Book Image

Mastering Ubuntu Server - Second Edition

By : Jay LaCroix
Book Image

Mastering Ubuntu Server - Second Edition

By: Jay LaCroix

Overview of this book

Ubuntu Server has taken the data centers by storm. Whether you're deploying Ubuntu for a large-scale project or for a small office, it is a stable, customizable, and powerful Linux distribution that leads the way with innovative and cutting-edge features. For both simple and complex server deployments, Ubuntu's flexible nature can be easily adapted to meet to the needs of your organization. With this book as your guide, you will learn all about Ubuntu Server, from initial deployment to creating production-ready resources for your network. The book begins with the concept of user management, group management, and filesystem permissions. Continuing into managing storage volumes, you will learn how to format storage devices, utilize logical volume management, and monitor disk usage. Later, you will learn how to virtualize hosts and applications, which will cover setting up KVM/QEMU, as well as containerization with both Docker and LXD. As the book continues, you will learn how to automate configuration with Ansible, as well as take a look at writing scripts. Lastly, you will explore best practices and troubleshooting techniques when working with Ubuntu Server that are applicable to real-world scenarios. By the end of the book, you will be an expert Ubuntu Server administrator who is well-versed in its advanced concepts.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)

Utilizing LVM volumes

The needs of your organization will change with time. While we as server administrators always do our best to configure resources with long-term growth in mind, budgets and changes in policy always seem to get in our way. LVM is something that I'm sure you'll come to appreciate. In fact, technologies such as LVM are one of those things that make Linux the champion when it comes to scalability and cloud deployments. With LVM, you are able to resize your filesystems online, without needing to reboot your server.

Take the following scenario for example. Say you have an application running on a virtualized production server, a server that's so important that downtime would cost your organization serious money. When the server was first set up, perhaps you gave
the application's storage directory a 100 GB partition, thinking it would never...