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Anand Patel apat183

  • Auckland, New Zealand
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@xbmcnut
xbmcnut / shelly_pir.yaml
Last active May 20, 2024 01:01
Making an outdoor motion sensor smart using a Shelly 1
/**
* I figured out you can fit a Shelly 1 inside the case of many outdoor motion sensors.
* Coupled with that fact that recently, Shelly added a feature to de-couple the switch from the relay
* so they act independently, makes this a great combo! Simply wire the output of the PIR motion sensor
* (the wire that normally goes to your outdoor light) to the switch input of the Shelly and wire
* the lightbulb to the L output of the Shelly. Then, in the Shelly app or directly via the devices webpage,
* select the button type as 'Detached Switch' and use the code below to make it work normally.
* Don't forget to adjust the daylight sensitivity to full daylight if you want the motion detection to work 24/7.
*/
@TemporaryJam
TemporaryJam / Howto convert a PFX to a seperate .key & .crt file
Last active April 4, 2024 10:52
How to convert a .pfx SSL certificate to .crt/key (pem) formats. Useful for NGINX
source: http://www.markbrilman.nl/2011/08/howto-convert-a-pfx-to-a-seperate-key-crt-file/
`openssl pkcs12 -in [yourfile.pfx] -nocerts -out [keyfile-encrypted.key]`
What this command does is extract the private key from the .pfx file. Once entered you need to type in the importpassword of the .pfx file. This is the password that you used to protect your keypair when you created your .pfx file. If you cannot remember it anymore you can just throw your .pfx file away, cause you won’t be able to import it again, anywhere!. Once you entered the import password OpenSSL requests you to type in another password, twice!. This new password will protect your .key file.
Now let’s extract the certificate:
`openssl pkcs12 -in [yourfile.pfx] -clcerts -nokeys -out [certificate.crt]`