micro, a modern and intuitive terminal-based text editor …
micro, a modern and intuitive terminal-based text editor https://t.co/Ja0OJio61u
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) October 9, 2017
micro, a modern and intuitive terminal-based text editor https://t.co/Ja0OJio61u
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) October 9, 2017
SSHPry v2 – Spy & Control SSH Connected client's TTY https://t.co/7WQs4jJixw
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) October 9, 2017
Dynamic Users with systemd https://t.co/0Z6TTvTcDO
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) October 9, 2017
3 DNS Records Every Email Marketer Must Know https://t.co/YRneAwZ12b #rackaid via @rackaid
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) October 1, 2017
Nmap Cheat Sheet https://t.co/O439Ccafde
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) August 17, 2017
I wanted to install Dropbox on my Ubuntu server so I’ve done some research and ended up with the following steps.
The official guide can be found on the Dropbox website but to me is not good enough. I found a Digital Ocean guide which is far more detailed but is a bit messy.
In conclusion, I decided to write a much more comprehensive and simple guide for my head.
Please note that it is recommended to do that in your home directory, the reason why you have the cd ~ command.
cd ~ && wget -O - "https://www.dropbox.com/download?plat=lnx.x86_64" | tar xzf -
The previous command would create the .dropbox-dist hidden directory in your home.
~/.dropbox-dist/dropboxd
The official guide states:
If you’re running Dropbox on your server for the first time, you’ll be asked to copy and paste a link in a working browser to create a new account or add your server to an existing account. Once you do, your Dropbox folder will be created in your home directory.
After doing that Dropbox would start to sync into the server all the cloud files. Just stop with CTRL+C.
This allows controlling Dropbox from the CLI:
cd ~ && wget -O dropbox.py https://www.dropbox.com/download?dl=packages/dropbox.py
Next, we need to give executable permissions to the dropbox.py file and eventually symlink to /usr/local/bin so we can run the command by simply typing dropbox:
chmod +x dropbox.py && ln -sf /root/dropbox.py /usr/local/bin/dropbox
dropbox start and we’re good to go. Dropbox may get quite busy depending on how much stuff you have in the cloud.
dropbox help gives you a nice list of available options.
You may want to exclude some folders from being synced to your server and to do that simply run
dropbox exclude add ~/Dropbox/folder-to-exclude/
Now I can play with rsync! 🙂
Someone may want to set Dropbox to start after a reboot. I’ve tried a few ways but I failed. Is not that important to me but I’ll try later with a fresh mind. In case, I’ll update this post.
You missed "it is written" which refers to Isaiah 64:6. Psalm 141:5 has an outcome: "for yet my prayer also shall be in their calamities."
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) July 18, 2017
Ofsted's Totalitarian Moral Vision – Faith Schools Which Resist Could be Closed – Sign: https://t.co/qjp8mgJHAD
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) July 15, 2017
Installing and configuring the fastest possible WordPress stack on Ubuntu 16.04 https://t.co/OUPnHZnwoQ via @davehilditch
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) July 7, 2017
Database Search and Replace Script in PHP https://t.co/arlJBxXvJo
— Cristian O. Balan (@oviliz) July 7, 2017