Book Image

Linux Administration Cookbook

By : Adam K. Dean
Book Image

Linux Administration Cookbook

By: Adam K. Dean

Overview of this book

Linux is one of the most widely used operating systems among system administrators,and even modern application and server development is heavily reliant on the Linux platform. The Linux Administration Cookbook is your go-to guide to get started on your Linux journey. It will help you understand what that strange little server is doing in the corner of your office, what the mysterious virtual machine languishing in Azure is crunching through, what that circuit-board-like thing is doing under your office TV, and why the LEDs on it are blinking rapidly. This book will get you started with administering Linux, giving you the knowledge and tools you need to troubleshoot day-to-day problems, ranging from a Raspberry Pi to a server in Azure, while giving you a good understanding of the fundamentals of how GNU/Linux works. Through the course of the book, you’ll install and configure a system, while the author regales you with errors and anecdotes from his vast experience as a data center hardware engineer, systems administrator, and DevOps consultant. By the end of the book, you will have gained practical knowledge of Linux, which will serve as a bedrock for learning Linux administration and aid you in your Linux journey.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Introduction

systemd (stylized lowercase) is a hydra.

In the old world, we had one piece of software for each little thing we wanted to do on a system. Time was handled by NTP, devices were handled by udev, and init was generally handled by SysV Init.

In the new world, we have systemd:

  • System clock management can be handled by systemd-timesyncd.
  • udev was merged into the systemd code base, forming systemd-udevd.
  • Process initialization is handled by the core of systemd itself.

The list goes on.

Generally, systemd has been adopting other projects, or writing the same functionality into implementations of their own (such as systemd-timesyncd which is an NTP replacement.) However, the systemd suite is also modular, meaning that distributions can broadly choose which bits to adopt and use.

For us, the important job that systemd does is replace the traditional init system on distributions...