Posted January 25, 2010 at 02:01am in
Security
Friday was my first time attending a PGP key signing party. We had it in one of the buildings on campus and I thought I would share some of the commands I used to handle all the certificates. I created a method for handling key signing parties while I did this one, but I think this is a fairly good method. What it basically does is keeps specific users in your pubring.gpg, while people at keysigning parties are in specific keyrings. When defining them in your gpg.conf file they will be included in all of your GPG operations so it will be like they were in your pubring.gpg keyring. It also means that if you don’t associate with anyone in the keysigning parting you can just comment out the file and still have the keys for later use or for archival purposes.
I first wanted to have these be in a specific keyring for the purposes of knowing who was at each keysigning. To make sure your key gets added to the keyring you need to specify not to use the default keyring and use a specific keyring.. Make sure you include your keyid in the list of keys to pull from the keyserver as it will be needed when PIUS runs against the specific keyring.
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Posted January 18, 2010 at 02:01am in
Linux
When I wrote the code to automatically generate aliases for hosts in my SSH config I started thinking about how checks are never done to verify we are not overriding an existing alias. This is my solution for it. I almost think that alias should be an alias for register_alias so that all aliases get checked, but I’m sure there could be an instance where it would break something. Let me know what you think about assigning aliases this way.
# .bash_functions
function register_alias() {
local alias=$(echo $* | cut -d'=' -f 1)
local TEMP_CMD=$(which $alias)
local TEMP_ALIAS=$(echo "`alias`" | sed 's/alias\ \(.*\)=.*/\1/' | grep ^$alias$)
if [ ${#TEMP_CMD} -gt 0 ]; then
echo "Alias $alias conflicts with command $TEMP_CMD"
elif [ ${#TEMP_ALIAS} -gt 0 ]; then
echo "Alias $alias conflicts with alias $alias"
else
alias "$*"
fi
}
# .bashrc
if [ -f ~/.bash_functions ]; then
. ~/.bash_functions
fi
# .bash_aliases
register_alias sls='screen -ls'
register_alias sdr='screen -d -r'
Update: I changed the TEMP_ALIAS line to use sed instead of cut/sed
Posted January 18, 2010 at 12:01am in
Linux
There are some aliases and small scripts I use on a normal basis.
I prefer to just type in the machine I want to ssh to instead of typing ssh in front of it. This chunk of code goes in my ~/.bashrc file and creates an alias for each “Host …” entry in ~/.ssh/config. It checks to see if there is an existing command that matches the Host entry, and alerts you if there is a conflict
# Generate SSH aliases
for host in $(grep ^Host .ssh/config | sed s/Host\ //g); do
TEMP_CMD=$(which $host)
TEMP_ALIASES=$(echo "`alias`" | sed 's/alias\ \(.*\)=.*/\1/' | grep ^$host$)
if [ ${#TEMP_CMD} -gt 0 ]; then
echo "Alias $host conflicts with command $TEMP_CMD"
elif [ ${#TEMP_ALIASES} -gt 0 ]; then
echo "Alias $host conflicts with alias $host"
else
alias $host="ssh $host"
fi
done
When you open a terminal you will see something like this if you have conflicts.
Alias www conflicts with alias www
Alias hg conflicts with command /usr/bin/hg
Alias git conflicts with command /usr/bin/git
[20:05:21] manis@baron:~$
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