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@vyaslav
vyaslav / add_to_bashrc.sh
Created October 10, 2020 19:32
aliases for kubectl with autocomplete
source <(kubectl completion bash)
__start_kubectl_cust()
{
local cur prev words cword
declare -A flaghash 2>/dev/null || :
if declare -F _init_completion >/dev/null 2>&1; then
_init_completion -s || return
else
__kubectl_init_completion -n "=" || return
fi
@adamcrews
adamcrews / certificate_synthetic.js
Created June 11, 2019 05:36
New Relic SSL/TLS Synthetic
/*
To use this synthetic, set the following Secure credentials:
NEW_RELIC_INSIGHTS_API_KEY - Your api key from the account settings.
NEW_RELIC_ACCOUNT_ID - Your account ID, also found in the account settings.
CERTS_TO_MONITOR - A list of hosts to check via https, separated by a comma and a space, for example:
host.example.com, foo.example.com
Create a new Synthetic monitor, copy the entire contents of this script to the monitor.
Set the monitor to run once a day from a single location.
@apolloclark
apolloclark / postgres cheatsheet.md
Last active March 22, 2025 13:50
postgres cheatsheet

Postgres Cheatsheet

This is a collection of the most common commands I run while administering Postgres databases. The variables shown between the open and closed tags, "<" and ">", should be replaced with a name you choose. Postgres has multiple shortcut functions, starting with a forward slash, "". Any SQL command that is not a shortcut, must end with a semicolon, ";". You can use the keyboard UP and DOWN keys to scroll the history of previous commands you've run.

Setup

installation, Ubuntu

http://www.postgresql.org/download/linux/ubuntu/ https://help.ubuntu.com/community/PostgreSQL

@squarism
squarism / iterm2.md
Last active April 24, 2025 04:38
An iTerm2 Cheatsheet

Tabs and Windows

Function Shortcut
New Tab + T
Close Tab or Window + W (same as many mac apps)
Go to Tab + Number Key (ie: ⌘2 is 2nd tab)
Go to Split Pane by Direction + Option + Arrow Key
Cycle iTerm Windows + backtick (true of all mac apps and works with desktops/mission control)
@JonCole
JonCole / ThreadPool.md
Last active August 29, 2024 09:23
Intro to CLR ThreadPool Growth

ThreadPool Growth: Some Important Details

The CLR ThreadPool has two types of threads - "Worker" and "I/O Completion Port" (aka IOCP) threads.

  • Worker threads are used when for things like processing Task.Run(…) or ThreadPool.QueueUserWorkItem(…) methods. These threads are also used by various components in the CLR when work needs to happen on a background thread.
  • IOCP threads are used when asynchronous IO happens (e.g. reading from the network).

The thread pool provides new worker threads or I/O completion threads on demand (without any throttling) until it reaches the "Minimum" setting for each type of thread. By default, the minimum number of threads is set to the number of processors on a system.

Once the number of existing (busy) threads hits the "minimum" number of threads, the ThreadPool will throttle the rate at which is injects new threads to one thread per 500 milliseconds. This means that if your system gets a burst of work needing an IOCP thread, it will proces

@epicserve
epicserve / redis_key_sizes.sh
Last active February 21, 2025 22:37
A simple script to print the size of all your Redis keys.
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# This script prints out all of your Redis keys and their size in a human readable format
# Copyright 2013 Brent O'Connor
# License: http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
human_size() {
awk -v sum="$1" ' BEGIN {hum[1024^3]="Gb"; hum[1024^2]="Mb"; hum[1024]="Kb"; for (x=1024^3; x>=1024; x/=1024) { if (sum>=x) { printf "%.2f %s\n",sum/x,hum[x]; break; } } if (sum<1024) print "1kb"; } '
}