Difference between revisions of "Howto Ubuntu"
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Even better, you can define your own completion rules for other commands and applications. |
Even better, you can define your own completion rules for other commands and applications. |
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Read more on "howto" [http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/316 |
Read more on "howto" here: [http://www.debian-administration.org/articles/316 part 1] and [http://www.debian-administration.org/article/An_introduction_to_bash_completion_part_2 part 2] |
Revision as of 09:32, 18 May 2009
Contents
Notes about installing and setup of various apps and features in Ubuntu
- ssh with a private-public key
- svn notes - Subversion
- SciTe notes - the lightweight programmers editor
- simpleproxy - Simple TCP proxy for linux
- grep notes - grep and egrep usage tips
- XMMS setup for Ubuntu 8.04 and up - from source
- XMMS setup for Ubuntu Hardy - from deb.
Misc tasks
Other nice external links and howto-s
Tunneling to socks proxy
In short: $ssh -D 9999 username@ip-address-of-ssh-server Then set in Firefox to use a SOCKS proxy: “localhost", port 9999
Acroread on Ubuntu
The link: [1]
Check the ports and apps listening on them
netstat -lnptu
Listing members of a group
I.e., the opposite to the command 'groups myuser'
sudo apt-get install members [if needed] members groupname
Custom autocomplete in Ubuntu
It is nice to use TAB key to autocomlete path for example, for a ls command in bash.
It turns out, you can also autocomplete certain command arguments, e.g. apt-get inst<TAB>
expands to apt-get install.
Even better, you can define your own completion rules for other commands and applications.