just the simpler MemoryState is implemented [2], and there's no equivalent to MemoryAccessFilter. But it might not be that complicated to add...
[1]: https://github.com/NationalSecurityAgency/ghidra/blob/4561e8...
[2]: https://github.com/NationalSecurityAgency/ghidra/blob/4561e8...
- NSA releases Ghidra version 10.3.3
- Ghidra 10.3.2 released!
- Ghirda 10.3.2 released!
- Debugger Ghidra Class
What are some alternatives?
zsh-autosuggestions - Fish-like autosuggestions for zsh
x64dbg - An open-source user mode debugger for Windows. Optimized for reverse engineering and malware analysis.
zsh-syntax-highlighting - Fish shell like syntax highlighting for Zsh.
cutter - Free and Open Source Reverse Engineering Platform powered by rizin
base16-shell - Base16 for Shells
rizin - UNIX-like reverse engineering framework and command-line toolset.
awesome-zsh-plugins - A collection of ZSH frameworks, plugins, themes and tutorials.
r2ghidra - Native Ghidra Decompiler for r2
ranger - A VIM-inspired filemanager for the console
ret-sync - ret-sync is a set of plugins that helps to synchronize a debugging session (WinDbg/GDB/LLDB/OllyDbg2/x64dbg) with IDA/Ghidra/Binary Ninja disassemblers.
judo - Simple orchestration & configuration management
ghidra-dark - Dark theme installer for Ghidra