Book Image

CompTIA Server+ Certification Guide

By : Ron Price
Book Image

CompTIA Server+ Certification Guide

By: Ron Price

Overview of this book

CompTIA Server+ Certification is one of the top 5 IT certifications that is vendor neutral.System administrators opt for CompTIA server+ Certification to gain advanced knowledge of concepts including troubleshooting and networking. This book will initially start with the configuration of a basic network server and the configuration for each of its myriad roles. The next set of chapters will provide an overview of the responsibilities and tasks performed by a system administrator to manage and maintain a network server. Moving ahead, you will learn the basic security technologies, methods, and procedures that can be applied to a server and its network. Next, you will cover the troubleshooting procedures and methods in general, and specifically for hardware, software, networks, storage devices, and security applications. Toward the end of this book, we will cover a number of troubleshooting and security mitigation concepts for running admin servers with ease. This guide will be augmented by test questions and mock papers that will help you obtain the necessary certification. By the end of this book, you will be in a position to clear Server+ Certification with ease.
Table of Contents (28 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: System Architecture
8
Section 2: Administration
13
Section 3: Security
17
Section 4: Troubleshooting
25
Glossary
0-9
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
Z

Summary

Form factors set the form and fit of a computer's case, motherboard, power supply, and disk storage drive, the form factor sets the height, width, length, and the type and placement of its connector to the host computer. HDD device specifications include RPM, interface, access time, throughput, and IOPS. An HDD is a serial device and an SSD is a random-access device.

An SSD stores data in solid-state semiconductor chips and has no moving parts. SSDs use a SAS or SATA interface. Disk drive interfaces are word-serial or bit-serial and bit-oriented interfaces that connect through HBA, FC, SATA, and SAS. PATA uses parallel bit signaling . SATA uses serial bit signaling. SCSI provides a multiple-connection interface for several devices. SAS expands SCSI. NAS is clustered storage devices that appear as a network share. SAN is a network of storage devices and switches providing...