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Mastering Linux Administration

Mastering Linux Administration - Second Edition

By : Calcatinge, Balog
5 (6)
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Mastering Linux Administration

Mastering Linux Administration

5 (6)
By: Calcatinge, Balog

Overview of this book

Harness the power of Linux in modern data center management, leveraging its unparalleled versatility for efficiently managing your workloads in on-premises and cloud environments. In this second edition, you'll find updates on the latest advancements in Linux administration including containerization, shell scripting, and hypervisors. Written by an experienced Linux trainer, this book will start you off with Linux installation on on-premises systems. As you progress, you’ll master the Linux command line, files, packages, and filesystems. You'll explore essential Linux commands and techniques to secure your Linux environment. New to this edition is a chapter on shell scripting, providing structured guidance on using shell programming for basic Linux automation. This book also delves into the world of containers, with two new chapters dedicated to Docker containers and hypervisors, including KVM virtual machines. Once adept with Linux containers, you'll learn about modern cloud technologies, managing and provisioning container workloads using Kubernetes, and automating system tasks using Ansible. Finally, you'll get to grips with deploying Linux to the cloud using AWS and Azure-specific tools. By the end of this Linux book, you'll have mastered everyday administrative tasks, seamlessly navigating workflows spanning from on-premises to the cloud.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
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1
Part 1:Basic Linux Administration
7
Part 2:Advanced Linux Administration
13
Part 3:Server Administration
17
Part 4:Cloud Administration

Using scripts to showcase interprocess communication

Interprocess communication (IPC) was introduced in Chapter 5. In this chapter, we will revisit the mechanism that can make use of scripts. To illustrate most of these communication mechanisms, we will build our examples using a model of producer and consumer processes. The producer and consumer share a common interface, where the producer writes some data that’s read by the consumer. IPC mechanisms are usually implemented in distributed systems, built around more or less complex applications. Our examples will use simple Bash scripts (producer.sh and consumer.sh), thus mimicking the producer and consumer processes. We hope that the use of such simple models will still provide a reasonable analogy for real-world applications.

Now, let’s look at shared storage, named and unnamed pipes, and sockets IPC mechanisms, all of which we introduced in Chapter 5 but did not cover in detail.

Shared storage

In its simplest...

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Mastering Linux Administration
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