Found 425 repositories(showing 30)
kube-logging
Logging operator for Kubernetes
CCob
Hunts out CobaltStrike beacons and logs operator command output
ManojKumarPatnaik
A list of practical projects that anyone can solve in any programming language (See solutions). These projects are divided into multiple categories, and each category has its own folder. To get started, simply fork this repo. CONTRIBUTING See ways of contributing to this repo. You can contribute solutions (will be published in this repo) to existing problems, add new projects, or remove existing ones. Make sure you follow all instructions properly. Solutions You can find implementations of these projects in many other languages by other users in this repo. Credits Problems are motivated by the ones shared at: Martyr2’s Mega Project List Rosetta Code Table of Contents Numbers Classic Algorithms Graph Data Structures Text Networking Classes Threading Web Files Databases Graphics and Multimedia Security Numbers Find PI to the Nth Digit - Enter a number and have the program generate PI up to that many decimal places. Keep a limit to how far the program will go. Find e to the Nth Digit - Just like the previous problem, but with e instead of PI. Enter a number and have the program generate e up to that many decimal places. Keep a limit to how far the program will go. Fibonacci Sequence - Enter a number and have the program generate the Fibonacci sequence to that number or to the Nth number. Prime Factorization - Have the user enter a number and find all Prime Factors (if there are any) and display them. Next Prime Number - Have the program find prime numbers until the user chooses to stop asking for the next one. Find Cost of Tile to Cover W x H Floor - Calculate the total cost of the tile it would take to cover a floor plan of width and height, using a cost entered by the user. Mortgage Calculator - Calculate the monthly payments of a fixed-term mortgage over given Nth terms at a given interest rate. Also, figure out how long it will take the user to pay back the loan. For added complexity, add an option for users to select the compounding interval (Monthly, Weekly, Daily, Continually). Change Return Program - The user enters a cost and then the amount of money given. The program will figure out the change and the number of quarters, dimes, nickels, pennies needed for the change. Binary to Decimal and Back Converter - Develop a converter to convert a decimal number to binary or a binary number to its decimal equivalent. Calculator - A simple calculator to do basic operators. Make it a scientific calculator for added complexity. Unit Converter (temp, currency, volume, mass, and more) - Converts various units between one another. The user enters the type of unit being entered, the type of unit they want to convert to, and then the value. The program will then make the conversion. Alarm Clock - A simple clock where it plays a sound after X number of minutes/seconds or at a particular time. Distance Between Two Cities - Calculates the distance between two cities and allows the user to specify a unit of distance. This program may require finding coordinates for the cities like latitude and longitude. Credit Card Validator - Takes in a credit card number from a common credit card vendor (Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discoverer) and validates it to make sure that it is a valid number (look into how credit cards use a checksum). Tax Calculator - Asks the user to enter a cost and either a country or state tax. It then returns the tax plus the total cost with tax. Factorial Finder - The Factorial of a positive integer, n, is defined as the product of the sequence n, n-1, n-2, ...1, and the factorial of zero, 0, is defined as being 1. Solve this using both loops and recursion. Complex Number Algebra - Show addition, multiplication, negation, and inversion of complex numbers in separate functions. (Subtraction and division operations can be made with pairs of these operations.) Print the results for each operation tested. Happy Numbers - A happy number is defined by the following process. Starting with any positive integer, replace the number by the sum of the squares of its digits, and repeat the process until the number equals 1 (where it will stay), or it loops endlessly in a cycle which does not include 1. Those numbers for which this process ends in 1 are happy numbers, while those that do not end in 1 are unhappy numbers. Display an example of your output here. Find the first 8 happy numbers. Number Names - Show how to spell out a number in English. You can use a preexisting implementation or roll your own, but you should support inputs up to at least one million (or the maximum value of your language's default bounded integer type if that's less). Optional: Support for inputs other than positive integers (like zero, negative integers, and floating-point numbers). Coin Flip Simulation - Write some code that simulates flipping a single coin however many times the user decides. The code should record the outcomes and count the number of tails and heads. Limit Calculator - Ask the user to enter f(x) and the limit value, then return the value of the limit statement Optional: Make the calculator capable of supporting infinite limits. Fast Exponentiation - Ask the user to enter 2 integers a and b and output a^b (i.e. pow(a,b)) in O(LG n) time complexity. Classic Algorithms Collatz Conjecture - Start with a number n > 1. Find the number of steps it takes to reach one using the following process: If n is even, divide it by 2. If n is odd, multiply it by 3 and add 1. Sorting - Implement two types of sorting algorithms: Merge sort and bubble sort. Closest pair problem - The closest pair of points problem or closest pair problem is a problem of computational geometry: given n points in metric space, find a pair of points with the smallest distance between them. Sieve of Eratosthenes - The sieve of Eratosthenes is one of the most efficient ways to find all of the smaller primes (below 10 million or so). Graph Graph from links - Create a program that will create a graph or network from a series of links. Eulerian Path - Create a program that will take as an input a graph and output either an Eulerian path or an Eulerian cycle, or state that it is not possible. An Eulerian path starts at one node and traverses every edge of a graph through every node and finishes at another node. An Eulerian cycle is an eulerian Path that starts and finishes at the same node. Connected Graph - Create a program that takes a graph as an input and outputs whether every node is connected or not. Dijkstra’s Algorithm - Create a program that finds the shortest path through a graph using its edges. Minimum Spanning Tree - Create a program that takes a connected, undirected graph with weights and outputs the minimum spanning tree of the graph i.e., a subgraph that is a tree, contains all the vertices, and the sum of its weights is the least possible. Data Structures Inverted index - An Inverted Index is a data structure used to create full-text search. Given a set of text files, implement a program to create an inverted index. Also, create a user interface to do a search using that inverted index which returns a list of files that contain the query term/terms. The search index can be in memory. Text Fizz Buzz - Write a program that prints the numbers from 1 to 100. But for multiples of three print “Fizz” instead of the number and for the multiples of five print “Buzz”. For numbers which are multiples of both three and five print “FizzBuzz”. Reverse a String - Enter a string and the program will reverse it and print it out. Pig Latin - Pig Latin is a game of alterations played in the English language game. To create the Pig Latin form of an English word the initial consonant sound is transposed to the end of the word and an ay is affixed (Ex.: "banana" would yield anana-bay). Read Wikipedia for more information on rules. Count Vowels - Enter a string and the program counts the number of vowels in the text. For added complexity have it report a sum of each vowel found. Check if Palindrome - Checks if the string entered by the user is a palindrome. That is that it reads the same forwards as backward like “racecar” Count Words in a String - Counts the number of individual words in a string. For added complexity read these strings in from a text file and generate a summary. Text Editor - Notepad-style application that can open, edit, and save text documents. Optional: Add syntax highlighting and other features. RSS Feed Creator - Given a link to RSS/Atom Feed, get all posts and display them. Quote Tracker (market symbols etc) - A program that can go out and check the current value of stocks for a list of symbols entered by the user. The user can set how often the stocks are checked. For CLI, show whether the stock has moved up or down. Optional: If GUI, the program can show green up and red down arrows to show which direction the stock value has moved. Guestbook / Journal - A simple application that allows people to add comments or write journal entries. It can allow comments or not and timestamps for all entries. Could also be made into a shoutbox. Optional: Deploy it on Google App Engine or Heroku or any other PaaS (if possible, of course). Vigenere / Vernam / Ceasar Ciphers - Functions for encrypting and decrypting data messages. Then send them to a friend. Regex Query Tool - A tool that allows the user to enter a text string and then in a separate control enter a regex pattern. It will run the regular expression against the source text and return any matches or flag errors in the regular expression. Networking FTP Program - A file transfer program that can transfer files back and forth from a remote web sever. Bandwidth Monitor - A small utility program that tracks how much data you have uploaded and downloaded from the net during the course of your current online session. See if you can find out what periods of the day you use more and less and generate a report or graph that shows it. Port Scanner - Enter an IP address and a port range where the program will then attempt to find open ports on the given computer by connecting to each of them. On any successful connections mark the port as open. Mail Checker (POP3 / IMAP) - The user enters various account information include web server and IP, protocol type (POP3 or IMAP), and the application will check for email at a given interval. Country from IP Lookup - Enter an IP address and find the country that IP is registered in. Optional: Find the Ip automatically. Whois Search Tool - Enter an IP or host address and have it look it up through whois and return the results to you. Site Checker with Time Scheduling - An application that attempts to connect to a website or server every so many minute or a given time and check if it is up. If it is down, it will notify you by email or by posting a notice on the screen. Classes Product Inventory Project - Create an application that manages an inventory of products. Create a product class that has a price, id, and quantity on hand. Then create an inventory class that keeps track of various products and can sum up the inventory value. Airline / Hotel Reservation System - Create a reservation system that books airline seats or hotel rooms. It charges various rates for particular sections of the plane or hotel. For example, first class is going to cost more than a coach. Hotel rooms have penthouse suites which cost more. Keep track of when rooms will be available and can be scheduled. Company Manager - Create a hierarchy of classes - abstract class Employee and subclasses HourlyEmployee, SalariedEmployee, Manager, and Executive. Everyone's pay is calculated differently, research a bit about it. After you've established an employee hierarchy, create a Company class that allows you to manage the employees. You should be able to hire, fire, and raise employees. Bank Account Manager - Create a class called Account which will be an abstract class for three other classes called CheckingAccount, SavingsAccount, and BusinessAccount. Manage credits and debits from these accounts through an ATM-style program. Patient / Doctor Scheduler - Create a patient class and a doctor class. Have a doctor that can handle multiple patients and set up a scheduling program where a doctor can only handle 16 patients during an 8 hr workday. Recipe Creator and Manager - Create a recipe class with ingredients and put them in a recipe manager program that organizes them into categories like desserts, main courses, or by ingredients like chicken, beef, soups, pies, etc. Image Gallery - Create an image abstract class and then a class that inherits from it for each image type. Put them in a program that displays them in a gallery-style format for viewing. Shape Area and Perimeter Classes - Create an abstract class called Shape and then inherit from it other shapes like diamond, rectangle, circle, triangle, etc. Then have each class override the area and perimeter functionality to handle each shape type. Flower Shop Ordering To Go - Create a flower shop application that deals in flower objects and use those flower objects in a bouquet object which can then be sold. Keep track of the number of objects and when you may need to order more. Family Tree Creator - Create a class called Person which will have a name, when they were born, and when (and if) they died. Allow the user to create these Person classes and put them into a family tree structure. Print out the tree to the screen. Threading Create A Progress Bar for Downloads - Create a progress bar for applications that can keep track of a download in progress. The progress bar will be on a separate thread and will communicate with the main thread using delegates. Bulk Thumbnail Creator - Picture processing can take a bit of time for some transformations. Especially if the image is large. Create an image program that can take hundreds of images and converts them to a specified size in the background thread while you do other things. For added complexity, have one thread handling re-sizing, have another bulk renaming of thumbnails, etc. Web Page Scraper - Create an application that connects to a site and pulls out all links, or images, and saves them to a list. Optional: Organize the indexed content and don’t allow duplicates. Have it put the results into an easily searchable index file. Online White Board - Create an application that allows you to draw pictures, write notes and use various colors to flesh out ideas for projects. Optional: Add a feature to invite friends to collaborate on a whiteboard online. Get Atomic Time from Internet Clock - This program will get the true atomic time from an atomic time clock on the Internet. Use any one of the atomic clocks returned by a simple Google search. Fetch Current Weather - Get the current weather for a given zip/postal code. Optional: Try locating the user automatically. Scheduled Auto Login and Action - Make an application that logs into a given site on a schedule and invokes a certain action and then logs out. This can be useful for checking webmail, posting regular content, or getting info for other applications and saving it to your computer. E-Card Generator - Make a site that allows people to generate their own little e-cards and send them to other people. Do not use Flash. Use a picture library and perhaps insightful mottos or quotes. Content Management System - Create a content management system (CMS) like Joomla, Drupal, PHP Nuke, etc. Start small. Optional: Allow for the addition of modules/addons. Web Board (Forum) - Create a forum for you and your buddies to post, administer and share thoughts and ideas. CAPTCHA Maker - Ever see those images with letters numbers when you signup for a service and then ask you to enter what you see? It keeps web bots from automatically signing up and spamming. Try creating one yourself for online forms. Files Quiz Maker - Make an application that takes various questions from a file, picked randomly, and puts together a quiz for students. Each quiz can be different and then reads a key to grade the quizzes. Sort Excel/CSV File Utility - Reads a file of records, sorts them, and then writes them back to the file. Allow the user to choose various sort style and sorting based on a particular field. Create Zip File Maker - The user enters various files from different directories and the program zips them up into a zip file. Optional: Apply actual compression to the files. Start with Huffman Algorithm. PDF Generator - An application that can read in a text file, HTML file, or some other file and generates a PDF file out of it. Great for a web-based service where the user uploads the file and the program returns a PDF of the file. Optional: Deploy on GAE or Heroku if possible. Mp3 Tagger - Modify and add ID3v1 tags to MP3 files. See if you can also add in the album art into the MP3 file’s header as well as other ID3v2 tags. Code Snippet Manager - Another utility program that allows coders to put in functions, classes, or other tidbits to save for use later. Organized by the type of snippet or language the coder can quickly lookup code. Optional: For extra practice try adding syntax highlighting based on the language. Databases SQL Query Analyzer - A utility application in which a user can enter a query and have it run against a local database and look for ways to make it more efficient. Remote SQL Tool - A utility that can execute queries on remote servers from your local computer across the Internet. It should take in a remote host, user name, and password, run the query and return the results. Report Generator - Create a utility that generates a report based on some tables in a database. Generates sales reports based on the order/order details tables or sums up the day's current database activity. Event Scheduler and Calendar - Make an application that allows the user to enter a date and time of an event, event notes, and then schedule those events on a calendar. The user can then browse the calendar or search the calendar for specific events. Optional: Allow the application to create re-occurrence events that reoccur every day, week, month, year, etc. Budget Tracker - Write an application that keeps track of a household’s budget. The user can add expenses, income, and recurring costs to find out how much they are saving or losing over a period of time. Optional: Allow the user to specify a date range and see the net flow of money in and out of the house budget for that time period. TV Show Tracker - Got a favorite show you don’t want to miss? Don’t have a PVR or want to be able to find the show to then PVR it later? Make an application that can search various online TV Guide sites, locate the shows/times/channels and add them to a database application. The database/website then can send you email reminders that a show is about to start and which channel it will be on. Travel Planner System - Make a system that allows users to put together their own little travel itinerary and keep track of the airline/hotel arrangements, points of interest, budget, and schedule. Graphics and Multimedia Slide Show - Make an application that shows various pictures in a slide show format. Optional: Try adding various effects like fade in/out, star wipe, and window blinds transitions. Stream Video from Online - Try to create your own online streaming video player. Mp3 Player - A simple program for playing your favorite music files. Add features you think are missing from your favorite music player. Watermarking Application - Have some pictures you want copyright protected? Add your own logo or text lightly across the background so that no one can simply steal your graphics off your site. Make a program that will add this watermark to the picture. Optional: Use threading to process multiple images simultaneously. Turtle Graphics - This is a common project where you create a floor of 20 x 20 squares. Using various commands you tell a turtle to draw a line on the floor. You have moved forward, left or right, lift or drop the pen, etc. Do a search online for "Turtle Graphics" for more information. Optional: Allow the program to read in the list of commands from a file. GIF Creator A program that puts together multiple images (PNGs, JPGs, TIFFs) to make a smooth GIF that can be exported. Optional: Make the program convert small video files to GIFs as well. Security Caesar cipher - Implement a Caesar cipher, both encoding, and decoding. The key is an integer from 1 to 25. This cipher rotates the letters of the alphabet (A to Z). The encoding replaces each letter with the 1st to 25th next letter in the alphabet (wrapping Z to A). So key 2 encrypts "HI" to "JK", but key 20 encrypts "HI" to "BC". This simple "monoalphabetic substitution cipher" provides almost no security, because an attacker who has the encoded message can either use frequency analysis to guess the key, or just try all 25 keys.
ok2cqr
Linux logging program for amateur radio operators
openshift
Operator to support logging subsystem of OpenShift
dynatrace-oss
Koney is a Kubernetes operator that enables you to define so-called deception policies for your cluster. Koney automates the setup, rotation, and teardown of honeytokens and fake API endpoints, and uses eBPF to detect, log, and forward alerts when your traps have been accessed.
ctjacobs
PyQSO is a contact logging tool for amateur radio operators.
debezium
Kubernetes/OpenShift operator for Debezium Server. Please log issues at https://github.com/debezium/dbz/issues.
shbang91
A Modular Framework for Robot Planning, Control, and Deployment (RPC). It is designed to integrate multiple physics-based simulators, planning and control modules, visualization tools, plotting and logging utilities, and operator interfaces for robotic systems.
OT-CONTAINER-KIT
A golang based operator to create and manage EFK (Elasticsearch, Fluentd, and Kibana) stack on Kubernetes
nyaundid
SEIS 665 Assignment 2: Linux & Git Overview This week we will focus on becoming familiar with launching a Linux server and working with some basic Linux and Git commands. We will use AWS to launch and host the Linux server. AWS might seem a little confusing at this point. Don’t worry, we will gain much more hands-on experience with AWS throughout the course. The goal is to get you comfortable working with the technology and not overwhelm you with all the details. Requirements You need to have a personal AWS account and GitHub account for this assignment. You should also read the Git Hands-on Guide and Linux Hands-on Guide before beginning this exercise. A word about grading One of the key DevOps practices we learn about in this class is the use of automation to increase the speed and repeatability of processes. Automation is utilized during the assignment grading process to review and assess your work. It’s important that you follow the instructions in each assignment and type in required files and resources with the proper names. All names are case sensitive, so a name like "Web1" is not the same as "web1". If you misspell a name, use the wrong case, or put a file in the wrong directory location you will lose points on your assignment. This is the easiest way to lose points, and also the most preventable. You should always double-check your work to make sure it accurately reflects the requirements specified in the assignment. You should always carefully review the content of your files before submitting your assignment. The assignment Let’s get started! Create GitHub repository The first step in the assignment is to setup a Git repository on GitHub. We will use a special solution called GitHub Classroom for this course which automates the process of setting up student assignment repositories. Here are the basic steps: Click on the following link to open Assignment 2 on the GitHub Classroom site: https://classroom.github.com/a/K4zcVmX- (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. Click on the Accept this assignment button. GitHub Classroom will provide you with a URL (https) to access the assignment repository. Either copy this address to your clipboard or write it down somewhere. You will need to use this address to set up the repository on a Linux server. Example: https://github.com/UST-SEIS665/hw2-seis665-02-spring2019-<your github id>.git At this point your new repository to ready to use. The repository is currently empty. We will put some content in there soon! Launch Linux server The second step in the assignment is to launch a Linux server using AWS EC2. The server should have the following characteristics: Amazon Linux 2 AMI 64-bit (usually the first option listed) Located in a U.S. region (us-east-1) t2.micro instance type All default instance settings (storage, vpm, security group, etc.) I’ve shown you how to launch EC2 instances in class. You can review it on Canvas. Once you launch the new server, it may take a few minutes to provision. Log into server The next step is to log into the Linux server using a terminal program with a secure shell (SSH) support. You can use iTerm2 (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. on a Mac and GitBash/PuTTY (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. on a PC. You will need to have the private server key and the public IP address before attempting to log into the server. The server key is basically your password. If you lose it, you will need to terminate the existing instance and launch a new server. I recommend reusing the same key when launching new servers throughout the class. Note, I make this recommendation to make the learning process easier and not because it is a common security practice. I’ve shown you how to use a terminal application to log into the instance using a Windows desktop. Your personal computer or lab computer may be running a different OS version, but the process is still very similar. You can review the videos on the Canvas. Working with Linux If you’ve made it this far, congratulations! You’ve made it over the toughest hurdle. By the end of this course, I promise you will be able to launch and log into servers in your sleep. You should be looking at a login screen that looks something like this: Last login: Mon Mar 21 21:17:54 2016 from 174-20-199-194.mpls.qwest.net __| __|_ ) _| ( / Amazon Linux AMI ___|\___|___| https://aws.amazon.com/amazon-linux-ami/2015.09-release-notes/ 8 package(s) needed for security, out of 17 available Run "sudo yum update" to apply all updates. ec2-user@ip-172-31-15-26 ~]$ Your terminal cursor is sitting at the shell prompt, waiting for you to type in your first command. Remember the shell? It is a really cool program that lets you start other programs and manage services on the Linux system. The rest of this assignment will be spent working with the shell. Note, when you are asked to type in a command in the steps below, don’t type in the dollar-sign ($) character. This is just meant to represent the command prompt. The actual commands are represented by the characters to the right of the command prompt. Let’s start by asking the shell for some help. Type in: $ help The shell provides you with a list of commands you can run along with possible command options. Next, check out one of the pages in the built-in manual: $ man ls A man page will appear with information on how to use the ls command. This command is used to list the contents of file directories. Either space through the contents of the man page or hit q to exit. Most of the core Linux commands have man pages available. But honestly, some of these man pages are a bit hard to understand. Sometimes your best bet is to search on Google if you are trying to figure out how to use a specific command. When you initially log into Linux, the system places you in your home directory. Each user on the system has a separate home directory. Let’s see where your home directory is located: $ pwd The response should be /home/ec2-user. The pwd command is handy to remember if you ever forget what file directory you are currently located in. If you recall from the Linux Hands-on Guide, this directory is also your current working directory. Type in: $ cd / The cd command let’s you change to a new working directory on the server. In this case, we changed to the root (/) directory. This is the parent of all the other directories on the file system. Type in: $ ls The ls command lists the contents of the current directory. As you can see, root directory contains many other directories. You will become familiar with these directories over time. The ls command provides a very basic directory listing. You need to supply the command with some options if you want to see more detailed information. Type in: $ ls -la See how this command provides you with much more detailed information about the files and directories? You can use this detailed listing to see the owner, group, and access control list settings for each file or directory. Do you see any files listed? Remember, the first character in the access control list column denotes whether a listed item is a file or a directory. You probably see a couple files with names like .autofsck. How come you didn’t see this file when you typed in the lscommand without any options? (Try to run this command again to convince yourself.) Files names that start with a period are called hidden files. These files won’t appear on normal directory listings. Type in: $ cd /var Then, type in: $ ls You will see a directory listing for the /var directory. Next, type in: $ ls .. Huh. This directory listing looks the same as the earlier root directory listing. When you use two periods (..) in a directory path that means you are referring to the parent directory of the current directory. Just think of the two dots as meaning the directory above the current directory. Now, type in: $ cd ~ $ pwd Whoa. We’re back at our home directory again. The tilde character (~) is another one of those handy little directory path shortcuts. It always refers to our personal home directory. Keep in mind that since every user has their own home directory, the tilde shortcut will refer to a unique directory for each logged-in user. Most students are used to navigating a file system by clicking a mouse in nested graphical folders. When they start using a command-line to navigate a file system, they sometimes get confused and lose track of their current position in the file system. Remember, you can always use the pwd command to quickly figure out what directory you are currently working in. Let’s make some changes to the file system. We can easily make our own directories on the file system. Type: mkdir test Now type: ls Cool, there’s our new test directory. Let’s pretend we don’t like that directory name and delete it. Type: rmdir test Now it’s gone. How can you be sure? You should know how to check to see if the directory still exists at this point. Go ahead and check. Let’s create another directory. Type in: $ mkdir documents Next, change to the new directory: $ cd documents Did you notice that your command prompt displays the name of the current directory? Something like: [ec2-user@ip-172-31-15-26 documents]$. Pretty handy, huh? Okay, let’s create our first file in the documents directory. This is just an empty file for training purposes. Type in: $ touch paper.txt Check to see that the new file is in the directory. Now, go back to the previous directory. Remember the double dot shortcut? $ cd .. Okay, we don’t like our documents directory any more. Let’s blow it away. Type in: $ rmdir documents Uh oh. The shell didn’t like that command because the directory isn’t empty. Let’s change back into the documents directory. But this time don’t type in the full name of the directory. You can let shell auto-completion do the typing for you. Type in the first couple characters of the directory name and then hit the tab key: $ cd doc<tab> You should use the tab auto-completion feature often. It saves typing and makes working with the Linux file system much much easier. Tab is your friend. Now, remove the file by typing: $ rm paper.txt Did you try to use the tab key instead of typing in the whole file name? Check to make sure the file was deleted from the directory. Next, create a new file: $ touch file1 We like file1 so much that we want to make a backup copy. Type: $ cp file1 file1-backup Check to make sure the new backup copy was created. We don’t really like the name of that new file, so let’s rename it. Type: $ mv file1-backup backup Moving a file to the same directory and giving it a new name is basically the same thing as renaming it. We could have moved it to a different directory if we wanted. Let’s list all of the files in the current directory that start with the letter f: $ ls f* Using wildcard pattern matching in file commands is really useful if you want the command to impact or filter a group of files. Now, go up one directory to the parent directory (remember the double dot shortcut?) We tried to remove the documents directory earlier when it had files in it. Obviously that won’t work again. However, we can use a more powerful command to destroy the directory and vanquish its contents. Behold, the all powerful remove command: $ rm -fr documents Did you remember to use auto-completion when typing in documents? This command and set of options forcibly removes the directory and its contents. It’s a dangerous command wielded by the mightiest Linux wizards. Okay, maybe that’s a bit of an exaggeration. Just be careful with it. Check to make sure the documents directory is gone before proceeding. Let’s continue. Change to the directory /var and make a directory called test. Ugh. Permission denied. We created this darn Linux server and we paid for it. Shouldn’t we be able to do anything we want on it? You logged into the system as a user called ec2-user. While this user can create and manage files in its home directory, it cannot change files all across the system. At least it can’t as a normal user. The ec2-user is a member of the root group, so it can escalate its privileges to super-user status when necessary. Let’s try it: $ sudo mkdir test Check to make sure the directory exists now. Using sudo we can execute commands as a super-user. We can do anything we want now that we know this powerful new command. Go ahead and delete the test directory. Did you remember to use sudo before the rmdir command? Check to make sure the directory is gone. You might be asking yourself the question: why can we list the contents of the /var directory but not make changes? That’s because all users have read access to the /var directory and the ls command is a read function. Only the root users or those acting as a super-user can write changes to the directory. Let’s go back to our home directory: $ cd ~ Editing text files is a really common task on Linux systems because many of the application configuration files are text files. We can create a text file by using a text editor. Type in: $ nano myfile.conf The shell starts up the nano text editor and places your terminal cursor in the editing screen. Nano is a simple text-based word processor. Type in a few lines of text. When you’re done writing your novel, hit ctrl-x and answer y to the prompt to save your work. Finally, hit enter to save the text to the filename you specified. Check to see that your file was saved in the directory. You can take a look at the contents of your file by typing: $ cat myfile.conf The cat command displays your text file content on the terminal screen. This command works fine for displaying small text files. But if your file is hundreds of lines long, the content will scroll down your terminal screen so fast that you won’t be able to easily read it. There’s a better way to view larger text files. Type in: $ less myfile.conf The less command will page the display of a text file, allowing you to page through the contents of the file using the space bar. Your text file is probably too short to see the paging in action though. Hit q to quit out of the less text viewer. Hit the up-arrow key on your keyboard a few times until the commmand nano myfile.conf appears next to your command prompt. Cool, huh? The up-arrow key allows you to replay a previously run command. Linux maintains a list of all the commands you have run since you logged into the server. This is called the command history. It’s a really useful feature if you have to re-run a complex command again. Now, hit ctrl-c. This cancels whatever command is displayed on the command line. Type in the following command to create a couple empty files in the directory: $ touch file1 file2 file3 Confirm that the files were created. Some commands, like touch. allow you to specify multiple files as arguments. You will find that Linux commands have all kinds of ways to make tasks more efficient like this. Throughout this assignment, we have been running commands and viewing results on the terminal screen. The screen is the standard place for commands to output results. It’s known as the standard out (stdout). However, it’s really useful to output results to the file system sometimes. Type in: $ ls > listing.txt Take a look at the directory listing now. You just created a new file. View the contents of the listing.txt file. What do you see? Instead of sending the output from the ls command to the screen we sent it to a text file. Let’s try another one. Type: $ cat myfile.conf > listing.txt Take a look at the contents of the listing.txt file again. It looks like your myfile.conf file now. It’s like you made a copy of it. But what happened to the previous content in the listing.txt file? When you redirect the output of a command using the right angle-bracket character (>), the output overwrites the existing file. Type this command in: $ cat myfile.conf >> listing.txt Now look at the contents of the listing.txt file. You should see your original content displayed twice. When you use two angle-bracket characters in the commmand the output appends (or adds to) the file instead of overwriting it. We redirected the output from a command to a text file. It’s also possible to redirect the input to a command. Typically we use a keyboard to provide input, but sometimes it makes more sense to input a file to a command. For example, how many words are in your new listing.txt file? Let’s find out. Type in: $ wc -w < listing.txt Did you get a number? This command inputs the listing.txt file into a word count program called wc. Type in the command: $ ls /usr/bin The terminal screen probably scrolled quickly as filenames flashed by. The /usr/bin directory holds quite a few files. It would be nice if we could page through the contents of this directory. Well, we can. We can use a special shell feature called pipes. In previous steps, we redirected I/O using the file system. Pipes allow us to redirect I/O between programs. We can redirect the output from one program into another. Type in: $ ls /usr/bin | less Now the directory listing is paged. Hit the spacebar to page through the listing. The pipe, represented by a vertical bar character (|), takes the output from the ls command and redirects it to the less command where the resulting output is paged. Pipes are super powerful and used all the time by savvy Linux operators. Hit the q key to quit the paginated directory listing command. Working with shell scripts Now things are going to get interesting. We’ve been manually typing in commands throughout this exercise. If we were running a set of repetitive tasks, we would want to automate the process as much as possible. The shell makes it really easy to automate tasks using shell scripts. The shell provides many of the same features as a basic procedural programming language. Let’s write some code. Type in this command: $ j=123 $ echo $j We just created a variable named j referencing the string 123. The echo command printed out the value of the variable. We had to use a dollar sign ($) when referencing the variable in another command. Next, type in: $ j=1+1 $ echo $j Is that what you expected? The shell just interprets the variable value as a string. It’s not going to do any sort of computation. Typing in shell script commands on the command line is sort of pointless. We want to be able to create scripts that we can run over-and-over. Let’s create our first shell script. Use the nano editor to create a file named myscript. When the file is open in the editor, type in the following lines of code: #!/bin/bash echo Hello $1 Now quit the editor and save your file. We can run our script by typing: $ ./myscript World Er, what happened? Permission denied. Didn’t we create this file? Why can’t we run it? We can’t run the script file because we haven’t set the execute permission on the file. Type in: $ chmod u+x myscript This modifies the file access control list to allow the owner of the file to execute it. Let’s try to run the command again. Hit the up-arrow key a couple times until the ./myscript World command is displayed and hit enter. Hooray! Our first shell script. It’s probably a bit underwhelming. No problem, we’ll make it a little more complex. The script took a single argument called World. Any arguments provided to a shell script are represented as consecutively numbered variables inside the script ($1, $2, etc). Pretty simple. You might be wondering why we had to type the ./ characters before the name of our script file. Try to type in the command without them: $ myscript World Command not found. That seems a little weird. Aren’t we currently in the directory where the shell script is located? Well, that’s just not how the shell works. When you enter a command into the shell, it looks for the command in a predefined set of directories on the server called your PATH. Since your script file isn’t in your special path, the shell reports it as not found. By typing in the ./ characters before the command name you are basically forcing the shell to look for your script in the current directory instead of the default path. Create another file called cleanup using nano. In the file editor window type: #!/bin/bash # My cleanup script mkdir archive mv file* archive Exit the editor window and save the file. Change the permissions on the script file so that you can execute it. Now run the command: $ ./cleanup Take a look at the file directory listing. Notice the archive directory? List the contents of that directory. The script automatically created a new directory and moved three files into it. Anything you can do manually at a command prompt can be automated using a shell script. Let’s create one more shell script. Use nano to create a script called namelist. Here is the content of the script: #!/bin/bash # for-loop test script names='Jason John Jane' for i in $names do echo Hello $i done Change the permissions on the script file so that you can execute it. Run the command: $ ./namelist The script will loop through a set of names stored in a variable displaying each one. Scripts support several programming constructs like for-loops, do-while loops, and if-then-else. These building blocks allow you to create fairly complex scripts for automating tasks. Installing packages and services We’re nearing the end of this assignment. But before we finish, let’s install some new software packages on our server. The first thing we should do is make sure all the current packages installed on our Linux server are up-to-date. Type in: $ sudo yum update -y This is one of those really powerful commands that requires sudo access. The system will review the currently installed packages and go out to the Internet and download appropriate updates. Next, let’s install an Apache web server on our system. Type in: $ sudo yum install httpd -y Bam! You probably never knew that installing a web server was so easy. We’re not going to actually use the web server in this exercise, but we will in future assignments. We installed the web server, but is it actually running? Let’s check. Type in: $ sudo service httpd status Nope. Let’s start it. Type: $ sudo service httpd start We can use the service command to control the services running on the system. Let’s setup the service so that it automatically starts when the system boots up. Type in: $ sudo chkconfig httpd on Cool. We installed the Apache web server on our system, but what other programs are currently running? We can use the pscommand to find out. Type in: $ ps -ax Lots of processes are running on our system. We can even look at the overall performance of our system using the topcommand. Let’s try that now. Type in: $ top The display might seem a little overwhelming at first. You should see lots of performance information displayed including the cpu usage, free memory, and a list of running tasks. We’re almost across the finish line. Let’s make sure all of our valuable work is stored in a git repository. First, we need to install git. Type in the command: $ sudo yum install git -y Check your work It’s very important to check your work before submitting it for grading. A misspelled, misplaced or missing file will cost you points. This may seem harsh, but the reality is that these sorts of mistakes have consequences in the real world. For example, a server instance could fail to launch properly and impact customers because a single required file is missing. Here is what the contents of your git repository should look like before final submission: ┣archive ┃ ┣ file1 ┃ ┣ file2 ┃ ┗ file3 ┣ namelist ┗ myfile.conf Saving our work in the git repository Next, make sure you are still in your home directory (/home/ec2-user). We will install the git repository you created at the beginning of this exercise. You will need to modify this command by typing in the GitHub repository URL you copied earlier. $ git clone <your GitHub URL here>.git Example: git clone https://github.com/UST-SEIS665/hw2-seis665-02-spring2019-<your github id>.git The git application will ask you for your GitHub username and password. Note, if you have multi-factor authentication enabled on your GitHub account you will need to provide a personal token instead of your password. Git will clone (copy) the repository from GitHub to your Linux server. Since the repository is empty the clone happens almost instantly. Check to make sure that a sub-directory called "hw2-seis665-02-spring2019-<username>" exists in the current directory (where <username> is your GitHub account name). Git automatically created this directory as part of the cloning process. Change to the hw2-seis665-02-spring2019-<username> directory and type: $ ls -la Notice the .git hidden directory? This is where git actually stores all of the file changes in your repository. Nothing is actually in your repository yet. Change back to the parent directory (cd ..). Next, let’s move some of our files into the repository. Type: $ mv archive hw2-seis665-02-spring2019-<username> $ mv namelist hw2-seis665-02-spring2019-<username> $ mv myfile.conf hw2-seis665-02-spring2019-<username> Hopefully, you remembered to use the auto-complete function to reduce some of that typing. Change to the hw2-seis665-02-spring2019-<username> directory and list the directory contents. Your files are in the working directory, but are not actually stored in the repository because they haven’t been committed yet. Type in: $ git status You should see a list of untracked files. Let’s tell git that we want these files tracked. Type in: $ git add * Now type in the git status command again. Notice how all the files are now being tracked and are ready to be committed. These files are in the git staging area. We’ll commit them to the repository next. Type: $ git commit -m 'assignment 2 files' Next, take a look at the commit log. Type: $ git log You should see your commit listed along with an assigned hash (long string of random-looking characters). Finally, let’s save the repository to our GitHub account. Type in: $ git push origin master The git client will ask you for your GitHub username and password before pushing the repository. Go back to the GitHub.com website and login if you have been logged out. Click on the repository link for the assignment. Do you see your files listed there? Congratulations, you completed the exercise! Terminate server The last step is to terminate your Linux instance. AWS will bill you for every hour the instance is running. The cost is nominal, but there’s no need to rack up unnecessary charges. Here are the steps to terminate your instance: Log into your AWS account and click on the EC2 dashboard. Click the Instances menu item. Select your server in the instances table. Click on the Actions drop down menu above the instances table. Select the Instance State menu option Click on the Terminate action. Your Linux instance will shutdown and disappear in a few minutes. The EC2 dashboard will continue to display the instance on your instance listing for another day or so. However, the state of the instance will be terminated. Submitting your assignment — IMPORTANT! If you haven’t already, please e-mail me your GitHub username in order to receive credit for this assignment. There is no need to email me to tell me that you have committed your work to GitHub or to ask me if your GitHub submission worked. If you can see your work in your GitHub repository, I can see your work.
KestrelAI
An operator for streaming Kubernetes resource metadata, logs, events, and network traffic telemetry over mTLS to Kestrel Cloud.
Waffleslop
POTACAT is a Win/Linux/Mac desktop app for ham radio operators that aggregates real-time POTA, SOTA, and DX spots and lets you instantly tune your radio via CAT control with a single click. It also enables full remote operation (audio, PTT, logging) from your phone through a self-hosted browser interface.
felixnotka
Kubernetes operator that generates least-privilege RBAC policies from audit logs
freepik-company
Kubernetes operator that alerts based on Elasticsearch log queries
CloudNativeEntrepreneur
JX3 configured with istio for ingress, auth via keycloak, olm, keycloak operator, postgres operator, monitoring via prometheus/alertmanager, centralized logging via Loki, rbac with rbac-manager, and knative
Coly010
Debug operator to log observable values
ultranet1
Project Description: A music streaming company wants to introduce more automation and monitoring to their data warehouse ETL pipelines and they have come to the conclusion that the best tool to achieve this is Apache Airflow. As their Data Engineer, I was tasked to create a reusable production-grade data pipeline that incorporates data quality checks and allows for easy backfills. Several analysts and Data Scientists rely on the output generated by this pipeline and it is expected that the pipeline runs daily on a schedule by pulling new data from the source and store the results to the destination. Data Description: The source data resides in S3 and needs to be processed in a data warehouse in Amazon Redshift. The source datasets consist of JSON logs that tell about user activity in the application and JSON metadata about the songs the users listen to. Data Pipeline design: At a high-level the pipeline does the following tasks. Extract data from multiple S3 locations. Load the data into Redshift cluster. Transform the data into a star schema. Perform data validation and data quality checks. Calculate the most played songs for the specified time interval. Load the result back into S3. dag Structure of the Airflow DAG Design Goals: Based on the requirements of our data consumers, our pipeline is required to adhere to the following guidelines: The DAG should not have any dependencies on past runs. On failure, the task is retried for 3 times. Retries happen every 5 minutes. Catchup is turned off. Do not email on retry. Pipeline Implementation: Apache Airflow is a Python framework for programmatically creating workflows in DAGs, e.g. ETL processes, generating reports, and retraining models on a daily basis. The Airflow UI automatically parses our DAG and creates a natural representation for the movement and transformation of data. A DAG simply is a collection of all the tasks you want to run, organized in a way that reflects their relationships and dependencies. A DAG describes how you want to carry out your workflow, and Operators determine what actually gets done. By default, airflow comes with some simple built-in operators like PythonOperator, BashOperator, DummyOperator etc., however, airflow lets you extend the features of a BaseOperator and create custom operators. For this project, I developed several custom operators. operators The description of each of these operators follows: StageToRedshiftOperator: Stages data to a specific redshift cluster from a specified S3 location. Operator uses templated fields to handle partitioned S3 locations. LoadFactOperator: Loads data to the given fact table by running the provided sql statement. Supports delete-insert and append style loads. LoadDimensionOperator: Loads data to the given dimension table by running the provided sql statement. Supports delete-insert and append style loads. SubDagOperator: Two or more operators can be grouped into one task using the SubDagOperator. Here, I am grouping the tasks of checking if the given table has rows and then run a series of data quality sql commands. HasRowsOperator: Data quality check to ensure that the specified table has rows. DataQualityOperator: Performs data quality checks by running sql statements to validate the data. SongPopularityOperator: Calculates the top ten most popular songs for a given interval. The interval is dictated by the DAG schedule. UnloadToS3Operator: Stores the analysis result back to the given S3 location. Code for each of these operators is located in the plugins/operators directory. Pipeline Schedule and Data Partitioning: The events data residing on S3 is partitioned by year (2018) and month (11). Our task is to incrementally load the event json files, and run it through the entire pipeline to calculate song popularity and store the result back into S3. In this manner, we can obtain the top songs per day in an automated fashion using the pipeline. Please note, this is a trivial analyis, but you can imagine other complex queries that follow similar structure. S3 Input events data: s3://<bucket>/log_data/2018/11/ 2018-11-01-events.json 2018-11-02-events.json 2018-11-03-events.json .. 2018-11-28-events.json 2018-11-29-events.json 2018-11-30-events.json S3 Output song popularity data: s3://skuchkula-topsongs/ songpopularity_2018-11-01 songpopularity_2018-11-02 songpopularity_2018-11-03 ... songpopularity_2018-11-28 songpopularity_2018-11-29 songpopularity_2018-11-30 The DAG can be configured by giving it some default_args which specify the start_date, end_date and other design choices which I have mentioned above. default_args = { 'owner': 'shravan', 'start_date': datetime(2018, 11, 1), 'end_date': datetime(2018, 11, 30), 'depends_on_past': False, 'email_on_retry': False, 'retries': 3, 'retry_delay': timedelta(minutes=5), 'catchup_by_default': False, 'provide_context': True, } How to run this project? Step 1: Create AWS Redshift Cluster using either the console or through the notebook provided in create-redshift-cluster Run the notebook to create AWS Redshift Cluster. Make a note of: DWN_ENDPOINT :: dwhcluster.c4m4dhrmsdov.us-west-2.redshift.amazonaws.com DWH_ROLE_ARN :: arn:aws:iam::506140549518:role/dwhRole Step 2: Start Apache Airflow Run docker-compose up from the directory containing docker-compose.yml. Ensure that you have mapped the volume to point to the location where you have your DAGs. NOTE: You can find details of how to manage Apache Airflow on mac here: https://gist.github.com/shravan-kuchkula/a3f357ff34cf5e3b862f3132fb599cf3 start_airflow Step 3: Configure Apache Airflow Hooks On the left is the S3 connection. The Login and password are the IAM user's access key and secret key that you created. Basically, by using these credentials, we are able to read data from S3. On the right is the redshift connection. These values can be easily gathered from your Redshift cluster connections Step 4: Execute the create-tables-dag This dag will create the staging, fact and dimension tables. The reason we need to trigger this manually is because, we want to keep this out of main dag. Normally, creation of tables can be handled by just triggering a script. But for the sake of illustration, I created a DAG for this and had Airflow trigger the DAG. You can turn off the DAG once it is completed. After running this DAG, you should see all the tables created in the AWS Redshift. Step 5: Turn on the load_and_transform_data_in_redshift dag As the execution start date is 2018-11-1 with a schedule interval @daily and the execution end date is 2018-11-30, Airflow will automatically trigger and schedule the dag runs once per day for 30 times. Shown below are the 30 DAG runs ranging from start_date till end_date, that are trigged by airflow once per day. schedule
ew8bak
Logging program for amateur radio operators
suhailroushan13
Basics of JavaScript 1. History of JavaScript 2. Getting Started with JavaScript 3. Data Types 4. Different Types of console.log() 5. Variables (var, let, const) and Its Scope 6. Operators 7. Type Conversions 8. Control Flow (If else ,loops, break, switch) 9. Functions In JavaScript 10. Objects In JavaScript 11. Arrays In JavaScript
canonical
This charmed operator automates the operational procedures of ryunning Grafana Loki, an open-source logs backend, in monolithic mode
dynatrace-oss
A Kubernetes operator that logs and forwards all HTTP requests over TCP/IPv4 using an eBPF program to intercept traffic.
seifrajhi
Terraform module to set up alerts detecting manual actions using SNS. Monitors EKS Audit Logs and notifies subscribed operators when manual changes occur in the cluster
dallyswag
############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | Notes | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ # If you want to use special characters in this document, such as accented letters, you MUST save the file as UTF-8, not ANSI. # If you receive an error when Essentials loads, ensure that: # - No tabs are present: YAML only allows spaces # - Indents are correct: YAML hierarchy is based entirely on indentation # - You have "escaped" all apostrophes in your text: If you want to write "don't", for example, write "don''t" instead (note the doubled apostrophe) # - Text with symbols is enclosed in single or double quotation marks # If you have problems join the Essentials help support channel: http://tiny.cc/EssentialsChat ############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | Essentials (Global) | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ # A color code between 0-9 or a-f. Set to 'none' to disable. ops-name-color: '4' # The character(s) to prefix all nicknames, so that you know they are not true usernames. nickname-prefix: '~' # The maximum length allowed in nicknames. The nickname prefix is included in this. max-nick-length: 15 # Disable this if you have any other plugin, that modifies the displayname of a user. change-displayname: true # When this option is enabled, the (tab) player list will be updated with the displayname. # The value of change-displayname (above) has to be true. #change-playerlist: true # When essentialschat.jar isn't used, force essentials to add the prefix and suffix from permission plugins to displayname. # This setting is ignored if essentialschat.jar is used, and defaults to 'true'. # The value of change-displayname (above) has to be true. # Do not edit this setting unless you know what you are doing! #add-prefix-suffix: false # If the teleport destination is unsafe, should players be teleported to the nearest safe location? # If this is set to true, Essentials will attempt to teleport players close to the intended destination. # If this is set to false, attempted teleports to unsafe locations will be cancelled with a warning. teleport-safety: true # The delay, in seconds, required between /home, /tp, etc. teleport-cooldown: 3 # The delay, in seconds, before a user actually teleports. If the user moves or gets attacked in this timeframe, the teleport never occurs. teleport-delay: 5 # The delay, in seconds, a player can't be attacked by other players after they have been teleported by a command. # This will also prevent the player attacking other players. teleport-invulnerability: 4 # The delay, in seconds, required between /heal or /feed attempts. heal-cooldown: 60 # What to prevent from /i /give. # e.g item-spawn-blacklist: 46,11,10 item-spawn-blacklist: # Set this to true if you want permission based item spawn rules. # Note: The blacklist above will be ignored then. # Example permissions (these go in your permissions manager): # - essentials.itemspawn.item-all # - essentials.itemspawn.item-[itemname] # - essentials.itemspawn.item-[itemid] # - essentials.give.item-all # - essentials.give.item-[itemname] # - essentials.give.item-[itemid] # - essentials.unlimited.item-all # - essentials.unlimited.item-[itemname] # - essentials.unlimited.item-[itemid] # - essentials.unlimited.item-bucket # Unlimited liquid placing # # For more information, visit http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/Command_Reference/ICheat#Item.2FGive permission-based-item-spawn: false # Mob limit on the /spawnmob command per execution. spawnmob-limit: 1 # Shall we notify users when using /lightning? warn-on-smite: true # motd and rules are now configured in the files motd.txt and rules.txt. # When a command conflicts with another plugin, by default, Essentials will try to force the OTHER plugin to take priority. # Commands in this list, will tell Essentials to 'not give up' the command to other plugins. # In this state, which plugin 'wins' appears to be almost random. # # If you have two plugin with the same command and you wish to force Essentials to take over, you need an alias. # To force essentials to take 'god' alias 'god' to 'egod'. # See http://wiki.bukkit.org/Bukkit.yml#aliases for more information overridden-commands: # - god # - info # Disabling commands here will prevent Essentials handling the command, this will not affect command conflicts. # Commands should fallback to the vanilla versions if available. # You should not have to disable commands used in other plugins, they will automatically get priority. disabled-commands: # - nick # - clear - mail - mail.send - nuke - afk # These commands will be shown to players with socialSpy enabled. # You can add commands from other plugins you may want to track or # remove commands that are used for something you dont want to spy on. socialspy-commands: - msg - w - r - mail - m - t - whisper - emsg - tell - er - reply - ereply - email - action - describe - eme - eaction - edescribe - etell - ewhisper - pm # If you do not wish to use a permission system, you can define a list of 'player perms' below. # This list has no effect if you are using a supported permissions system. # If you are using an unsupported permissions system, simply delete this section. # Whitelist the commands and permissions you wish to give players by default (everything else is op only). # These are the permissions without the "essentials." part. player-commands: - afk - afk.auto - back - back.ondeath - balance - balance.others - balancetop - build - chat.color - chat.format - chat.shout - chat.question - clearinventory - compass - depth - delhome - getpos - geoip.show - help - helpop - home - home.others - ignore - info - itemdb - kit - kits.tools - list - mail - mail.send - me - motd - msg - msg.color - nick - near - pay - ping - protect - r - rules - realname - seen - sell - sethome - setxmpp - signs.create.protection - signs.create.trade - signs.break.protection - signs.break.trade - signs.use.balance - signs.use.buy - signs.use.disposal - signs.use.enchant - signs.use.free - signs.use.gamemode - signs.use.heal - signs.use.info - signs.use.kit - signs.use.mail - signs.use.protection - signs.use.repair - signs.use.sell - signs.use.time - signs.use.trade - signs.use.warp - signs.use.weather - spawn - suicide - time - tpa - tpaccept - tpahere - tpdeny - warp - warp.list - world - worth - xmpp # Note: All items MUST be followed by a quantity! # All kit names should be lower case, and will be treated as lower in permissions/costs. # Syntax: - itemID[:DataValue/Durability] Amount [Enchantment:Level].. [itemmeta:value]... # For Item meta information visit http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/Item_Meta # 'delay' refers to the cooldown between how often you can use each kit, measured in seconds. # For more information, visit http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/Kits kits: Goblin: delay: 3600 items: - 272 1 sharpness:2 unbreaking:1 looting:1 name:&8[&2Goblin&8]&fSword - 306 1 unbreaking:1 protection:1 name:&8[&2Goblin&8]&fHelmet - 307 1 unbreaking:1 protection:1 name:&8[&2Goblin&8]&fChestplate - 308 1 unbreaking:1 protection:1 name:&8[&2Goblin&8]&fLeggings - 309 1 unbreaking:1 protection:1 name:&8[&2Goblin&8]&fBoots - 256 1 efficiency:1 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&2Goblin&8]&fShovel - 257 1 efficiency:1 unbreaking:1 fortune:1 name:&8[&2Goblin&8]&fPickaxe - 258 1 efficiency:1 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&2Goblin&8]&fAxe - 364 16 Griefer: delay: 14400 items: - 276 1 sharpness:3 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&d&lGriefer&8]&fSword - 322:1 1 - 310 1 protection:2 name:&8[&d&lGriefer&8]&fHelmet - 311 1 protection:2 name:&8[&d&lGriefer&8]&fChestplate - 312 1 protection:2 name:&8[&d&lGriefer&8]&fLeggings - 313 1 protection:2 name:&8[&d&lGriefer&8]&fBoots Villager: delay: 43200 items: - 267 1 sharpness:4 name:&8[&eVillager&8]&fSword - 306 1 unbreaking:3 protection:4 name:&8[&eVillager&8]&fHelmet - 307 1 unbreaking:3 protection:4 name:&8[&eVillager&8]&fChestplate - 308 1 unbreaking:3 protection:4 name:&8[&eVillager&8]&fLeggings - 309 1 unbreaking:3 protection:4 name:&8[&eVillager&8]&fBoots - 388 10 - 383:120 2 Knight: delay: 43200 items: - 276 1 sharpness:3 name:&8[&cKnight&8]&fSword - 310 1 protection:2 name:&8[&cKnight&8]&fHelmet - 311 1 protection:2 name:&8[&cKnight&8]&fChestplate - 312 1 protection:2 name:&8[&cKnight&8]&fLeggings - 313 1 protection:2 name:&8[&cKnight&8]&fBoots - 388 20 - 383:120 4 King: delay: 43200 items: - 276 1 sharpness:4 fire:1 name:&8[&5King&8]&fSword - 310 1 protection:4 name:&8[&5King&8]&fHelmet - 311 1 protection:4 name:&8[&5King&8]&fChestplate - 312 1 protection:4 name:&8[&5King&8]&fLeggings - 313 1 protection:4 name:&8[&5King&8]&fBoots - 388 30 - 383:120 6 Hero: delay: 43200 items: - 276 1 sharpness:4 fire:2 name:&8[&aHero&8]&fSword - 310 1 protection:4 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&aHero&8]&fHelmet - 311 1 protection:4 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&aHero&8]&fChestplate - 312 1 protection:4 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&aHero&8]&fLeggings - 313 1 protection:4 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&aHero&8]&fBoots - 388 40 - 383:120 8 God: delay: 43200 items: - 276 1 sharpness:5 fire:2 name:&8[&4God&8]&fSword - 310 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&4God&8]&fHelmet - 311 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&4God&8]&fChestplate - 312 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&4God&8]&fLeggings - 313 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&4God&8]&fBoots - 388 50 - 383:120 10 - 322:1 5 Legend: delay: 43200 items: - 276 1 sharpness:5 fire:2 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&6&lLegend&8]&fSword - 310 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 thorns:3 name:&8[&6&lLegend&8]&fHelmet - 311 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 thorns:3 name:&8[&6&lLegend&8]&fChestplate - 312 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 thorns:3 name:&8[&6&lLegend&8]&fLeggings - 313 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 thorns:3 name:&8[&6&lLegend&8]&fBoots - 388 60 - 383:120 12 - 322:1 10 - 383:50 5 - 261 1 flame:1 power:5 punch:2 unbreaking:3 infinity:1 name:&8[&6&lLegend&8]&fBow - 262 1 - 279 1 sharpness:5 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&6&lLegend&8]&fAxe Youtube: delay: 43200 items: - 276 1 sharpness:5 fire:2 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&f&lYou&c&lTube&8]&fSword - 310 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 thorns:3 name:&8[&f&lYou&c&lTube&8]&fHelmet - 311 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 thorns:3 name:&8[&f&lYou&c&lTube&8]&fChestplate - 312 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 thorns:3 name:&8[&f&lYou&c&lTube&8]&fLeggings - 313 1 protection:4 unbreaking:3 thorns:3 name:&8[&f&lYou&c&lTube&8]&fBoots - 388 60 - 383:120 12 - 322:1 10 - 383:50 5 - 261 1 flame:1 power:5 punch:2 unbreaking:3 infinity:1 name:&8[&f&lYou&c&lTube&8]&fBow - 262 1 - 279 1 sharpness:5 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&f&lYou&c&lTube&8]&fAxe Join: delay: 3600 items: - 17 16 - 333 1 - 49 32 - 50 16 - 4 64 - 373:8258 1 - 320 16 Reset: delay: 31536000 items: - 272 1 sharpness:4 unbreaking:3 name:&8[&cR&ee&as&be&dt&8]&fSword - 298 1 protection:3 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&cR&ee&as&be&dt&8]&fHelmet - 299 1 protection:3 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&cR&ee&as&be&dt&8]&fChestplate - 300 1 protection:3 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&cR&ee&as&be&dt&8]&fLeggings - 301 1 protection:3 unbreaking:1 name:&8[&cR&ee&as&be&dt&8]&fBoots - 354 1 name:&f&l Cake &4Vote # Essentials Sign Control # See http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/Sign_Tutorial for instructions on how to use these. # To enable signs, remove # symbol. To disable all signs, comment/remove each sign. # Essentials Colored sign support will be enabled when any sign types are enabled. # Color is not an actual sign, it's for enabling using color codes on signs, when the correct permissions are given. enabledSigns: - color - balance - buy - sell #- trade #- free #- disposal #- warp #- kit #- mail #- enchant #- gamemode #- heal #- info #- spawnmob #- repair #- time #- weather # How many times per second can Essentials signs be interacted with per player. # Values should be between 1-20, 20 being virtually no lag protection. # Lower numbers will reduce the possibility of lag, but may annoy players. sign-use-per-second: 4 # Backup runs a batch/bash command while saving is disabled. backup: # Interval in minutes. interval: 30 # Unless you add a valid backup command or script here, this feature will be useless. # Use 'save-all' to simply force regular world saving without backup. #command: 'rdiff-backup World1 backups/World1' # Set this true to enable permission per warp. per-warp-permission: false # Sort output of /list command by groups. # You can hide and merge the groups displayed in /list by defining the desired behaviour here. # Detailed instructions and examples can be found on the wiki: http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/List list: # To merge groups, list the groups you wish to merge #Staff: owner admin moderator Admins: owner admin # To limit groups, set a max user limit #builder: 20 # To hide groups, set the group as hidden #default: hidden # Uncomment the line below to simply list all players with no grouping #Players: '*' # More output to the console. debug: false # Set the locale for all messages. # If you don't set this, the default locale of the server will be used. # For example, to set language to English, set locale to en, to use the file "messages_en.properties". # Don't forget to remove the # in front of the line. # For more information, visit http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/Locale #locale: en # Turn off god mode when people exit. remove-god-on-disconnect: false # Auto-AFK # After this timeout in seconds, the user will be set as afk. # This feature requires the player to have essentials.afk.auto node. # Set to -1 for no timeout. auto-afk: 300 # Auto-AFK Kick # After this timeout in seconds, the user will be kicked from the server. # essentials.afk.kickexempt node overrides this feature. # Set to -1 for no timeout. auto-afk-kick: -1 # Set this to true, if you want to freeze the player, if he is afk. # Other players or monsters can't push him out of afk mode then. # This will also enable temporary god mode for the afk player. # The player has to use the command /afk to leave the afk mode. freeze-afk-players: false # When the player is afk, should he be able to pickup items? # Enable this, when you don't want people idling in mob traps. disable-item-pickup-while-afk: false # This setting controls if a player is marked as active on interaction. # When this setting is false, you will need to manually un-AFK using the /afk command. cancel-afk-on-interact: true # Should we automatically remove afk status when the player moves? # Player will be removed from AFK on chat/command regardless of this setting. # Disable this to reduce server lag. cancel-afk-on-move: true # You can disable the death messages of Minecraft here. death-messages: false # Should operators be able to join and part silently. # You can control this with permissions if it is enabled. allow-silent-join-quit: true # You can set a custom join message here, set to "none" to disable. # You may use color codes, use {USERNAME} the player's name or {PLAYER} for the player's displayname. custom-join-message: "" # You can set a custom quit message here, set to "none" to disable. # You may use color codes, use {USERNAME} the player's name or {PLAYER} for the player's displayname. custom-quit-message: "" # Add worlds to this list, if you want to automatically disable god mode there. no-god-in-worlds: # - world_nether # Set to true to enable per-world permissions for teleporting between worlds with essentials commands. # This applies to /world, /back, /tp[a|o][here|all], but not warps. # Give someone permission to teleport to a world with essentials.worlds.<worldname> # This does not affect the /home command, there is a separate toggle below for this. world-teleport-permissions: false # The number of items given if the quantity parameter is left out in /item or /give. # If this number is below 1, the maximum stack size size is given. If over-sized stacks. # are not enabled, any number higher than the maximum stack size results in more than one stack. default-stack-size: -1 # Over-sized stacks are stacks that ignore the normal max stack size. # They can be obtained using /give and /item, if the player has essentials.oversizedstacks permission. # How many items should be in an over-sized stack? oversized-stacksize: 64 # Allow repair of enchanted weapons and armor. # If you set this to false, you can still allow it for certain players using the permission. # essentials.repair.enchanted repair-enchanted: true # Allow 'unsafe' enchantments in kits and item spawning. # Warning: Mixing and overleveling some enchantments can cause issues with clients, servers and plugins. unsafe-enchantments: false #Do you want essentials to keep track of previous location for /back in the teleport listener? #If you set this to true any plugin that uses teleport will have the previous location registered. register-back-in-listener: false #Delay to wait before people can cause attack damage after logging in. login-attack-delay: 5 #Set the max fly speed, values range from 0.1 to 1.0 max-fly-speed: 0.8 #Set the max walk speed, values range from 0.1 to 1.0 max-walk-speed: 0.8 #Set the maximum amount of mail that can be sent within a minute. mails-per-minute: 1000 # Set the maximum time /tempban can be used for in seconds. # Set to -1 to disable, and essentials.tempban.unlimited can be used to override. max-tempban-time: -1 ############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | EssentialsHome | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ # Allows people to set their bed at daytime. update-bed-at-daytime: true # Set to true to enable per-world permissions for using homes to teleport between worlds. # This applies to the /home only. # Give someone permission to teleport to a world with essentials.worlds.<worldname> world-home-permissions: false # Allow players to have multiple homes. # Players need essentials.sethome.multiple before they can have more than 1 home. # You can set the default number of multiple homes using the 'default' rank below. # To remove the home limit entirely, give people 'essentials.sethome.multiple.unlimited'. # To grant different home amounts to different people, you need to define a 'home-rank' below. # Create the 'home-rank' below, and give the matching permission: essentials.sethome.multiple.<home-rank> # For more information, visit http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/Multihome sethome-multiple: Goblin: 1 Villager: 2 Knight: 3 King: 4 Hero: 5 God: 6 # In this example someone with 'essentials.sethome.multiple' and 'essentials.sethome.multiple.vip' will have 5 homes. # Set timeout in seconds for players to accept tpa before request is cancelled. # Set to 0 for no timeout. tpa-accept-cancellation: 120 ############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | EssentialsEco | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ # For more information, visit http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/Essentials_Economy # Defines the balance with which new players begin. Defaults to 0. starting-balance: 1000 # worth-# defines the value of an item when it is sold to the server via /sell. # These are now defined in worth.yml # Defines the cost to use the given commands PER USE. # Some commands like /repair have sub-costs, check the wiki for more information. command-costs: # /example costs $1000 PER USE #example: 1000 # /kit tools costs $1500 PER USE #kit-tools: 1500 # Set this to a currency symbol you want to use. currency-symbol: '$' # Set the maximum amount of money a player can have. # The amount is always limited to 10 trillion because of the limitations of a java double. max-money: 10000000000000 # Set the minimum amount of money a player can have (must be above the negative of max-money). # Setting this to 0, will disable overdrafts/loans completely. Users need 'essentials.eco.loan' perm to go below 0. min-money: -10000 # Enable this to log all interactions with trade/buy/sell signs and sell command. economy-log-enabled: false ############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | EssentialsHelp | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ # Show other plugins commands in help. non-ess-in-help: true # Hide plugins which do not give a permission. # You can override a true value here for a single plugin by adding a permission to a user/group. # The individual permission is: essentials.help.<plugin>, anyone with essentials.* or '*' will see all help regardless. # You can use negative permissions to remove access to just a single plugins help if the following is enabled. hide-permissionless-help: true ############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | EssentialsChat | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ chat: # If EssentialsChat is installed, this will define how far a player's voice travels, in blocks. Set to 0 to make all chat global. # Note that users with the "essentials.chat.spy" permission will hear everything, regardless of this setting. # Users with essentials.chat.shout can override this by prefixing text with an exclamation mark (!) # Users with essentials.chat.question can override this by prefixing text with a question mark (?) # You can add command costs for shout/question by adding chat-shout and chat-question to the command costs section." radius: 0 # Chat formatting can be done in two ways, you can either define a standard format for all chat. # Or you can give a group specific chat format, to give some extra variation. # If set to the default chat format which "should" be compatible with ichat. # For more information of chat formatting, check out the wiki: http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/Chat_Formatting format: '<{DISPLAYNAME}> {MESSAGE}' #format: '&7[{GROUP}]&r {DISPLAYNAME}&7:&r {MESSAGE}' group-formats: Goblin: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f&o {MESSAGE}' Youtuber: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Witch: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f&o {MESSAGE}' Wizard: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Sorcerer: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Raider: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Greifer: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&a {MESSAGE}' ChatMod: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Owner: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&c {MESSAGE}' OP: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Developer: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' HeadAdmin: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Admin: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' JuniorAdmin: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' StaffManager: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' ForumAdmin: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' HeadModerator: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Moderator: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Helper: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Villager: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Knight: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' King: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Hero: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' God: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&f {MESSAGE}' Legend: '&7{DISPLAYNAME}&8:&b {MESSAGE}' # If you are using group formats make sure to remove the '#' to allow the setting to be read. ############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | EssentialsProtect | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ protect: # General physics/behavior modifications. prevent: lava-flow: false water-flow: false water-bucket-flow: false fire-spread: true lava-fire-spread: true flint-fire: false lightning-fire-spread: true portal-creation: false tnt-explosion: false tnt-playerdamage: false tnt-minecart-explosion: false tnt-minecart-playerdamage: false fireball-explosion: false fireball-fire: false fireball-playerdamage: false witherskull-explosion: false witherskull-playerdamage: false wither-spawnexplosion: false wither-blockreplace: false creeper-explosion: false creeper-playerdamage: false creeper-blockdamage: false enderdragon-blockdamage: true enderman-pickup: false villager-death: false # Monsters won't follow players. # permission essentials.protect.entitytarget.bypass disables this. entitytarget: false # Prevent the spawning of creatures. spawn: creeper: false skeleton: false spider: false giant: false zombie: false slime: false ghast: false pig_zombie: false enderman: false cave_spider: false silverfish: false blaze: false magma_cube: false ender_dragon: false pig: false sheep: false cow: false chicken: false squid: false wolf: false mushroom_cow: false snowman: false ocelot: false iron_golem: false villager: false wither: true bat: false witch: false horse: false # Maximum height the creeper should explode. -1 allows them to explode everywhere. # Set prevent.creeper-explosion to true, if you want to disable creeper explosions. creeper: max-height: -1 # Disable various default physics and behaviors. disable: # Should fall damage be disabled? fall: false # Users with the essentials.protect.pvp permission will still be able to attack each other if this is set to true. # They will be unable to attack users without that same permission node. pvp: false # Should drowning damage be disabled? # (Split into two behaviors; generally, you want both set to the same value.) drown: false suffocate: false # Should damage via lava be disabled? Items that fall into lava will still burn to a crisp. ;) lavadmg: false # Should arrow damage be disabled? projectiles: false # This will disable damage from touching cacti. contactdmg: false # Burn, baby, burn! Should fire damage be disabled? firedmg: false # Should the damage after hit by a lightning be disabled? lightning: false # Should Wither damage be disabled? wither: false # Disable weather options? weather: storm: false thunder: false lightning: false ############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | EssentialsAntiBuild | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ # Disable various default physics and behaviors # For more information, visit http://wiki.ess3.net/wiki/AntiBuild # Should people with build: false in permissions be allowed to build? # Set true to disable building for those people. # Setting to false means EssentialsAntiBuild will never prevent you from building. build: true # Should people with build: false in permissions be allowed to use items? # Set true to disable using for those people. # Setting to false means EssentialsAntiBuild will never prevent you from using items. use: true # Should we tell people they are not allowed to build? warn-on-build-disallow: true # For which block types would you like to be alerted? # You can find a list of IDs in plugins/Essentials/items.csv after loading Essentials for the first time. # 10 = lava :: 11 = still lava :: 46 = TNT :: 327 = lava bucket alert: on-placement: 10,11,46,327 on-use: 327 on-break: blacklist: # Which blocks should people be prevented from placing? placement: 10,11,46,327 # Which items should people be prevented from using? usage: 327 # Which blocks should people be prevented from breaking? break: # Which blocks should not be pushed by pistons? piston: # Which blocks should not be dispensed by dispensers dispenser: ############################################################ # +------------------------------------------------------+ # # | Essentials Spawn / New Players | # # +------------------------------------------------------+ # ############################################################ newbies: # Should we announce to the server when someone logs in for the first time? # If so, use this format, replacing {DISPLAYNAME} with the player name. # If not, set to '' #announce-format: '' announce-format: '&cWelcome &e&l{DISPLAYNAME}&c to the &8R&7e&8t&7r&8o&4-&cFactions server!' # When we spawn for the first time, which spawnpoint do we use? # Set to "none" if you want to use the spawn point of the world. spawnpoint: newbies # Do we want to give users anything on first join? Set to '' to disable # This kit will be given regardless of cost, and permissions. #kit: '' kit: join # Set this to lowest, if you want Multiverse to handle the respawning. # Set this to high, if you want EssentialsSpawn to handle the respawning. # Set this to highest, if you want to force EssentialsSpawn to handle the respawning. respawn-listener-priority: high # When users die, should they respawn at their first home or bed, instead of the spawnpoint? respawn-at-home: false # End of File <-- No seriously, you're done with configuration.
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