As a piece of general advice to avoid doing this: don’t put your home directory directly in source control. Instead, pull out specific config files (not, obviously, things like ssh or gpg keys) into a dotfiles repo and copy or link them out into the final locations in your home directory. (GNU Stow is perfect for this, but I imagine there’s other tools that would work, or it could easily be handled by a simple script.)
As a piece of general advice to avoid doing this: don’t put your home directory directly in source control. Instead, pull out specific config files (not, obviously, things like ssh or gpg keys) into a dotfiles repo and copy or link them out into the final locations in your home directory. (GNU Stow is perfect for this, but I imagine there’s other tools that would work, or it could easily be handled by a simple script.)
Great advice. This is what I do. Here’s my script: https://gist.github.com/brandonbloom/200cb1082424ddccfad6
To check to make sure you haven’t accidentally done this.
The search was known a (few years?) while ago, so github has specifically filtered that query.
That doesn’t stop Google, of course.
I don’t understand what you mean. You say they filtered it but clicking the link in this post says otherwise?
Sure, they blocked that query. So you query for
id_rsa.pub… then check for theid_rsanext to it.The query worked fine for me.. no messages anything.
We could not perform this search
The listed users and repositories cannot be searched either because the resources do not exist or you do not have permission to view them.
facepalm
Thanks, seems to work here with the asterisk at the end.
Working fine here: http://i.imgur.com/cnKXoka.png
In chrome this works fine, but I have set up chrome with my github login, but firefox which does not it says:
and