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Books : Study Books : Professional : Computing : Operating Systems : UNIX & Linux : UNIX & Linux Administation
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Offers practical knowledge for managing a complete range of Linux systems and servers. This book summarizes the steps you need to build products ranging from standalone SOHO hubs, web servers, and LAN servers to load balanced clusters and servers consolidated through virtualization. It also teaches you to back up data and create shell scripts.
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UNIX expert Randal K. Michael guides you through every detail of writing shell scripts to automate specific tasks. Each chapter begins with a typical, everyday UNIX challenge, then shows you how to take basic syntax and turn it into a shell scripting solution.
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Helps you administer Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 in any production environment. This book aims to bring together best practices for the entire system lifecycle, from planning and deployment through maintenance and troubleshooting. It contains coverage of network and web services, from Apache HTTP server to remote login with OpenSSH.
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Python is an ideal language for solving problems, especially for Linux and Unix. This book reviews various tasks that often occur in the management of these systems, and helps administrators learn how Python can provide a way to handle them. It also helps to develop command-line utilities with Python to tackle a wide range of problems.
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Pro Ubuntu Server Administration teaches you advanced Ubuntu system building. After reading this book, you will be able to manage anything from simple file servers to multiple virtual servers to high–availability clusters. This is the capstone volume of the Apress Ubuntu trilogy that includes Beginning Ubuntu Linux, Third Edition and Beginning Ubuntu Server LTS Administration: From Novice to Professional, Second Edition. You will be able to make Ubuntu technology shine in a Fortune–500 environment and let Ubuntu server become the backbone of your infrastructure. Topics covered include
- Performance monitoring and optimization
- High–availability clustering
- Advanced LDAP integrated networking
What you’ll learn
- Monitor Ubuntu Server software and the hardware it is running on.
- Make Ubuntu Server fly by careful optimization.
- Learn how to craft high–availability clusters.
- Ease your way into large–scale LDAP networking.
- Acquire the skills to adjust Ubuntu Server to the security needs of a Fortune–500 environment.
- Run your own Ubuntu application server.
Who is this book for?
Anyone who administers Linux servers and wants to know enough about Ubuntu to make it fly
About the Apress Pro Series
The Apress Pro series books are practical, professional tutorials to keep you on and moving up the professional ladder.
You have gotten the job, now you need to hone your skills in these tough competitive times. The Apress Pro series expands your skills and expertise in exactly the areas you need. Master the content of a Pro book, and you will always be able to get the job done in a professional development project. Written by experts in their field, Pro series books from Apress give you the hard–won solutions to problems you will face in your professional programming career.
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The third edition of Practical UNIX & Internet Security contains--to an even greater extent than its favourably received predecessors--an enormous amount of accumulated wisdom about how to protect Internet-connected UNIX machines from intrusion and other forms of attack. The world's most business-critical transactions run on UNIX machines, which means the machines running those transactions attract evildoers. Furthermore, a lot of those machines have Internet connections, which means it's always possible that some nefarious remote user will find a way in. This book is fat with practical advice on specific defensive measures (to defeat known attacks) and generally wise policies (to head off as-yet-undiscovered ones).
The authors' approach to UNIX security is holistic and clever; they devote as much space to security philosophy as to advice about closing TCP ports and disabling unnecessary services. They also recognise that lots of UNIX machines are development platforms, and make many recommendations to consider as you design software. It's rare that you read a page in this carefully compiled book that does not impart some obscure nugget of knowledge, or remind you to implement some important policy. What's more, the authors have a style that reminds their readers that computing is supposed to be about intellectual exercise and fun, an attitude that's absent from too much of the
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