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55
content/blog/audioreplace.md
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55
content/blog/audioreplace.md
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---
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title: "Replace Audio in Video"
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date: 2020-04-20T20:32:26-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: []
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---
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I recorded a video and wanted to touch up my audio in audacity. Here's how I used `ffmpeg` to extract the audio, and then replace it with a modified version.
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## Extract Audio
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If you know the format of the audio (mp3, ogg, aac) then it's possible to do a byte copy of the audio track into a file:
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```bash
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ffmpeg -i input_video.mkv -vn -acodec copy output.aac
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```
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| Argument | Description |
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| -------------- | -------------------------- |
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| `-i` | Input |
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| `-vn` | No Video |
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| `-acodec copy` | Copy audio stream directly |
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If you don't know the audio codec and have `mediainfo` installed, then run
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```bash
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mediainfo --Inform="Audio;%Format%" input_video.mkv
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```
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If you gave up, then you can transcode the audio (will take longer than direct copy)
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```bash
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ffmpeg -i input_video.mkv -vn output.aac
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```
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## Replacing Audio
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Once you're done touching up the audio (`touchup.mp3`), you'll want to replace the existing audio with it.
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```bash
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ffmpeg -i input_video.mkv \
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-i touchup.mp3 \
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-c:v copy \
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-map 0:v:0 \
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-map 1:a:0 \
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output_video.mp4
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```
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| Argument | Description |
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| ---------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------ |
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| `-i` | Inputs |
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| `-c:v copy` | Make this a copy operation |
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| `-c:v copy -map 0:v:0` | Map the video from the first input to the first video output |
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| `-map 1:a:0` | Map the audio from the second input to the first video output |
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99
content/blog/internalca.md
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content/blog/internalca.md
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---
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title: "Quick CA for internal LAN"
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date: 2020-04-18T16:26:53-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["network"]
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---
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Setting up trusted HTTPs inside a network without exposure to the Internet requires creating a Certificate Authority. The audience for this post is oriented for people setting up services in a small low threat model environment. Additional cautions should be applied when setting this up for a business, for example working off an intermediate CA.
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We're going to be using [CFSSL](https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-cfssl/), this is Cloudflare's PKI toolkit to accomplish this. To install on Ubuntu,
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```bash
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sudo apt install golang-cfssl
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```
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## Creating the CA
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This tool makes heavy use of JSON for its configuration. To setup a CA, first let's create `csr_ca.json` that contains the following information
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```json
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{
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"CN": "Common Name",
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"key": {
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"algo": "rsa",
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"size": 2048
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},
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"names": [
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{
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"C": "US",
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"O": "Orgnaization",
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"OU": "Organizational Unit",
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"ST": "Washington",
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"L": "Locality"
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}
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]
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}
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```
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Where `C` is the two-letter country code and `ST` is the full state name.
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Then to create the certificate authority
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```bash
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cfssl gencert -initca csr_ca.json | cfssljson -bare ca
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```
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This will create the following files
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| Filename | Purpose |
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| ---------- | --------------------------- |
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| ca.pem | Public Certificate |
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| ca-key.pem | Private Key |
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| ca.csr | Certificate Signing Request |
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## Creating Certficates
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Now we can create SSL certificates for whatever websites we wish by specifying in a file we'll call `csr_client.json`
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```json
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{
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"hosts": [
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"example.com",
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"*.example.com"
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],
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"key": {
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"algo": "rsa",
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"size": 2048
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},
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"names": [
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{
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"C": "US",
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"O": "Orgnaization",
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"OU": "Organizational Unit",
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"ST": "Washington",
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"L": "Locality"
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}
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]
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}
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```
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Then to create the certs,
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```bash
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cfssl gencert -ca=ca.pem -ca-key=ca-key.pem csr_client.json | cfssljson -bare cert
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```
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It will create the private key, public certificate, and CSR just like the previous command. By default the certificate will last for one year and has the following usages:
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- Signing
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- Key Encipherment
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- Server Authentication
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- Client Authentication
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To have more full grained control over the certificate usages and expiry time, I will defer you to the documentation. It involves creating another JSON file to pass as a flag into `cfssl gencert`.
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## Trusting the CA
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To trust the CA on Linux, you need to copy the `ca.pem` file over to `/usr/local/share/ca-certificates/` and then execute `sudo update-ca-certificates`. Firefox has its own certificate store that you can add `ca.pem` to by accessing Preferences->Privacy & Security->Security->Certificates->View Certificates->Authorities->Import. The exact trail might have changed by the time you read this.
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@ -79,3 +79,5 @@ Or they can just install the packages they want
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pip install --no-index -f /path/to/wheels/wheels package_name
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```
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If you don't want to add flags to every command, check out my post on using [configuration files with pip](https://brandonrozek.com/blog/pipconf/).
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42
content/blog/pipconf.md
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content/blog/pipconf.md
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---
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title: "Pip Config"
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date: 2020-04-10T11:56:19-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["python"]
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---
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If you find yourself added flags to every pip command, consider adding those flag's to a pip configuration file.
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In order of importance, the configuration files will be located
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- Inside the virtualenv `/path/to/virtualenv/pip.conf`
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- In the user folder `~/.config/pip/pip.conf`
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- Site-wide `/etc/pip.conf`
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It is structured as an INI file where the blocks are the commands (`global` indicates all commands)
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For an example, we can set the timeout for all commands to 60 seconds, but the timeout for the freeze command to only 10 seconds.
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```ini
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[global]
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timeout = 60
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[freeze]
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timeout = 10
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```
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Boolean flags are set by assigning a value of `true` or `yes` to them
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```ini
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[install]
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ignore-installed = true
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```
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For operating in an offline environment,
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```ini
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[global]
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no-index = true
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find-links = /path/to/wheels
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```
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content/blog/pycacheprop.md
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content/blog/pycacheprop.md
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---
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title: "Quick Python: Cached Property"
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date: 2020-04-18T18:29:21-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: ["python"]
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---
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If you have a property in an object that only needs to be computed once, consider using `cached_property` to store the result and serve for future function calls.
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```python
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import functools
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class Number:
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def __init__(self, n):
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self.n = n
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@functools.cached_property
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def is_prime(self):
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return all(self.n % i for i in range(2, self.n))
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```
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Let's test it with the Mersenne prime `524287`.
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```python
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n = Number(524287)
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n.is_prime
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```
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After maybe 1-2 seconds of thinking you should get `True.`
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Run it again and the result will be instantaneous!
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content/blog/pysubscribepattern.md
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127
content/blog/pysubscribepattern.md
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---
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title: "Python Patterns: Subscribe"
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date: 2020-04-14T07:53:46-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: []
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---
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It is common for larger applications to have modules that publishes and subscribes to events. This post will outline a couple ways to achieve this using [decorators](https://brandonrozek.com/blog/pydecorators/).
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## Single Event
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First let us concern ourselves with a single event since that's the easiest. Here we will create an application class that stores callbacks of functions through the subscribe decorator. Calling `emit` will send a message to all the functions stored in `self.callbacks`.
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```python
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class Application:
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def __init__(self):
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self.callbacks = []
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def subscribe(self, func):
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self.callbacks.append(func)
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return func
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def emit(self, message):
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for callback in self.callbacks:
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callback(message)
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```
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Here is an example of its usage:
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```python
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app = Application()
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@app.subscribe
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def test1(message):
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print("Function 1:", message)
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@app.subscribe
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def test2(message):
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print("Function 2:", message)
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app.emit('Hello World')
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```
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```
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Function 1: Hello World
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Function 2: Hello World
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```
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## Multiple Events
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Let's say you want the application to handle different types of events. Now `self.callbacks` is a dictionary of lists, where the key is the event and the list is the same as the last section. There's an additional layered function on top of `subscribe` this time in order to handle passing an argument into the decorator.
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```python
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from collections import defaultdict
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class Application:
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def __init__(self):
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self.callbacks = defaultdict(list)
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def on(self, event):
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def subscribe(func):
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self.callbacks[event].append(func)
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return func
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return subscribe
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def emit(self, event, message):
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for callback in self.callbacks[event]:
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callback(message)
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```
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To show its usage lets first create an instance of `Application`
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```python
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app = Application()
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```
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Now let's subscribe a couple functions to `event1`
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```python
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@app.on('event1')
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def test1(message):
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print("Function 1:", message)
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@app.on('event1')
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def test3(message):
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print("Function 3:", message)
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```
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Now to subscribe a couple events to `event2`
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```python
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# Subscribed to event 2
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@app.on('event2')
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def test2(message):
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print("Function 2:", message)
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@app.on('event2')
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def test4(message):
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print("Function 4:", message)
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```
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We can also subscribe to both events
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```python
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# Subscribed to both events
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@app.on('event1')
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@app.on('event2')
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def test5(message):
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print("Function 5:", message)
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```
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```python
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app.emit('event1', 'Hello, World!')
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```
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```
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Function 1: Hello, World!
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Function 3: Hello, World!
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Function 5: Hello, World!
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```
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```python
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app.emit('event2', 'Goodbye, World!')
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```
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```
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Function 2: Goodbye, World!
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Function 4: Goodbye, World!
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Function 5: Goodbye, World!
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```
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14
content/blog/quickpythonhttp.md
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content/blog/quickpythonhttp.md
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---
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title: "Quick Python: HTTP Server"
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date: 2020-04-18T17:15:09-04:00
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draft: false
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tags: []
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---
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You can use Python to quickly spin up a HTTP server. A common use case for me is to quickly transfer files to mobile devices in my internal network.
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```python
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python -m http.server
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```
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This will likely start an HTTP server on port 8000 on your machine listening to all network interfaces.
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@ -22,3 +22,19 @@ youtube-dl --ignore-errors \
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URL_HERE
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```
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## Audio Only
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To extract only audio here's the modified command
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```bash
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youtube-dl --ignore-errors \
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--playlist-reverse \
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--output "%(uploader)s/%(uploader)s - %(title)s - %(upload_date)s.%(ext)s" \
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--format "bestvideo[ext=mp4]+bestaudio[ext=m4a]" \
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--merge-output-format mp4 \
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--embed-thumbnail \
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--add-metadata \
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--extract-audio
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||||
URL_HERE
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||||
```
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