Book Image

Mastering CentOS 7 Linux Server

By : Mohamed Alibi, BHASKARJYOTI ROY
Book Image

Mastering CentOS 7 Linux Server

By: Mohamed Alibi, BHASKARJYOTI ROY

Overview of this book

Most server infrastructures are equipped with at least one Linux server that provides many essential services, both for a user's demands and for the infrastructure itself. Setting up a sustainable Linux server is one of the most demanding tasks for a system administrator to perform. However, learning multiple, new technologies to meet all of their needs is time-consuming. CentOS 7 is the brand new version of the CentOS Linux system under the RPM (Red Hat) family. It is one of the most widely-used operating systems, being the choice of many organizations across the world. With the help of this book, you will explore the best practices and administration tools of CentOS 7 Linux server along with implementing some of the most common Linux services. We start by explaining the initial steps you need to carry out after installing CentOS 7 by briefly explaining the concepts related to users, groups, and right management, along with some basic system security measures. Next, you will be introduced to the most commonly used services and shown in detail how to implement and deploy them so they can be used by internal or external users. Soon enough, you will be shown how to monitor the server. We will then move on to master the virtualization and cloud computing techniques. Finally, the book wraps up by explaining configuration management and some security tweaks. All these topics and more are covered in this comprehensive guide, which briefly demonstrates the latest changes to all of the services and tools with the recent shift from CentOS 6 to CentOS 7.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Mastering CentOS 7 Linux Server
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Setting up OpenVZ virtualization on CentOS 7


OpenVZ is a new form of virtualization technology that we call a container based one. It basically creates multiple secure and isolated Linux containers running on a single Linux server. This container technology allows better server utilization, since we are not installing a full virtual machine, just a container to hold some of it, and it eliminates application conflict. The virtual machine running on OpenVZ platform are on a standalone mode, where it is the capacity to run without falling in any type of conflict with any other virtual machine running on the same platform. Those machines are independent from each other.

The virtual machines running on OpenVZ have their own operating system, IP address, processes, memory or storage space, application and configuration files, and so on.

While using OpenVZ, the virtualization is run through the system-level virtualization technology, where the guest system uses the...