From d36c2e459a74ec67e523539eb98b78b95b01432a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: EuAndreh <eu@euandre.org>
Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2025 11:20:43 -0300
Subject: src/content/: Normalize [source,$lang] code blocks

---
 src/content/tils/2020/11/08/find-broken-symlink.adoc   | 4 ++--
 src/content/tils/2020/11/12/diy-nix-bash-ci.adoc       | 2 +-
 src/content/tils/2020/11/12/git-bisect-automation.adoc | 5 +++--
 src/content/tils/2020/11/12/useful-bashvars.adoc       | 6 +++---
 src/content/tils/2020/11/30/git-notes-ci.adoc          | 4 ++--
 5 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-)

(limited to 'src/content/tils/2020/11')

diff --git a/src/content/tils/2020/11/08/find-broken-symlink.adoc b/src/content/tils/2020/11/08/find-broken-symlink.adoc
index 9b44036..624d24a 100644
--- a/src/content/tils/2020/11/08/find-broken-symlink.adoc
+++ b/src/content/tils/2020/11/08/find-broken-symlink.adoc
@@ -6,7 +6,7 @@
 
 The `find` command knows how to show broken symlinks:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 find . -xtype l
 ----
@@ -15,7 +15,7 @@ This was useful to me when combined with {annex}[Git Annex].  Its
 {annex-wanted}[`wanted`] option allows you to have a "sparse" checkout of the
 content, and save space by not having to copy every annexed file locally:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 git annex wanted . 'exclude=Music/* and exclude=Videos/*'
 ----
diff --git a/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/diy-nix-bash-ci.adoc b/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/diy-nix-bash-ci.adoc
index 219b694..97ace30 100644
--- a/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/diy-nix-bash-ci.adoc
+++ b/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/diy-nix-bash-ci.adoc
@@ -12,7 +12,7 @@ to the server.
 In most of my project I like to keep a `test` attribute which runs the test with
 `nix-build -A test`.  This way, a post-receive hook could look like:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 #!/usr/bin/env bash
 set -Eeuo pipefail
diff --git a/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/git-bisect-automation.adoc b/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/git-bisect-automation.adoc
index d7ea2ca..dff8737 100644
--- a/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/git-bisect-automation.adoc
+++ b/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/git-bisect-automation.adoc
@@ -10,11 +10,12 @@ I've already been in the situation when a bug was introduced and I didn't know
 how it even was occurring, and running Git bisect over hundreds of commits to
 pinpoint the failing commit was very empowering:
 
-....
+[source,sh]
+----
 $ GOOD_COMMIT_SHA=e1fd0a817d192c5a5df72dd7422e36558fa78e46
 $ git bisect start HEAD $GOOD_COMMIT_SHA
 $ git bisect run sn -c './build.sh && ./run-failing-case.sh'
-....
+----
 
 Git will than do a binary search between the commits, and run the commands you
 provide it with to find the failing commit.
diff --git a/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/useful-bashvars.adoc b/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/useful-bashvars.adoc
index 84b93c3..fb148fb 100644
--- a/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/useful-bashvars.adoc
+++ b/src/content/tils/2020/11/12/useful-bashvars.adoc
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ on the terminal.
 The {bash-bang-bang}[`!!` variable] refers to the previous command, and I find
 useful when following chains for symlinks:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 $ which git
 /run/current-system/sw/bin/git
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ readlink $(which git)
 It is also useful when you forget to prefix `sudo` to a command that requires
 it:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 $ requires-sudo.sh
 requires-sudo.sh: Permission denied
@@ -43,7 +43,7 @@ The {bash-dollar-underscore}[`$_` variable] will give you the most recent
 parameter you provided to a previous argument, which can save you typing
 sometimes:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 # instead of...
 $ mkdir -p a/b/c/d/
diff --git a/src/content/tils/2020/11/30/git-notes-ci.adoc b/src/content/tils/2020/11/30/git-notes-ci.adoc
index 602e11d..48a996b 100644
--- a/src/content/tils/2020/11/30/git-notes-ci.adoc
+++ b/src/content/tils/2020/11/30/git-notes-ci.adoc
@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ I've written a small script that will put log files and CI job data on Git
 notes, and make it visible on the porcelain log.  It is a simple extension of
 the previous article:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 #!/usr/bin/env bash
 set -Eeuo pipefail
@@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ https://euandre.org/git/servers/commit?id=87c57133abd8be5d7cc46afbf107f59b260665
 You can go even further: since cgit can serve raw blob directly, you can even
 serve such artifacts (log files, release artifacts, binaries) from cgit itself:
 
-[source,shell]
+[source,sh]
 ----
 $ SHA="$(git notes --ref=refs/notes/ci-logs list 87c57133abd8be5d7cc46afbf107f59b26066575)"
 $ echo "https://euandre.org/git/servers/blob?id=$SHA"
-- 
cgit v1.2.3