rhit
navi
rhit | navi | |
---|---|---|
8 | 52 | |
810 | 14,365 | |
- | - | |
7.3 | 8.2 | |
6 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
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.
rhit
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Your favourite Rust CLI utilities this year?
As two of the tools I made I already listed here, may I suggest also lfs (which tells you about your disks and available space) and rhit (if you have a nginx server running) ?
- Semantic HTML conveys meaning
- Rhit – Nginx log explorer that leaves nothing behind, no temp file, no database
- Rhit – a Nginx log explorer, it leaves nothing behind, no temp file, no database
- Rhit - NGINX log navigator that reads even gzipped logs, does some analysis and tells you about it in pretty tables without storing or polluting anything
- Show HN: Rhit, a Nginx Log Explorer
- Rhit, a command-line nginx log explorer I just made
- Rhit, a small tool I just made to analyze your existing nginx logs
navi
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Show HN: TBMK – A Commands Bookmark for Terminal
I've built something similar for myself (fzf+a bit of shell). But I realized that fzf's history view (with very long history buffer) works much better for my use case.
I still needed something to cover rare commands with dynamic arguments. That got covered by Navi: https://github.com/denisidoro/navi (takes more friction to add new command than with TBMK, but you get much more organized and easier to search tool).
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Isues with Navi CLI cheat sheets
navi repo add denisidoro/navi-tldr-pages Cloning https://github.com/denisidoro/navi-tldr-pages into /home//.local/share/navi/cheats/tmp... Cloning into '/home//.local/share/navi/cheats/tmp'... remote: Enumerating objects: 1841, done. remote: Counting objects: 100% (1841/1841), done. remote: Compressing objects: 100% (1756/1756), done. remote: Total 1841 (delta 83), reused 1839 (delta 83), pack-reused 0 Receiving objects: 100% (1841/1841), 504.71 KiB | 1.95 MiB/s, done. Resolving deltas: 100% (83/83), done. Hey, listen! navi encountered a problem. Do you think this is a bug? File an issue at https://github.com/denisidoro/navi. Caused by: 0: Failed to import cheatsheets from `denisidoro/navi-tldr-pages` 1: Failed to get cheatsheet files from finder 2: Failed to pass data to finder 3: Unable to prompt cheats to import 4: Broken pipe (os error 32)
- How to store frequently used commands?
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intelli-shell - Bookmark commands and autocomplete at any time!
Similar projects (in a way): navi
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How I've improved my Linux Skills
I think navi is a better alternative. You can create custom cheats too.
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Me relearning git every week
navi might help you with that
- Twitter open sources Navi: High-Performance Machine Learning Serving Server in Rust
- Looking for a snippet tool
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Script manager?
I like using navi, but idk if you want something that runs in the terminal.
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229 Linux Commands with Examples
There's also a cli program called tealdeer that does this kind of thing and uses a local cache. And there's a fuzzy search interactive cli cheatsheet program called navi that's also pretty cool (and you can write your own cheatsheets).
What are some alternatives?
taplo - A TOML toolkit written in Rust
tldr - 📚 Collaborative cheatsheets for console commands
dusage - 💾 A command line disk usage information tool.
cheat.sh - the only cheat sheet you need
log4rs - A highly configurable logging framework for Rust
thefuck - Magnificent app which corrects your previous console command.
hprof-slurp - JVM heap dump analyzer
zsh-histdb - A slightly better history for zsh
nginx-rs - Nginx module written in Rust
termgraph - a python command-line tool which draws basic graphs in the terminal
ubi - The Universal Binary Installer
md2pdf - Markdown to PDF conversion tool