Sometimes we need to change the resolution of our monitor, but the resolution doesn't show up on the xfce4-display-settings, what should we do? First you'll need a terminal or command prompt, then type cvt or gtf command with your desired resolution, for example:
cvt 1920 1080
it would show something like this:
# 1920x1080 59.96 Hz (CVT 2.07M9) hsync: 67.16 kHz; pclk: 173.00 MHz Modeline "1920x1080_60.00" 173.00 1920 2048 2248 2576 1080 1083 1088 1120 -hsync +vsync
now, you should add it using xrandr command:
xrandr --newmode "1920x1080" 173.00 1920 2048 2248 2576 1080 1083 1088 1120 -hsync +vsync
now, assign it the desired display port from the graphics card, first let see our graphic card available ports, type xrandr again without parameter, it would show something like this:
Screen 0: minimum 8 x 8, current 1600 x 1200, maximum 32767 x 32767
VGA1 connected primary 1600x1200+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 0mm x 0mm
1024x768 70.07 + 85.00 75.08 60.00
1600x1200 60.00*
1280x1024 85.02 75.02
1440x900 59.89
1280x960 85.00
1280x800 59.81
1152x864 75.00
1024x768 86.96
832x624 74.55
800x600 85.06 72.19 75.00 60.32 56.25
640x480 85.01 75.00 72.81 66.67 60.00
720x400 87.85 70.08
HDMI1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
VIRTUAL1 disconnected (normal left inverted right x axis y axis)
1920x1080 (0x2ee) 173.000MHz
h: width 1920 start 2048 end 2248 total 2576 skew 0 clock 67.16KHz
v: height 1080 start 1083 end 1088 total 1120 clock 59.96Hz
Now we know that we have 3 ports: VGA1, HDMI1 and VIRTUAL1, of course the current monitor was plugged into VGA1 because it shows "connected", now we could assign using this command:
xrandr --addmode VGA1 1920x1080
and set the display resolution using this command:
xrandr --output VGA1 --mode 1920x1080
Voila, now your resolution changed!
Note: if you're using VGA Video Splitter, make sure that the monitor plugged into the first port, so it would send correct EDID.
programming: the action or process of writing computer programs. | rants: speak or shout at length in a wild, [im]passioned way.
2014-08-23
SLock simplest screen locker ever!
SLock is the simplest screen locker ever, it works without hassle or configuration. If you havent isntall any of screensaver (gnome-screensaver, xscreensaver), you could use it as the default screensaver. B-b-b-but how to unlock the screen? there's no password box to type '____' ?
You just need to type your password (screen would change color as you type first letter) and press enter to unlock the screen.
What if I have inputted wrong password? just press backspace or enter to restart inputting the password.
How to lock the screen? just type slock on terminal or run-dialog.
Well.. that's all for now~
You just need to type your password (screen would change color as you type first letter) and press enter to unlock the screen.
What if I have inputted wrong password? just press backspace or enter to restart inputting the password.
How to lock the screen? just type slock on terminal or run-dialog.
Well.. that's all for now~
Where to put fonts on Linux
To install fonts on Linux (especially Arch Linux), you must copy the fonts on the ~/.local/share/fonts folder (for old distribution, use ~/.fonts directory). To view fonts, install gnome-font-viewer, that program could also be used to install fonts locally. I have selected some fonts that good for programming imho. Contact me (if you can ^^ myahahah!) if the server is down or expired, or just google for these fonts:
BPmono.ttf | BPmonoBold.ttf | BPmonoItalics.ttf | DejaVuSans-Bold.ttf | DejaVuSans-BoldOblique.ttf |
DejaVuSans-ExtraLight.ttf | DejaVuSans-Oblique.ttf | DejaVuSans.ttf | DejaVuSansCondensed-Bold.ttf | DejaVuSansCondensed-BoldOblique.ttf |
DejaVuSansCondensed-Oblique.ttf | DejaVuSansCondensed.ttf | DejaVuSansMono-Bold.ttf | DejaVuSansMono-BoldOblique.ttf | DejaVuSansMono-Oblique.ttf |
DejaVuSansMono.ttf | DejaVuSerif-Bold.ttf | DejaVuSerif-BoldItalic.ttf | DejaVuSerif-Italic.ttf | DejaVuSerif.ttf |
DejaVuSerifCondensed-Bold.ttf | DejaVuSerifCondensed-BoldItalic.ttf | DejaVuSerifCondensed-Italic.ttf | DejaVuSerifCondensed.ttf | DroidSansMono.ttf |
Envy Code B 10pt.ttf | Envy Code R Bold.ttf | Envy Code R Italic.ttf | Envy Code R VS Italic-as-bold.ttf | Envy Code R VS.ttf |
Envy Code R.ttf | FantasqueSansMono-Bold.ttf | FantasqueSansMono-BoldItalic.ttf | FantasqueSansMono-RegItalic.ttf | FantasqueSansMono-Regular.ttf |
FiraMono-Bold.ttf | FiraMono-Medium.ttf | FiraMono-Regular.ttf | FiraSans-Bold.ttf | FiraSans-BoldItalic.ttf |
FiraSans-Book.ttf | FiraSans-BookItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Eight.ttf | FiraSans-EightItalic.ttf | FiraSans-ExtraBold.ttf |
FiraSans-ExtraBoldItalic.ttf | FiraSans-ExtraLight.ttf | FiraSans-ExtraLightItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Four.ttf | FiraSans-FourItalic.ttf |
FiraSans-Hair.ttf | FiraSans-HairItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Heavy.ttf | FiraSans-HeavyItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Italic.ttf |
FiraSans-Light.ttf | FiraSans-LightItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Medium.ttf | FiraSans-MediumItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Regular.ttf |
FiraSans-SemiBold.ttf | FiraSans-SemiBoldItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Thin.ttf | FiraSans-ThinItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Two.ttf |
FiraSans-TwoItalic.ttf | FiraSans-Ultra.ttf | FiraSans-UltraItalic.ttf | FiraSans-UltraLight.ttf | FiraSans-UltraLightItalic.ttf |
LiberationMono-Bold.ttf | LiberationMono-BoldItalic.ttf | LiberationMono-Italic.ttf | LiberationMono-Regular.ttf | LiberationSans-Bold.ttf |
LiberationSans-BoldItalic.ttf | LiberationSans-Italic.ttf | LiberationSans-Regular.ttf | LiberationSerif-Bold.ttf | LiberationSerif-BoldItalic.ttf |
LiberationSerif-Italic.ttf | LiberationSerif-Regular.ttf | MesloLGLDZ-Bold.ttf | MesloLGLDZ-BoldItalic.ttf | MesloLGLDZ-Italic.ttf |
MesloLGLDZ-Regular.ttf | MesloLGMDZ-Bold.ttf | MesloLGMDZ-BoldItalic.ttf | MesloLGMDZ-Italic.ttf | MesloLGMDZ-Regular.ttf |
MesloLGSDZ-Bold.ttf | MesloLGSDZ-BoldItalic.ttf | MesloLGSDZ-Italic.ttf | MesloLGSDZ-Regular.ttf | Monaco.ttf |
PTM55F.ttf | PTM75F.ttf | VeraMono-Bold-Italic.ttf | VeraMono-Bold.ttf | VeraMono-Italic.ttf |
VeraMono.ttf | drucifer_0.ttf | drucifer_i.ttf | edlo.ttf | mplus-1c-black.ttf |
mplus-1c-bold.ttf | mplus-1c-heavy.ttf | mplus-1c-light.ttf | mplus-1c-medium.ttf | mplus-1c-regular.ttf |
mplus-1c-thin.ttf | mplus-1m-bold.ttf | mplus-1m-light.ttf | mplus-1m-medium.ttf | mplus-1m-regular.ttf |
mplus-1m-thin.ttf | mplus-1mn-bold.ttf | mplus-1mn-light.ttf | mplus-1mn-medium.ttf | mplus-1mn-regular.ttf |
mplus-1mn-thin.ttf | mplus-1p-black.ttf | mplus-1p-bold.ttf | mplus-1p-heavy.ttf | mplus-1p-light.ttf |
mplus-1p-medium.ttf | mplus-1p-regular.ttf | mplus-1p-thin.ttf | mplus-2c-black.ttf | mplus-2c-bold.ttf |
mplus-2c-heavy.ttf | mplus-2c-light.ttf | mplus-2c-medium.ttf | mplus-2c-regular.ttf | mplus-2c-thin.ttf |
mplus-2m-bold.ttf | mplus-2m-light.ttf | mplus-2m-medium.ttf | mplus-2m-regular.ttf | mplus-2m-thin.ttf |
mplus-2p-black.ttf | mplus-2p-bold.ttf | mplus-2p-heavy.ttf | mplus-2p-light.ttf | mplus-2p-medium.ttf |
mplus-2p-regular.ttf | mplus-2p-thin.ttf |
How to Install VirtualBox 4.3.14 on ArchLinux
VirtualBox is one of many virtualization software that could be run on Linux, one with slowest cpu performance according to this article. Installing VirtualBox is quite simple, but to make it run you must also install certain package. To install VirtualBox, type:
yaourt --needed --noconfirm -S --force virtualbox virtualbox-host-modules linux-headers
To make it able to run, you must create the kernel module first, the easiest way is using dkms:
sudo dkms autoinstall
or
sudo dkms vboxhost/4.3.14
then enable it using:
sudo modprobe vboxdrv
Now you can start and run VirtualBox images without error.
if you want to auto-recompile when installing new kernel, use this command:
sudo systemctl enable dkms
yaourt --needed --noconfirm -S --force virtualbox virtualbox-host-modules linux-headers
To make it able to run, you must create the kernel module first, the easiest way is using dkms:
sudo dkms autoinstall
or
sudo dkms vboxhost/4.3.14
then enable it using:
sudo modprobe vboxdrv
Now you can start and run VirtualBox images without error.
if you want to auto-recompile when installing new kernel, use this command:
sudo systemctl enable dkms
Installing Go 1.3.1 with LiteIDE x23.2 on Arch Linux
So I installing new computer on my company, using Arch Linux as usual.
How to install Go? it's really easy when using yaourt, just type:
yaourt --needed --noconfirm -S --force go mercurial git bzr subversion liteide gdb
Go took about 40.76 MB
Mercurial, Git, Bzr and Subversion requires about 13.12 MB
LiteIDE took about 13.14 MB
Gdb took about 3.06 MB
Set your working directory:
mkdir ~/go
export GOPATH=~/go
export PATH=$PATH:~/go/bin
I suggest that you should put those environment variables on .bashrc
Then you can test the installation, create a file named test1.go
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println("Hello my lovely PC :3")
}
Run it using:
go run test1.go
or
go build test1.go && ./test1
or press Ctrl+R on LiteIDE.
How to install Go? it's really easy when using yaourt, just type:
yaourt --needed --noconfirm -S --force go mercurial git bzr subversion liteide gdb
Go took about 40.76 MB
Mercurial, Git, Bzr and Subversion requires about 13.12 MB
LiteIDE took about 13.14 MB
Gdb took about 3.06 MB
Set your working directory:
mkdir ~/go
export GOPATH=~/go
export PATH=$PATH:~/go/bin
I suggest that you should put those environment variables on .bashrc
Then you can test the installation, create a file named test1.go
package main
import "fmt"
func main() {
fmt.Println("Hello my lovely PC :3")
}
Run it using:
go run test1.go
or
go build test1.go && ./test1
or press Ctrl+R on LiteIDE.
2014-08-21
Which program that uses the bandwidth the most?
So, my boarding house internet connection has been down for 4 days now, and I decided to find alternate internet connection. On Indonesia it's really hard to find mobile internet provider that has unlimited bandwidth without FUP. I decided to use one with limited quota (8GB/month) T__T seriously.. 8GB it's my daily usage, not monthly. So I buy a router with modem support (TP-Link Wireless N Router TL-MR3420) a modem (Huawei E173) and GSM card for internet (Three). Long story short, I want to know which program that uses so much bandwidth since the beginning, so I install nethogs). That program should be used as root, and the first argument is default to eth0. Nethogs will show the list of process that uses most bandwith.
2014-08-11
How to make git ignore changes on commited files?
Sometimes there are some file that we want to ignore some file on git, of course we could use .gitignore, but that only take effect on untracked files. When the files already tracked/commited, we could make that file changes ignored using git update-index command, for example:
git update-index --assume-unchanged file-to-be-ignored
From now on, that file would not appear on git status or git diff when changed. When you want to track back the changes, use --no-assume-unchanged flag.
git update-index --assume-unchanged file-to-be-ignored
From now on, that file would not appear on git status or git diff when changed. When you want to track back the changes, use --no-assume-unchanged flag.
What to do when git pull conflict before commit?
Sometimes we want to pull from git without committing current changes, and yes, the correct way is to commit our changes first before pulling, so we could merge the conflict. But if you doesn't want to do that, there are some trick that you could use, that is git stash, the usage example:
# to store all changes on the stash
git stash
# this should no longer conflict
git pull
# to overwrite from previous stash
git stash pop
# you could see the difference using
git diff
# to store all changes on the stash
git stash
# this should no longer conflict
git pull
# to overwrite from previous stash
git stash pop
# you could see the difference using
git diff
2014-08-05
How to setup SSH Tunneling (SOCKS) Proxy
Sometimes we need to connect to some site via a very secure way without our nearby computers able to see (or sniff) which sites we are visiting, or to prevent any blocking from our LAN's firewall. One easy solution to solve this, but you'll need a VPS (Virtual Private Server) with public IP address of course, all you have to do is start a SSH connection to your VPS, for example:
sudo ssh -D my_local_port my_vps_user@my_vps_public_ip
for example:
ssh -D 8081 aurora@w.x.y.z
Then, setup your browser to use SOCKS to localhost:my_local_port, for example:
Voila, now everything that you browse will encrypted through to w.x.y.z.
sudo ssh -D my_local_port my_vps_user@my_vps_public_ip
for example:
ssh -D 8081 aurora@w.x.y.z
Voila, now everything that you browse will encrypted through to w.x.y.z.
2014-08-04
Open Source Desktop Database GUI
When developing database apps sometimes we need easier user interface to query the database, instead of using command line (mysql for MySQL, psql for PostgreSQL), or using MySQL Workbench or the default pgAdmin. When you're using any of IDE from JetBrains you could use their Database Explorer.
DBeaver is one open source and cross platform database explorer, but it doesn't really work well with dark theme.
SQL Workbench also open source java-based database explorer, works fine with dark theme, but failed to display invalid Date.
Execute Query quite fine, I have no rants about this one.
Oh well I'll find and try another later on.
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