- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
I have been searching for a simple way to copy loads of text from remote servers for a while. This includes files, but is sometimes also only multiple lines from stdout of a program. Oftentimes this is kinda hard to do in terminal emulators, so I wrote a very small program to copy text via Operating System Commands.
This allows the terminal emulator itself to copy the text directly into the host clipboard. No x11 pass-through needed.
Lots of text editors like vim (with oscyank-plugin) or helix already have a functionality like that, but opening large files just to copy them is stupid (also not all servers I admin have the oscyank or helix even installed).
If you want to know, if your terminal emulator supports osc52, please refer to the oscyank-repo, they have a nice list.
- Don’t use
"*"
dep version requirements. - Add
Cargo.lock
to version control. - Why read to string if you’re going to base64-encode and use
Vec<u8>
later anyway?
All good points. I will address them in a later version.
The Cargo.lock thing is weird though, but apparently the builtin .gitignore of codeberg/forgejo has Cargo.lock in it.
In addition to the sibling comment, note that reproducible build systems from Docker to Nix require a lockfile in order to be reproducible, and if you don’t provide one, then somebody downstream will provide it instead. By checking in
Cargo.lock
, you ensure control over the precise versions of your dependencies for all downstream users.Regarding
Cargo.lock
, the recommendation always was to include it in version control for application/binary crates, but not library ones. But tendencies changed over time to include it even for libraries. If arust-toolchain
file is tracked by version control, and is pinned to a specific stable release, thenCargo.lock
should definitely be tracked too [1][2].It’s strictly more information tracked, so there is no logical reason not to include it. There was this concern about people not being aware of
--locked
not being the default behaviour ofcargo install
, giving a false sense of security/reliability/reproducibility. But “false sense” is never a good technical argument in my book.Anyway, your crate is an application/binary one. And if you were to not change the
"*"
dependency version requirement, then it is almost guaranteed that building your crate will break in the future without trackingCargo.lock
;)
- Don’t use
TIL about OSC52, this is very good to know, thank you for sharing!
Thanks for creating and sharing this tool! Will definitely add it to my toolbelt!
Intriguing 🤔 Might actually come in handy. Thank you!