tldr-sh-client
updog
tldr-sh-client | updog | |
---|---|---|
3 | 14 | |
701 | 2,815 | |
- | - | |
4.3 | 0.0 | |
4 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
Shell | Python | |
MIT License | 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.
tldr-sh-client
-
your favorite cheatsheet app ?
I like tldr with sh client. Simple and POSIX compliant.
-
Node.js packages don't deserve your trust
> While I find projects in those other languages to also have too many dependencies, it's no where near what happens in JS apps. I'm thinking of projects I've recently worked on in Rust, PHP, and Java.
My experience with these new languages is such that this feels a bit unfair. It's like insisting that a disaster with 1000 fatalities is "much worse" than one with "only". It's ... true ... I guess, but there's something uncomfortable about making the comparison. Something has gone badly wrong if the comparison even needs to happen in the first place.
What I'm getting at is that e.g. Rust has an enormous problem in this area. It's not uncommon for me to see Node projects with over a thousand transitive dependencies, but on the other hand, I very frequently see Rust projects with over a hundred. And the Node projects tend to be more complicated than the Rust ones; they do more.
Take the last Rust program I tried to use, tealdeer. [1] If you don't know, tldr is a project that provides alternative simplified man pages for commonly used programs that consist entirely of easy to understand examples for the program. [2] What a tldr client needs to do is simply to check a local cache for each lookup, and if necessary update the cache online. It's a trivial problem that can be, and has been! [3], solved in a few hundred lines of shell (if you're being extremely verbose). How many recursive dependencies would you guess tealdeer uses? Depends on how you count, of course, but as of today the answer is ~133 deduplicated dependencies! For a program that's a glorified wrapper around curl!
Or another Rust program I looked at recently, rua [4]. In Arch Linux, the AUR is a repository of user maintained scripts for building and installing software as native Arch packages. Official tools for the building and installing software already exist for Arch, but it is common for users to use a wrapper around these tools that makes fetching and updating the software from the AUR easier. It's a relatively simple task that (once again) can be done with shell scripts. rua is such a wrapper. As of today it uses 137 deduplicated dependencies!
These Rust programs are simple terminal tools to do tasks that are almost trivial in nature. And yet they require hundreds of constantly updating dependencies! The situation may well be better than what you'll find for Node, but it's undeniably disastrous compared to either simpler languages without a built in package manager (like C) or more complicated batteries-included languages where best practices continue to prevail (like Python).
[1] https://github.com/dbrgn/tealdeer
[2] https://tldr.sh/
[3] https://github.com/raylee/tldr-sh-client/blob/main/tldr
[4] https://github.com/vn971/rua
-
unlimited power
Bash https://github.com/raylee/tldr-sh-client
updog
-
Installing NSP/XCI files over network?
I tried using updog (https://github.com/sc0tfree/updog) but DBI doesn't parse the served HTTP page as a directory listing, and I can't find a way to make updog do a plain listing like SimpleHTTPServer that DBI can understand.
- Looking for free-open source web based file browser
- Is there a way to transfer large files from a victim machine to my local Kali machine via the powershell php script method?
- What online cyber security tools do you wish existed?
- Transferring files from windows to kali using Impacket smbserver.py doesn't work?
-
How do you use Termux?
just chillin https://github.com/sc0tfree/updog
-
Self Hosted Weekly Roundup #2
I noticed you mentioned miniserve for simple HTTP sharing. On my quest to ✨encrypt everything ✨, I would recommend UpDog (https://github.com/sc0tfree/updog)
-
How do i transfer a malicious file from my laptop to my vm
you could also host a local file server (ftp, python-http, updog https://github.com/sc0tfree/updog, etc) and download it locally
-
iPhone 13 Pro = Best Phone Ever.
Why are you still using lightning if it’s slow? The radios in the devices have much more bandwidth, use airdrop or https://github.com/sc0tfree/updog once apples removes the port you will have to use those either way, why keep complaining, there have been better ways to transfer files faster wireless forever.
- Files – Single-file photo gallery and file manager
What are some alternatives?
opendrop - An open Apple AirDrop implementation written in Python
snapdrop - A Progressive Web App for local file sharing
cheat.sh - the only cheat sheet you need
termux-app - Termux - a terminal emulator application for Android OS extendible by variety of packages.
proposal-ses - Draft proposal for SES (Secure EcmaScript)
rua - Build tool for Arch Linux providing control, review and jailed build options
tealdeer - A very fast implementation of tldr in Rust.
navi-tldr-pages - tldr-pages for navi, an interactive cheatsheet tool for the command-line
h5ai - HTTP web server index for Apache httpd, lighttpd and nginx.