Book Image

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 Administration - Second Edition

By : Pablo Iranzo Gómez, Pedro Ibáñez Requena, Miguel Pérez Colino, Scott McCarty
2 (2)
Book Image

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 Administration - Second Edition

2 (2)
By: Pablo Iranzo Gómez, Pedro Ibáñez Requena, Miguel Pérez Colino, Scott McCarty

Overview of this book

With Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 becoming the standard for enterprise Linux used from data centers to the cloud, Linux administration skills are in high demand. With this book, you’ll learn how to deploy, access, tweak, and improve enterprise services on any system on any cloud running Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9. Throughout the book, you’ll get to grips with essential tasks such as configuring and maintaining systems, including software installation, updates, and core services. You’ll also understand how to configure the local storage using partitions and logical volumes, as well as assign and deduplicate storage. You’ll learn how to deploy systems while also making them secure and reliable. This book provides a base for users who plan to become full-time Linux system administrators by presenting key command-line concepts and enterprise-level tools, along with essential tools for handling files, directories, command-line environments, and documentation for creating simple shell scripts or running commands. With the help of command line examples and practical tips, you’ll learn by doing and save yourself a lot of time. By the end of the book, you’ll have gained the confidence to manage the filesystem, users, storage, network connectivity, security, and software in RHEL 9 systems on any footprint.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
1
Part 1 – Systems Administration – Software, User, Network, and Services Management
9
Part 2 – Security with SSH, SELinux, a Firewall, and System Permissions
14
Part 3 – Resource Administration – Storage, Boot Process, Tuning, and Containers
21
Part 4 – Practical Exercises

Summary

In this chapter, we learned about identifying processes, checking their resource consumption, and how to send signals to them.

In terms of the signals, we learned that some of them have some additional behavior, such as terminating processes nicely or abruptly, simply sending a notification that some programs understand as reload configuration without restarting, and more.

Also, related to processes, we learned how to adjust their priority compared to other processes in terms of CPU and I/O so that we can adjust long-running processes or disk-intensive ones to not affect other running services.

Finally, we introduced the tuned daemon, which includes several general use-case profiles that we can use directly in our system, allowing tuned to apply some dynamic tuning. Alternatively, we can fine-tune the profiles by creating one of our own to increase system performance or optimize power usage. We also learned how to graphically monitor the performance of our system via...