Book Image

Linux Administration Best Practices

By : Scott Alan Miller
3.3 (3)
Book Image

Linux Administration Best Practices

3.3 (3)
By: Scott Alan Miller

Overview of this book

Linux is a well-known, open source Unix-family operating system that is the most widely used OS today. Linux looks set for a bright future for decades to come, but system administration is rarely studied beyond learning rote tasks or following vendor guidelines. To truly excel at Linux administration, you need to understand how these systems work and learn to make strategic decisions regarding them. Linux Administration Best Practices helps you to explore best practices for efficiently administering Linux systems and servers. This Linux book covers a wide variety of topics from installation and deployment through to managing permissions, with each topic beginning with an overview of the key concepts followed by practical examples of best practices and solutions. You'll find out how to approach system administration, Linux, and IT in general, put technology into proper business context, and rethink your approach to technical decision making. Finally, the book concludes by helping you to understand best practices for troubleshooting Linux systems and servers that'll enable you to grow in your career as well as in any aspect of IT and business. By the end of this Linux administration book, you'll have gained the knowledge needed to take your Linux administration skills to the next level.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Section 1: Understanding the Role of Linux System Administrator
4
Section 2: Best Practices for Linux Technologies
9
Section 3: Approaches to Effective System Administration

Summary

In summary, system architecture is complex and requires us to really dig into business needs, how operations works, talk to key roles throughout the organization and elicit input, and take a broad view of technological building blocks to construct solutions that deliver the performance and reliability that our workloads need at the minimum cost.

We looked at fundamental components with virtual machines and containers and should now be able to defend our use of them and choose properly between them, as well as be able to use traditional containers without becoming confused with more recent application containers. And we learned about locality. You should be able to navigate the complicated linguistic minefield that is managers attempting to talk about the placement and ownership of server resources, analyze costs and risks and find the right option for your organization. Colocation, cloud, traditional virtualization, on premises are all options that you understand.

And...