emacs --daemon to run in the background.
emacsclient.emacs24 <filename/dirname> to open in terminal
NOTE: "M-m and SPC can be used interchangeably".
- Undo -
C-/ - Redo -
C-? - Change case: 1. Camel Case :
M-c2. Upper Case :M-u
- Lower Case :
M-l
| let mapleader = "," | |
| if &compatible | |
| set nocompatible " Be iMproved | |
| endif | |
| call plug#begin('~/.vim/plugged') | |
| Plug 'tpope/vim-fugitive' | |
| Plug 'airblade/vim-gitgutter' |
| --- | |
| hosts: all | |
| tasks: | |
| - name: add github ssh key | |
| copy: > | |
| src=files/id_rsa.github | |
| dest=/root/.ssh/id_rsa.github | |
| owner=root | |
| group=root |
emacs --daemon to run in the background.
emacsclient.emacs24 <filename/dirname> to open in terminal
NOTE: "M-m and SPC can be used interchangeably".
C-/C-?M-c
2. Upper Case : M-uM-lI've been using a lot of Ansible lately and while almost everything has been great, finding a clean way to implement ansible-vault wasn't immediately apparent.
What I decided on was the following: put your secret information into a vars file, reference that vars file from your task, and encrypt the whole vars file using ansible-vault encrypt.
Let's use an example: You're writing an Ansible role and want to encrypt the spoiler for the movie Aliens.