Visits

[+/-]
Today:
Yesterday:
Day before yesterday:
29
389
372

+17
This week:
Last week:
Week before last week:
1515
2427
2483

-56

Last month:
Month before last month:
10693
9885
8946

+939

Visitor Data

IP ADDRESS
38.107.191.87
-
Location
United States
-
Browser
Unknown Browser
-
Operating System
Unknown Operating System

Most Downloaded


No Documents
Add to: JBookmarks Add to: Bookmarks.cc Add to: Digg Add to: Reddit Add to: Upchuckr Add to: StumbleUpon Add to: Slashdot Add to: Blogmarks Add to: Technorati Add to: Newsvine Add to: Blinkbits Add to: Smarking Add to: Spurl Add to: Google Information

10

Oct

Restoring a hosed terminal

# cat /bin/cat

Behold! Your terminal looks like garbage. Everything you type looks like you're looking into the Matrix. What do you do?

You type reset. But wait you say, typing reset is too close to typing reboot or shutdown. Your palms start to sweat—especially if you are doing this on a production machine.

Rest assured: You can do it with the confidence that no machine will be rebooted. Go ahead, do it:

# reset

Now your screen is back to normal. This is much better than closing the window and then logging in again, especially if you just went through five machines to SSH to this machine.