Difference between revisions of "Howto Ubuntu"

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(Custom autocomplete in Ubuntu)
(Acroread on Ubuntu)
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==== Acroread on Ubuntu ====
==== Acroread on Ubuntu ====
The link: [http://ubuntu-tutorials.com/2008/06/23/install-adobe-acrobat-reader-812-on-ubuntu-804/]
The [http://ubuntu-tutorials.com/2008/06/23/install-adobe-acrobat-reader-812-on-ubuntu-804/ link].



==== Check the ports and apps listening on them ====
==== Check the ports and apps listening on them ====

Revision as of 10:33, 23 March 2010

Notes about installing and setup of various apps and features in Ubuntu


Other nice external links and howto-s

Mass search and replace in files (with sed)

for i in $(find . -type f); do sed 's/oldstring/newstring/g' $i > $i-tmp; mv $i $i-backup; mv $i-tmp $i; done


DV/Firewire for Ubuntu

https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Firewire


Tunneling to socks proxy

ssh-tunnel-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.

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.

Read more on "howto" here: part 1 and part 2


Create your own apt-get repositories

The link.