Anyone know of a linux command I can run in ProxSpace that is basically a timer delay? Like I want to put a 5 second delay in a script between commands?
The proxmark client also lets you issue proxmark commands from bash if you call the client and use the -c switch.
Example: proxmark3 -c "lf search; msleep -t 100; lf search"
This will start the client, issue the lf search command followed by a sleep/wait of 100 milliseconds then another lf search and then quit the client once the commands have run.
So I am guessing I have to choose between one or the other. But how hard is it to switch a proxmark3 easy between a PC and a Mac? My tower is a Pc I built and my laptop is a MacBook I had for art school. i would like the ability to use a proxmark3 on both. If itās too much of a pain Iāll buy a second proxmark I guess.
I found it will save the changes if you select OK and cancel edit BUT if you try and edit again, it will drop the previous edit, so on the second edit you are best to
āselect allā
ācopy pasteā
new edit then save
get error
click OK
and it SHOULD be doneā¦
Pretty easy. You will need to install the client software on both machines (and preferably the same version, and match the firmware version to at least one client version)
I move mine between Android and Linux without issue.
I shouldnāt complain really: all the other forums I patronize donāt let you edit anything: get your post right, and if you fuck up, too bad. But you kinda get used to Discourseās post-first-then-think feature
I still think it has to do with cloud flare, even though Iām supposedly passing all traffic without any filtering for the forum and I also have the cloud flare plug in for discourse installed
I doubt it. New posts with code go through fine. Itās only when you edit them later. So I think itās a protection feature in Discourse that doesnāt work when posting new posts.
Also, apparently itās only when it tries to generate a preview in the edit. I just edited one of mine to replace the code preview with a plain old link and it went through.
Iām not quite sure what itās trying to protect against though. Itās not like browsers execute Python or shell code embedded inside HTML pages willy-nilly.