commandline

1749 readers
1 users here now

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
26
 
 

I just noticed that eza can now display total disk space used by directories!

I think this is pretty cool. I wanted it for a long time.

There are other ways to get the information of course. But having it integrated with all the other options for listing directories is fab. eza has features like --git-awareness, --tree display, clickable --hyperlink, filetype --icons and other display, permissions, dates, ownerships, and other stuff. being able to mash everything together in any arbitrary way which is useful is handy. And of course you can --sort=size

docs:

  --total-size               show the size of a directory as the size of all
                             files and directories inside (unix only)

It also (optionally) color codes the information. Values measures in kb, mb, and gb are clear. Here is a screenshot to show that:

eza --long -h --total-size --sort=oldest --no-permissions --no-user

Of course it take a little while to load large directories so you will not want to use by default.

Looks like it was first implemented Oct 2023 with some fixes since then. (Changelog). PR #533 - feat: added recursive directory parser with `--total-size` flag by Xemptuous

27
 
 

https://gitlab.com/christosangel/tui-mines

tui mines is evidently a text-based user interface implimentation of the classic mine sweeping puzzle game.

The user has to clear a board, square by square, flagging the squares suspected to hide mines on the way.

If the user opens a mine square, things go KABOOM! and the game is lost.

kaboom!

The user uses hints from the numbered squares. This numbers how many bombs are touching that square in every direction ( 8 in total).

Through logic, and a bit of luck, the player ends up clearing all the squares, while flagging all the mines.

28
 
 

https://github.com/dislux-hapfyl/pynksh

Writing functional shell snake code to improve my sanity.

29
 
 

Howdy Lemmy,

I'm announcing Rook v0.0.9, software that provides a secret service a-la secret-tool, keyring, or pass/gopass, except backed by a Keepass 4.x kdbx file.

The problem Rook solves is mainly in script automation, where you have aerc, offlineimap, isync, vdirsyncer, msmtp, restic, or any other cron jobs that need passwords and which are often configured to fetch these passwords from a secret service with a CLI tool. Unlike existing solutions, Rook is headless and does not have a bespoke secrets database, full of passwords that must be manually synchronized with Keepass; instead, it uses a Keepass db directly.

While the readme goes into more detail, I will say the motivation for Rook evolved from a desire to use a Keepass db in a GUI-less environment and finding no existing solutions. KeepassXC provides a secret service, but is not headless; it also provides a CLI tool, but this requires the db credentials on every call. kpmenu exists, but is designed specifically to require human interaction and is unsuitable for cron environment scripting. Every other solution maintains its own DB back end, incompatible with Keepass.

Rook also benefits from minimal external dependencies, and at 1kloc is auditable by developers - I believe even by ones who do not know Go (the language of implementation). Being able to verify for yourself that there's no malicious code is a critical trait for a tool with which you're trusting secrets.

Rook is fit for purpose, and signed binaries are provided as well as build-from-source instructions (for auditors).

The project contains work in progress: credentials are limited to simple password-locked kdbx, and so doesn't yet support key files. Bash scripts that provide autotyping and attribute/secret selection via rofi, fzf, and xdotool are provided, for GUI environments; these have known bugs. Rook has not been tested on BSD, Darwin, or any other system than Linux, but may well work; the main sticking point is the use of a local file socket for client/server communication, so POSIX systems should be fine, but still, YMMV.

As a final caveat: up until v0.0.9 I've been compressing with brotli, which is very nice yet somewhat obscure. With the next release, everything will be gzipped. Also included in the next release will be packages for various distributions.

30
 
 

Hello Lemmy,

invidtui is a TUI-based Invidious client, which can:

  • Search for and browse videos, playlists and channels
  • Play audio or video from any instance
  • View, open, edit and save m3u8 playlists
  • Download video/audio in any format
  • Authenticate with the preferred instance, and show user feed, playlists and subscriptions

This release contains the following new features/fixes:


Embedded Recommendations tab

Recommendations for the video that is currently being played is now shown in a separate tab within the queue.

A demo and instructions are posted here


YouTube timestamps

Timestamps found within Youtube URIs are now seeked to on playback.

A demo and instructions are posted here


Custom seeking

A separate modal is shown to modify the playback position. Positions can be seeked to relatively/absolutely.

A demo and instructions are posted here


I hope you enjoy this release, and any feedback is appreciated.

31
 
 

After an unexpected need to reset my work machine πŸ˜“, and needing to set up my development environment again by hand πŸ› οΈ, I decided to create a solution to quickly restore my local git repositories (and associated folder structure) πŸ”„.

I took this opportunity to write two bash scripts that clone and update all repositories on GitHub belonging to either a user or an organization πŸ“¦.

This means that, for example, with a single command ⌨️, you can clone hundreds or thousands of repositories, with high levels of concurrency (50 clones in parallel is doable πŸ’¨).

The scripts allow for a configurable clone depth, a limit for the number of repositories cloned, and a level of concurrency that decides how many clones are run in parallel πŸ“ˆ.

By running the following command:

git-clone-all --owner f3rno64 --limit 200 --jobs 40 --dir ./f3rno64

I was able to clone all 174 personal repositories πŸ“š, with full commit histories and all tags & branches, in 58 seconds ⏱️.

I wrote a blog post describing this in more detail here πŸ“, check it out for a breakdown of the arguments and examples of usage.

The GitHub repository is f3rno64/mass-git-scripts and the README also includes examples and general usage instructions πŸ—‚οΈ.

Please check it out and let me know what you think! πŸ’¬

I hope you find it useful, and any feedback or suggestions for improvement would be greatly appreciated! πŸ™

32
 
 

Hello! This is not my project, I just found it today.

Making verbose things more concise and readable makes a big difference to me, and this could be excellent for me when dealing with HTML/XML. Just piping those formats through xmq yields a beautiful and clear rendering of the data.

And as a NestedText enthusiast, I can now (using additional existing tooling):

  • transform HTML -> JSON -> NestedText
  • edit NestedText
  • transform NestedText -> JSON -> HTML
33
 
 

I have a list containing a set of tags, and would like to exclude one tag, unless another tag exists in the line.

Say I have the following list, and want to exclude B, unless A is present.

[A,B]
[A,C]
[B,C]
[A]
[B]

I can reverse grep for B:

> grep --invert-match "B"
[A,C]
[A]

How can I find the previous list, but also the item containing [A,B]?

34
 
 

Smassh is a TUI based typing test application inspired by MonkeyType -- A very popular online web-based typing application

Smassh tries to be a full fledged typing test experience but not missing out on looks and feel! There is a lot of room for improvements/additions and I am open to contributions and suggestions!

Github: https://github.com/kraanzu/smassh

Thank you! <3

35
 
 

kdotool uses KWin's scripting API to control windows. In each invocation, it generates a KWin script on-the-fly, loads it into KWin, runs it, and then deletes it, using KWin's DBus interface.

This program should work with both KDE 5 and the upcoming KDE 6.

36
 
 

Hello Lemmy,

invidtui is a TUI-based Invidious client, which can:

  • Search for and browse videos, playlists and channels
  • Play audio or video from any instance
  • View, open, edit and save m3u8 playlists
  • Download video/audio in any format
  • Authenticate with the preferred instance, and show user feed, playlists and subscriptions

This release contains the following new features/fixes:


Dynamic theming

Themes can now be applied from theme files dynamically within the application as well as from command-line and configuration options.

A demo and instructions are posted here


Channel 'Releases' tab

A new 'releases' tab is added to the channel page, to show new content from channel authors.


Enhanced configuration handling

Configuration handling is now done in the most cross-platform way as possible.


I hope you enjoy this release, and any feedback is appreciated.

37
 
 

I created a very simple script that shows the history usage of your shell. Should work with bash and fish shells.

This basically goes through the history and counts the command names. So all of git push, git pull, etc will count as just git.

Example output:

    847 pacman
    296 cd
    206 git
    203 time
    180 vim
    172 awk
    166 aur
    142 strace
    141 cat
    125 ls
Total commands:  7008
Unique commands: 753
38
 
 

Terminal Trove showcases the best of the terminal, Discover a collection of CLI, TUI, and more developer tools at Terminal Trove.

39
 
 

Hello Lemmy,

invidtui is a TUI-based Invidious client, which can:

  • Search for and browse videos, playlists and channels
  • Play audio or video from any instance
  • View, open, edit and save m3u8 playlists
  • Download video/audio in any format
  • Authenticate with the preferred instance, and show user feed, playlists and subscriptions

This release contains the following new features/fixes:


  • Playlists are downloadable as well, with progress display in the "Downloads" page. Deleted/private videos are stored separately from the public ones.

    To use this feature:

    • Select a playlist with the i key, wait for the playlist to load
    • Press Ctrl+S to initialize the download
    • To view the progress of the download, press Y

  • Optimizations to the playlist file loading and queue rendering (reduced CPU usage)
    • Updating the queue only for new/updated items
    • Rate limiting the calls to MPV
    • Cancellable loading of playlist entries
      • Open the queue and press x to cancel loading the playlist entries.

  • An "Initializing" indicator is shown when the player is hidden and about to start playing a file

I hope you enjoy this release, and any feedback is appreciated.

40
10
Nushell 0.87.0 (www.nushell.sh)
submitted 1 year ago by [email protected] to c/commandline
41
 
 

https://gitlab.com/christosangel/turnip-tv

turnip-tv is a customizable tui iptv client, written in Bash.

The user can (among other customizations) choose input program between

  • read

1read.png

  • fzf

1fzf.png

  • rofi

1rofi.png

  • dmenu

1dmenu.png


This script was inspired by and is almost identical with another project called radion, which is a tui internet radio client.

The channel list was found here, and was modified to fit the script's functionality.

42
 
 

Note: Raku programming language and a module manager(zef) are required.

43
 
 

Hello Lemmy,

Bluetuith is a TUI based bluetooth manager for Linux, that aims to be an alternative to most bluetooth managers, and can perform bluetooth based operations like:

  • Connection to and general management of bluetooth devices, with device information like battery percentage, RSSI etc. displayed, if the information is available. More detailed information about a device can be viewed by selecting the 'Info' option in the menu or by clicking the 'i' key.

  • Bluetooth adapter management, with toggleable power, discoverability, pairablilty and scanning modes.

  • Transfer and receive files via the OBEX protocol, with an interactive file picker to choose and select multiple files.

  • Handle both PANU and DUN based networking for each bluetooth device

  • Control media playback on the currently connected device, with a media player popup that displays playback information and controls.

This release contains the following new features:

  • New command-line options --adapter-states to set adapter properties and --connect-bdaddr to connect to a device on initialization
  • Block/unblock devices
  • Indefinite passkey/pincode display
  • Modifiable navigation keys
  • Display the 'Bonded' property for a device

I hope you enjoy this release, and any feedback is appreciated.

44
 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/7130937

radion is an internet radio CLI client, written in Bash.

https://gitlab.com/christosangel/radion

Radion can be costumized as far as the station selecting program is concerned. The user can choose between:

  • read

read

  • fzf

fzf

  • rofi

rofi

  • dmenu

dmenu


Update: Introduced new feature: costumizing prompt text for fzf dmenu and rofi.

Update: Recording functionality added, with the use of another (you guessed it) bash script

icy

Also options in read as Preferred selector are also case insensitive.

Any feedback is appreciated!

45
10
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/commandline
 
 

Nushell, or Nu for short, is a new shell that takes a modern, structured approach to your command line. It works seamlessly with the data from your filesystem, operating system, and a growing number of file formats to make it easy to build powerful command line pipelines.

Today, we're releasing version 0.86 of Nu. This release adds fish-like directory completions, type system improvements, our first officially supported uutils command, and much more

46
 
 

Nothing too shabby honestly. But there you have it nonetheless. And yep, I used AI for a l"head start". :p

47
5
LADDER: A CLI word puzzle (programming.dev)
submitted 1 year ago by christos to c/commandline
 
 

https://gitlab.com/christosangel/ladder

Ladder is a word puzzle, played in a terminal window.

Your starting point is an initial four-letter word.

Your goal is to transform this word, one letter at a time, through other valid words, and end up with the target word.

The tricky part is that on each entry, you can change ONLY ONE LETTER.

48
 
 

Made in a day, it works and I wanted to share it

49
12
UX patterns for CLI tools (lucasfcosta.com)
submitted 1 year ago by lysdexic to c/commandline
50
34
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by christos to c/commandline
 
 

tui-sudoku is a configurable terminal interface sudoku game, with quite a few features.

https://gitlab.com/christosangel/tui-sudoku

Starting the game, and through the main menu, the player can :

  • Start a new game
  • Load previously saved game
  • Configure some parameters (colors, preferred editor, puzzle symmetry,preffered png)
  • exit the program

PLAYING THE GAME

After choosing the n New Game option, the player can select the level of difficulty.

The user will be presented with the known 9x9 sudoku matrix.

Using the shortcuts in the shown cheatsheet table, the player can

Shorcuts Action
hjkl πŸ „ πŸ …πŸ ‡πŸ † Move Cursor
[1-9] Insert Number
0,␣,␈ Clear Cell
E Earmark cells
H Toggle Highlight Numbers
S Save Game
z,Z Undo / Redo
M Return to Main Menu
Q Show Solution & Quit
  • Typing H while the cursor is on a number, e.g. 2, will highlight all the 2s in the matrix.

    Typing H again will undo the highlighting:

-Typing E and entering up to 3 digits, will earmark the cell:

  • Entering an illegal number (a number that already exists in the row, the line or the 3x3 block) will mark the number with a different color, and give a warning message:

While the Moption returns to the Main Menu, and the S option saves the game, the Q option prints the solution and exits:

  • The user can also Undo or Redo their entries with the z or Z option respectively.

Back in the Main Menu, the player can also

  • Load a previously saved game with the l option

  • Configure preferred colors, preferred text editor and puzzle symmetry with the c option

  • or Browse the Top Ten Scores (s option)

The configuration is kept in the $HOME/.config/tui-sudoku/tui-sudoku.config file.

If there is no file kept there, default values will be loaded.

  • You can select the colors you like and the respective codes as they demonstrated here:

    https://talyian.github.io/ansicolors/

    Default colors

    Color Code Script Variable
    Grid Color \x1b[38;5;60m" C1
    Given Numbers Color \e[1;33m" C2
    Found Numbers Color \e[1;36m" C3
    Wrong Numbers Color \e[1;31m" C4
    Highlight Color \e[1;32m" C5
    TextColor1 \e[35m" C6
    TextColor1 \e[36m" C7
  • SYMMETRY variable configures the symmetry of the given cells in the 9x9 matrix. Valid options are: none, rotate90, rotate180, mirror, flip, or random

  • PREFFERED_PNG variable defines the png that shows in the notifications. These images are located in the $HOME/.cache/tui-sudoku/png/ directory.

Any feedback is appreciated!

Any feedback is appreciated!


Added feature in 0.2.0: earmarked cells change color when illegal (the number already exists in row, column or 3x3 square)


Added feature in 0.3.0: Toggle info (key cheatsheet).

view more: β€Ή prev next β€Ί