1.5 KiB
Put cloned repository to PATH 👣
By putting it in the path, you can use it from anywhere in the terminal.
For bash, you could run something like this:
echo 'export PATH="$PATH:/path/to/SecDep"' >> ~/.bashrc
For zsh, you could run something like this:
echo 'export PATH="$PATH:/path/to/SecDep"' >> ~/.zshrc
Make it executable 🪄
chmod +x /path/to/SecDep/secdep.py
Make an alias 🧙
For bash
echo "alias secdep='python3 /path/to/SecDep/secdep.py'" >> ~/.bashrc
For zsh
echo "alias secdep='python3 /path/to/SecDep/secdep.py'" >> ~/.zshrc
Or if it is in the path:
For bash
echo "alias secdep='secdep.py'" >> ~/.bashrc
For zsh
echo "alias secdep='secdep.py'" >> ~/.zshrc
Usage after those steps 📖
We can now use the tool by running secdep in the terminal.
For example secdep -h will show the help menu.
Easier ssh command 💪
If the repository is in the path, you can make a zsh or bash function in your .zshrc or .bashrc respectively as:
function secdepssh {
ssh -i $(whereis secdep) secdep@$1
}
Where $1 will be the instance's ip address.
Then it is only a matter of secdepssh <ip>
Specific aws use case
When using aws as provider value, you can use the --awsregion flag to specify the region on which we operate. That decreases the speed of some actions because it no longer needs to go through all of the regions to check if there are any nodes there.
Example usage:
secdep -P aws -l --awsregion us-east-2
secdep -P aws -a deleteall --awsregion us-east-2