What are you working on? - Programming On Unix
Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)
|
|||
(07-08-2021, 11:53 AM)zge Wrote: I just finished cleaning up a IRC library I wrote for (GNU) AWK a few years ago, and published it here: https://git.sr.ht/~pkal/irc.awk This shebang is not portable: Code: #!/usr/bin/gawk -f irc.awk -f Posix requires only one argument to the interpreter, more information here. |
|||
|
|||
(07-08-2021, 06:04 PM)seninha Wrote: This shebang is not portable: I mean, they did specify that it was written in GNU AWK, so POSIX compatibility is already out the window. |
|||
|
|||
(07-08-2021, 06:04 PM)seninha Wrote:(07-08-2021, 11:53 AM)zge Wrote: I just finished cleaning up a IRC library I wrote for (GNU) AWK a few years ago, and published it here: https://git.sr.ht/~pkal/irc.awk Didn't know about that, I can update the README and replace the shebang with a manual invocation. But as Opfez says and the README notes, the library relies on GNU AWK for now, so portability is a lesser priority. |
|||
|
|||
Speaking of awk, I formalized a plain text markup language I have been using for ages in a awk script that converts it to troff -ms or html.
I call it incipit, and it is heavily based on non-ASCII Unicode characters for marking things up. For example, the section character (§) is used to mark up section headers, and the bullet character (•) is used to mark up bulleted lists. Since those characters are rarely used in a text, I do not have to escape things out (in Markdown I often had to escape *s, =s and #s). Another feature is that tables are more readable with box drawing characters. |
|||
|
|||
I am working again on my X11 File Manager.
This time, after studying pthreads for some time, I'm using another thread to get and cache the thumbnails. https://0x0.st/-YHg.mp4 I'm also working on the second version of my window manager, shod2. Now it can tile windows in floating containers. |
|||
|
|||
(13-06-2015, 08:47 AM)pizzaroll1 Wrote: I've been a bit bored recently, I don't have any ideas on what to program, rice, write on my blog, or anything. So I haven't been working on much. I've been trying to increase my knowledge on computers and have began running linux (more specifically the Ubuntu distribution) through a virtual machine. |
|||
|
|||
|
|||
I decided to make my email stack more robust, so I built a secondary mail server to queue up mails in the event that my primary server goes down.
Turns out, it's super easy with opensmtp ! I did that an automate it in a couple hours, and as I got some spare time, I setup spamd on both MX servers, and synchronized them together. Man I love the OpenBSD software stack. |
|||
|
|||
(30-09-2021, 04:36 AM)Ssynicil Wrote: I've been trying to increase my knowledge on computers and have began running linux (more specifically the Ubuntu distribution) through a virtual machine. Nice! Welcome, and do not hesitate to join us on IRC for chatting! At first, our words won't make much sense to you, but if you ask us for explanations, you'll learn stuff faster than by exploring yourself.. or might go lost in one of the rabbit holes... which happens to me regularly, even :) Not related to softwares, but I'm trying to do the drawing for a desktop case for my mini-ITX motherboard. With an ATX psu, which would have slots for 6 sata HDD, able to take a GPU in the PCIe slot, all that printable in the reasonable volume of 20cm x 25cm x 20 cm. Old project (around 3 years, maybe older), fairly easy, but required to put some time in it (time in the printer, time in learning CAD, and time to draw the stuff), I'd dare say I finally got a placement to avoid assembling junctions, so maybe I can do even better... |
|||
|
|||
(01-10-2021, 02:11 PM)z3bra Wrote: I decided to make my email stack more robust, so I built a secondary mail server to queue up mails in the event that my primary server goes down. This sounds great, and it's always nice when things like this turn out to be easier than anticipated. The most recent project that I have been working on is migrating my standalone and Docker container online services to LXC. I have used a combination of drist(1) and make(1) to manage and configure (almost) everything. It is still a work in progress but so far everything seems to be running well. |
|||
|
|||
(07-08-2021, 11:53 AM)pkal Wrote: I just finished cleaning up a IRC library I wrote for (GNU) AWK a few years ago, and published it here: https://git.sr.ht/~pkal/irc.awk That reminds me the jj irc client: https://github.com/aaronNGi/jj No matter what I do, I end-up trying to implement something in awk *first*, and then switching to C when it gets too complex. |
|||
|
|||
(23-09-2021, 04:15 PM)seninha Wrote: X11 File Manager Many times, when facing complex software, or crashes, or something they did not understand, I figured users ended-up seeking for two things: the Windows taskbar with the start menu, the file browser (~/Desktop included). The angle stone of using computers is browsing files, after all, in particular in Unix. |
|||
|
|||
Doing small url/other tokens parser which would feed fzf to pick something from the terminal window without the mouse. Here is regex, any critique is welcomed:
Code: grep -aEo "(((http|https|git|gopher|gemini|ftp)://|www\\.)[a-zA-Z0-9._-]*[:]?[a-zA-Z0-9./@$&%?\#=_~-]*)|([a-zA-Z0-9._-]*\\.(com|ru|xyz)/*[:]?[a-zA-Z0-9./@$&%?\#=_~-]*)|(tel:[0-9+]*)|(mailto:[a-zA-Z0-9._-]*@[a-zA-Z0-9._-]*)|([a-zA-Z0-9._-]*@[a-zA-Z0-9._-]*)|((magnet:\\?xt=urn:btih:)[a-zA-Z0-9./@$&%?\#\(\)=_~-]*)|([0-9]*\\.[0-9]*\\.[0-9]*\\.[0-9]*)" |
|||
|
|||
I'm working in a set of utilities for self-organization called orgutils.
It already has an event manager (calendar) and a task manager (todo). The goal is for those programs to be scriptable. They are non-interactive filters that do not do colored output or other forms of pretty-printing, so their output can be used by other utilities, in a shell pipeline for example. I am now writing habit, a habit tracking software that will print a report of how the habits are being realized during the user's routine. I'm thinking in add some kind of gamification to that. The user gains experience when doing good habits and levels up when gaining enough experience. I am looking for a relation between experience and level, like a mathematical function that makes leveling easier in lower levels and harder in greater levels. I'm also looking for a rate for experience gaining. I'm thinking in using a logarithmic function for the experience-to-level mapping and make experience being gained at a constant rate every time a good habit is done. However, after I present this gamification idea to someone, they replied me with: Quote:do you take into consideration that gamification might cause addiction-like (self-)gratification issues for the user The main purpose of leveling in a gamificated system is to get some kind of reward when leveling up. However, I don't think a simple CLI utility will cause such kind of addiction. In any case, other CLI utilities I'm planning for orgutils are:
I'm also reading orgmode's manual to get ideas to copy. Orgmode's agenda view is implemented by agenda(1), a shell script that is included with orgutils. |
|||
|
|||
(22-10-2021, 03:46 PM)humky Wrote: Here is regex, any critique is welcomed: Which terminal do you use and how do you spawn the extractor ? Does it handle wrapped URL that are too long for a terminal window ? |
|||
|
|||
I've been working on a Go based file sharing system (posing as an HTTP server). Result is here: partage.
I wanted a self-hosted solution for my family to share big files (eg. pictures, videos, …). Introduction post on my Gopher hole (http). |
|||
|
|||
(25-10-2021, 06:29 AM)z3bra Wrote: Which terminal do you use and how do you spawn the extractor ? Does it handle wrapped URL that are too long for a terminal window ?It does handle wrapped URLs. It also handles emails, valid ipv4 and other tokens. I since altered the script somewhat, there was a problem with " ' and $, because of multiple levels of subshells and multiple level of quotes it was not possible to escape them in grep, I added another pass of sed to escape them that way. You need st terminal with externalpipe patch applied, launch option in config.def look like this: Code: static char *copytokencmd[] = { "/bin/sh", "-c", "fzf-st-copy-token.sh", "externalpipe", "NULL" }; script itself: Code: #!/bin/sh "fzf-prompt" name is set to floating in my wm. I use urxvt instead of another instance of st because urxvt can be demonized and it spawns the window quicker. |
|||
|
|||
I uninstalled my last own FreeBSD server (I still am in charge of one for a local community who wants to do it themselves one day) last night, replacing it with another OpenBSD server. There are too many crashes and “surprising behaviors” in recent FreeBSDs (and, as this is a production server, I missed another opportunity to run NetBSD on anything).
The most annoying problem was to get ZNC running. As it turns out, IO::Socket won’t play well with LibreSSL, requiring separate listeners for IPv4 and IPv6. Try to find issues like this on your own! Also, I successfully (?) fought relayd for the first time. I sincerely hope that I won’t have to do this too often. -- <mort> choosing a terrible license just to be spiteful towards others is possibly the most tux0r thing I've ever seen |
|||
|
|||
I have been playing with troff recently.
Motivated on that, I did a presentation on how to create a troff macro package, and I create a macro package. This macro package contains macro for formatting books: format chapters, generate table of contents, do footnotes, etc. To experiment the macros, I formatted a book using them. The book I chose was The Cathedral and the Bazaar, by esr. You can find the source code of the book (and the book itself, in pdf format) here: https://github.com/phillbush/catb-mb I formatted it to fit on my ereader screen. |
|||
|
|||
(19-11-2021, 02:03 AM)seninha Wrote: You can find the source code of the book (and the book itself, in pdf format) here: https://github.com/phillbush/catb-mb I really want to dig through all that. I want to use troff more often. I have some super large documents (thousands of pages) that are currently turned into PDFs using LaTeX, which is just insanely slow for documents of that size. troff should do the job just as fine and I hope that it’ll be quite a bit faster. Other than that, I’m working mostly on twtxt stuff these days. I also revisited GPG and added signatures to my release tarballs and future git commits – but I’m not sure if I’ll keep it or have to start over or whatever, because I feel that I might not be smart enough for GPG. |
|||
|
|||
(21-11-2021, 02:40 PM)movq Wrote: I really want to dig through all that. I want to use troff more often. I have some super large documents (thousands of pages) that are currently turned into PDFs using LaTeX, which is just insanely slow for documents of that size. troff should do the job just as fine and I hope that it’ll be quite a bit faster. You asked me about how I do TOC on the document; here I explain how I do that. You can check my Makefile. It runs troff twice: It first parses some of the source files to generate a index.roff from the stderr of the troff command. The index.roff file describes the contents of the TOC. In a second pass, it processes the title.roff (the pages before the toc), index.roff (the TOC itself) and the other files, and outputs to the post processor (dpost), that will generate the document. So, I have the following .roff files:
I'm writing a manual for the -mb macro package. (Yes, I make it work first then write the documentation later...) |
|||
|
|||
(13-06-2015, 08:47 AM)pizzaroll1 Wrote: I've been a bit bored recently, I don't have any ideas on what to program, rice, write on my blog, or anything. So I haven't been working on much. I'm mostly writing shell scripts of questionable usefulness to anyone else other than myself[1], and I even made my own password manager[2] a couple of months ago, lol [1]: https://gt.kalli.st/novaburst/posix-sh-tools [2]: https://git.patchysicp.xyz/novaburst/ayu I've a full list somewhere on my site, or something... Code: _ _ , |
|||
|
|||
(17-04-2022, 12:28 PM)akoizumi Wrote: [2]: https://git.patchysicp.xyz/novaburst/ayu That's very nice and straight forward, it seems many persons are building their own password management tools. It reminds me of this other thread: https://nixers.net/Thread-Password-management |
|||
|
|||
Hi all,
Recently I've been working on a couple of themes and theme portion of the web site for my static site generator mkws. First two themes previews: https://mkws.sh/sans.webp and https://mkws.sh/mono.webp. |
|||
|
|||
(17-04-2022, 05:26 PM)adi Wrote: the web site for my static site generator mkws The name is really well-chosen. However, I got a tip, you're sharing the binaries in a tgz file directly but I can't find any mention of the source of the script. A lot of users would like to give it a look before installing. |
|||
|
|||
(18-04-2022, 02:26 AM)venam Wrote:(17-04-2022, 05:26 PM)adi Wrote: the web site for my static site generator mkws Thanks! Maybe it's a good idea to add the sources to the home page. They're over here https://mkws.sh/docs.html#sources. |
|||
|
|||
Ted Unangst wrote that creating a self-contained website in Go does not work well because Go has broken support for zip files. I still found the concept interesting, so I wrote one in Rust instead.
https://code.rosaelefanten.org/zb/tree Granted, zb (zipblog…) is not a quite as clever name. I know of the broken Markdown in the README file in Fossil, by the way. I’ll fix that later. (Edit: Done.) -- <mort> choosing a terrible license just to be spiteful towards others is possibly the most tux0r thing I've ever seen |
|||
|
|||
@jkl I remember someone having done something similar, it's called redbean
|
|||
|
|||
Well, at least I hope that someone finds a use for it. :)
edit: Redbean - https://redbean.dev - is a similar project indeed. It does not seem to support asset conversion (like zb does), but it is a cross-platform system with embedded Lua (zb is not). Interesting. -- <mort> choosing a terrible license just to be spiteful towards others is possibly the most tux0r thing I've ever seen |
|||
|
|||
I'm working in control, my last (and probably most ambitious?) project.
It is a X11 widget toolkit (or widget set) for writing GUI programs. Currently it only provides a single widget, the text input field, where you can edit a single line of text. However, this widget is very powerful and has lots of editing features any user expects from an input field: Ctrl-Z (undo/redo), mouse selection, Emacs-like text-editing keybindings, etc. In the future, I'll expand this widget set with more widgets, and write some actually useful applications with it. |
|||