handlefinder
the-art-of-command-line
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handlefinder | the-art-of-command-line | |
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6 | 49 | |
152 | 148,750 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 1.8 | |
5 months ago | 20 days ago | |
Python | ||
MIT License | - |
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.
handlefinder
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Coding Novice to CoFounder: My Full-Stack Startup Journey, Warts and All.
MorningBot: https://github.com/bnkc/morningbot HandleFinder: https://github.com/bnkc/handlefinder ThreeSigma: https://www.threesigma.ai
- Hey. How does one find out everything related to a certain e-mail adress? on which sites it has an account registered and stuff like that? im totally new to this. thanks!!!
- Iniziamo il 2023 con una raccolta utile di siti web
- November 28, 2022 FLiP Stack Weekly
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I built an app that scans every social media network for your username
I found myself scrolling through Github’s “trending” repos, looking for some coding inspiration. Within the next hour, I stumbled across something called The Sherlock Project. Interesting, It had over 35k stars, must be pretty popular.
I quickly cloned the repo and started toying around with it. It didn’t take me long to realize the power of this tool. All I had to do was insert a username, and Wa Lah! I was looking at every social media website that was associated with the username. Not only that but direct links to the accounts.
I immediately wanted to turn this into a web app so that everyone could use it. My first challenge was that this was a CLI tool, so I got to work. The Sherlock project makes about 400 requests to various site s to check if your username exists. This was going to be tough... I noticed they were using requests.FutureSession to multithread the result.
My first thought was maybe I could collect all the requests into a list and then dump it back to the frontend with a get request, but the issue here was that the results could take a couple minutes to gather, and no-one is gonna sit and wait that long.
Ok, so how do I continuously report out data to the frontend as the requests get full-filled? The answer? Web-sockets. Not just any web-socket though, a multithreaded web-socket. After ALOT of trial and error I finally got something working. The Issue now though was that it wouldn't run in production due to a multiprocessing error: Daemonic processes are not allowed to have children.
The hell did that mean? back to the drawing board. Eventually I learned that you cant use the standard multiprocessing library for this kind of thing, you had to use billiard. Bam! It worked. I quickly hacked together a simple frontend, configured the web socket, and results were pouring in.
Time to post on reddit. I quickly sent out a post or two and eagerly awaited peoples responses. There was an issue though. The more people flooded the site, the slower it got until it was completely unusable. Dang. How do I fix this? I removed the post quickly and got back to work.
Turns out, the web-socket is considered a "long running request" as it makes 400 external requests. Maybe I could use celery to offload this process to a worker and queue it up. I started working on it and realized this was a little out of my skill range.
I then decided to take a look at the logs where I hosted the code and what do i find? CPU, Memory, and bandwidth all reaching a staggering 100% usage. Welp, I found my issue. I did some rework of my codebase and it started running a little faster.
I then realized the true issue. I was using the free tier of Render that only allowed for one instance of my app...duh.
Needless to say, I learned to take it slow, build tests for my code, and be patient with results.
What do you guys think? Any hard lessons learned in coding? What were your takeaways?
Here is also a link to the repo: https://github.com/bnkc/handlefinder
Here is a link to the repo: https://github.com/bnkc/handlefinder
the-art-of-command-line
- The-art-of-command-line: Master the command line, in one page
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Linux Command Line Cheat Sheet: All the Commands You Need
The Art of Command Line — notes and tips on using the command-line, suitable for both beginners and experienced users
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IWTL technical skills of IT/Technology
For learning command line linux stuff, there are many guides and command line tutorials on github (you can use a google search phrase like "github linux terminal operating system tutorial" or something similar. This seems like a good guide, but again, your experience, background, etc. may mean you need something more basic).
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I have recently installed Endeavour OS and I need suggestions
If you want to learn useful commands, you should read this
- good books or courses to learn bash
- The Art of Command Line
- 18 useful GitHub repositories every developer should bookmark
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Learning Linux: recommended resources
The Art of Command Line
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What are the abilities you would expect from someone with an intermediate level of Linux?
Basically general familiarity with https://github.com/jlevy/the-art-of-command-line
What are some alternatives?
WhatsMyName - This repository has the JSON file required to perform user enumeration on various websites.
the-book-of-secret-knowledge - A collection of inspiring lists, manuals, cheatsheets, blogs, hacks, one-liners, cli/web tools and more.
sherlock - 🔎 Hunt down social media accounts by username across social networks
github-readme-stats - :zap: Dynamically generated stats for your github readmes
YOLOV7-OBJECT-COUNTER-V1.2 - Distance Detector (People) with Yolov7
FT-991A - My central FT-991A documents trove
github-trends - :chart_with_upwards_trend: GitHub star history plots
linux-insides - A little bit about a linux kernel
Piped - An alternative privacy-friendly YouTube frontend which is efficient by design.
Awesome-Linux-Software - 🐧 A list of awesome Linux softwares
libreddit - Private front-end for Reddit
revanced-documentation - 🗄 Collection of all ReVanced documentation