mirror of
https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/seirdy.one
synced 2024-11-14 01:32:11 +00:00
103 lines
5.2 KiB
Text
103 lines
5.2 KiB
Text
Here's the software I use. I've recently started to reduce my use of TUIs in favor of CLIs, for a variety of reasons. When possible, I try to use lightweight programs that can run on any machine, from a single-board computer to a giant desktop. I don't ever want to feel like I need to upgrade my hardware to do the same tasks as before: hardware upgrades should only be justified by my use-cases significantly changing, existing hardware being broken beyond repair, or upstream abandonment of security patches.
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## Hardware
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My main computer is a 2013 HP Elitebook 840 G1. It has a dual-core Intel i5-4300U CPU (Haswell), with simultaneous multithreading disabled.
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## Environment
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I don't currently use a prebuilt desktop environment. I assemble mine out of the following components:
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* Fedora: Primary OS, latest stable version. Uses Linux, Systemd, GNU libc, GNU coreutils, dnf, firewalld, and SELinux.
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* Sway: Dynamic Wayland compositor that focuses on tiling window management but also supports tabbed and stacking layouts.
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* Zsh: Login shell. POSIX-compatible and mostly Bash-compatible. Custom static build to skip checking system files and improve startup performance.
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* DASH: Minimal POSIX-compatible shell that I use for non-interactive purposes (e.g. shell scripts). When statically-linked, its startup time is negligible even on the most underpowered hardware. This is really important to me, since many of my most-used commands are shell-script wrappers that I expect to run in a few milliseconds.
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* Foot: Primary terminal emulator. Sometimes I use gnome-terminal when I'm using a screen reader.
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* i3status-rust: Status bar. It's more efficient to use this single program than to shell out to a dozen utilities. Given the widgets I cram into it, it's more lightweight than most alternatives.
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## Basic utilities:
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* `$EDITOR`: Neovim
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* Browser: Firefox for most pages, Chromium for apps, NetSurf when I'm low on battery.
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* Coreutils alternatives: ripgrep, sd (better multiline regexes than sed), fd
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* Session manager: tmux (I don't use it for tiling, Sway handles that)
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* IRC client: WeeChat. Might use senpai eventually, if I can get it to play well with espeak-ng.
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* News: Newsboat. I'm thinking of switching to a feed-to-IMAP or Maildir setup eventually so I can get sync and use mblaze, and replace a TUI with a CLI. Ideally something that supports WebSub.
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* Containers: Toolbox: Creates quick mutable environments for me to mess around as root. I use Fedora Rawhide for more bleeding-edge packages in these environments. Quick mutable environments to mess around in or use different toolchains are pretty much my only use of containers.
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* Screen reader: Orca
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=> https://sr.ht/~seirdy/mpd-scripts/ mpd-scripts page
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=> https://github.com/po5/mpv_sponsorblock mpv_sponsorblock
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=> https://sr.ht/~taiite/senpai/ senpai
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## Multimedia
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* Music player: mpd, along with my mpd scripts
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* Video player: three builds of mpv, two with a PGO run on different types of video (anime and live-action-with-filmgrain). Often paired with yt-dlp and mpv_sponsorblock
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* Image viewer: mpv (one less program to keep track of), swayimg. Both support AVIF and JPEG-XL now.
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## Mail:
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* Mail fetcher: mbsync
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* SMTP client: msmtp
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* routine tasks, viewing/filtering latest messages: mblaze
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* MUA: mostly neomutt
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* Viewing HTML mail: w3m-sandbox or edbrowse.
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=> https://github.com/leahneukirchen/mblaze mblaze
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=> https://git.sr.ht/~seirdy/bwrap-scripts/tree/trunk/item/w3m-sandbox w3m-sandbox
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## Networking and pentesting:
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* RustScan (don't use it on max settings without permission)
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* q, a DNS client that supports DoH, DoH3, DoQ, and ODoH.
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* rnp, a ping tool that supports TCP and QUIC "pings" to estimate handshake latency.
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* subfinder, Project Discovery's subdomain enumeration tool
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* both curl and xh for HTTP testing.
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* kinvolk's wrk2 fork and bombardier for HTTP load-testing
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* ssh-auditor
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## Other tools:
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* jq (I love writing jq programs)
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* fzf
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* z.lua
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* msync
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* wormhole-william
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* rdrview
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* Efficient Compression Tool (better than Zopfli/ZopfliPNG)
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* usvg and resvg
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* zpaqfranz
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* scc
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* Pandoc
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* ghq, a VCS repository manager in the style of $GOPATH
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=> https://github.com/psanford/wormhole-william wormhole-william
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=> https://github.com/eafer/rdrview rdrview
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=> https://github.com/fhanau/Efficient-Compression-Tool Efficient Compression Tool
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=> https://github.com/boyter/scc scc
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## Server-side stuff
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* Custom build of nginx-quic with some patches. Statically l inked against zlib-ng, BoringSSL, PCRE2, musl, headers_more, and ngx_brotli. Patched for dynamic TLS record sizing, using externally-managed OCSP stapling files, static HPACK dictionaries, removing server signatures, adding dark-mode on in-binary error pages.
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* certbot-ocsp-fetcher
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* webmentiond Webmention receiver
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* Agate Gemini server
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* searchmysite-go
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* Conduit matrix server
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## Services
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* Migadu: email provider
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* deSEC: managed DNS name servers
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* Namecheap: domain registrar (not endorsed)
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* Digital Ocean: VPS (not endorsed)
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* Search My Site: search API
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## What I don't use
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These are tools that I don't use, or avoid using.
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* system monitoring TUIs: I usually just run the command to view the resource I need to know about
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* File managers: I prefer using the shell with fzf-based tab-completion that also features preview windows
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