This document is intended for people who want to learn practical and cost-effective ways to raise the profile of an organization or promote new programs.
This document is intended for people who want to learn practical and cost-effective ways to raise the profile of an organization or promote new programs.
This book was written to provide a single reference for network administration in a Linux environment. Beginners and experienced users alike should find the information they need to cover nearly all important administration activities required to manage a Linux network configuration.
This documentation will attempt to summarize the installation and configuration, as well as the day-to-day administrative and maintenance procedures that should be followed to keep a Linux based server or desktop system up and running.
The Linux Documentation Project (LDP) is working on developing free, high?quality documentation for the GNU/Linux operating system. The overall goal of the LDP is to collaborate in all of the issues of Linux documentation.
We will start with an overview of how Linux became the operating system it is today. We will discuss past and future development and take a closer look at the advantages and disadvantages of this system. We will talk about distributions, about Open Source in general and try to explain a little something about GNU.
This chapter describes the Linux Standard Base, giving an overview of its evolution from the concept to the Linux Standard Base 2.0 edition. It describes the benefits of the specification, provides a brief history of the work that led to its creation, and places the specification in context with other industry standards initiatives.
This is a practical guide which, while not always being too serious, tries to give real-life instead of theoretical examples. I partly wrote it because I don\’t get excited with stripped down and over-simplified examples written by people who know what they are talking about, showing some really cool Bash feature so much out of [...]
Debian is a free operating system (OS) for your computer. An operating system is the set of basic programs and utilities that make your computer run. At the core of an operating system is the kernel.
This chapter introduces you to the upstart operating system Linux. It helps you determine whether Linux is right for you, by surveying the features and performance that Linux offers. It demonstrates that choosing Linux is a practical - even wise - decision for many computer users.
By now, you should have read the Red Hat Enterprise Linux Installation Guide and successfully installed Red Hat Enterprise Linux.