Book Image

CompTIA Linux+ Certification Guide

By : Philip Inshanally
Book Image

CompTIA Linux+ Certification Guide

By: Philip Inshanally

Overview of this book

The Linux+ certification provides a broad awareness of Linux operating systems, while giving professionals an upper hand in the IT industry. With this certification, you’ll be equipped with the all-important knowledge of installation, operation, administration, and troubleshooting services. This CompTIA Linux+ Certification Guide will give you an overview of the system architecture. You’ll understand how to install and uninstall Linux distributions, followed by working with various package managers. You’ll then move on to manipulating files and processes at the command-line interface (CLI) and creating, monitoring, killing, restarting, and modifying processes. As you progress, you’ll be equipped to work with display managers and learn how you can create, modify, and remove user accounts and groups, as well as understand how to automate tasks. The last set of chapters will help you configure dates and set up local and remote system logging. In addition to this, you’ll explore different internet protocols, and delve into network configuration, security administration, Shell scripting, and SQL management. By the end of this book, you’ll not only have got to grips with all the modules you need to study for the LX0-103 and LX0-104 certification exams, but you’ll also be able to test your understanding with practice questions and mock exams.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
19
Mock Exam - 1
20
Mock Exam - 2

DNF

Dandified YUM or DNF is the name of the package management utility. DNF is the next-generation version of YUM. It's used in RPM-based distributions. DNF was introduced in Fedora 18, and has been the default package manager for Fedora since version 22. In fact, when we run YUM commands in later releases of Fedora, we are actually running dnf in the background. The dnf utility offers, among other things, performance, memory usages, and dependency resolution.

To get started, we can check the version of dnf on our Fedora 28 system by using the --version option:

[root@localhost philip]# dnf --version
2.7.5
Installed: dnf-0:2.7.5-12.fc28.noarch at Wed 25 Apr 2018 06:35:34 AM GMT
Built : Fedora Project at Wed 18 Apr 2018 02:29:51 PM GMT
Installed: rpm-0:4.14.1-7.fc28.x86_64 at Wed 25 Apr 2018 06:34:14 AM GMT
Built : Fedora Project at Mon 19 Feb 2018 09:29:01 AM GMT
[root@localhost...