Book Image

Mastering Ubuntu Server - Fourth Edition

By : Jay LaCroix
4.7 (7)
Book Image

Mastering Ubuntu Server - Fourth Edition

4.7 (7)
By: Jay LaCroix

Overview of this book

Ubuntu Server is taking the server world by storm - and for a good reason! The server-focused spin of Ubuntu is a stable, flexible, and powerful enterprise-class distribution of Linux with a focus on running servers both small and large. Mastering Ubuntu Server is a book that will teach you everything you need to know in order to manage real Ubuntu-based servers in actual production deployments. This book will take you from initial installation to deploying production-ready solutions to empower your small office network, or even a full data center. You'll see examples of running an Ubuntu Server in the cloud, be walked through set up popular applications (such as Nextcloud), host your own websites, and deploy network resources such as DHCP, DNS, and others. You’ll also see how to containerize applications via LXD to maximize efficiency and learn how to build Kubernetes clusters. This new fourth edition updates the popular book to cover Ubuntu 22.04 LTS, which takes advantage of the latest in Linux-based technologies. By the end of this Ubuntu book, you will have gained all the knowledge you need in order to work on real-life Ubuntu Server deployments and become an expert Ubuntu Server administrator who is well versed in its feature set.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
24
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25
Index

Creating and deploying Ubuntu AMIs

Just about every cloud platform I know of includes some sort of feature that can be used to create images of the instance’s hard disk. An image can be used to create copies of the original server, as well as acting as a starting point so if the server needs to be rebuilt, we won’t have to start over from scratch. In AWS, images are known as Amazon Machine Images (AMIs). For all intents and purposes, there’s nothing very unique about AMIs; if you’ve worked with disk images in the past, it’s the same thing. When it comes to what to include in an AMI, you can (and should) use your imagination here—anything you find yourself manually setting up or configuring while rolling out a new server is a candidate to be included in an image, and the more customizations you include inside the image, the more time it will save you later.

Let’s see this in action and create an image of the server we’ve just...