Book Image

Oracle Linux Cookbook

By : Erik Benner, Erik B. Thomsen, Jonathan Spindel
Book Image

Oracle Linux Cookbook

By: Erik Benner, Erik B. Thomsen, Jonathan Spindel

Overview of this book

Discover the power of Oracle Linux 8, the free and enterprise-grade Linux distribution designed for use in any environment, with this recipe-style book. Starting with instructions on how to obtain Oracle Linux for both X86 and ARM-based platforms, this book walks you through various installation methods, from running it as a Windows service to installing it on a Raspberry Pi. It unravels advanced topics such as system upgrades using Leapp for major version transitions and using a PXE server and kickstart files for more advanced installations. The book then delves into swapping kernels to take advantage of Oracle’s UEK, exploring boot options, managing software with DNF, and achieving high availability. Detailed recipes involving security topics will assist with tasks such as data encryption, both at rest and in motion. For developers, it offers guidance on building RPM files, using Docker and Podman in a containerized environment, working with AppStreams, and more. For large-scale deployments, the book introduces Oracle Linux Automation Manager for enterprise-level Ansible utilization, from setting up the Ansible server to basic playbook writing. Finally, you’ll discover strategies for cloud migration. By the end of this book, you’ll possess a comprehensive toolkit that will elevate your skills as a Linux administrator.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)

Btrfs – creating, resizing, and monitoring

In this recipe, we will create a new RAIDed Btrfs volume and filesystem, using multiple disks for fault-tolerant storage. We will then add a new LUN, growing the filesystem. We will wrap up by modifying the filesystem to compress the data!

Getting ready

To get started, I added five 10 GB drives to the OS. These will be used to build a new RAID1C4 volume. I can see these new devices by using the fdisk -l command, grepping for GiB using the following command:

fdisk -l | grep GiB

The output is seen in the following figure:

Figure 4.5 – fdisk output

Figure 4.5 – fdisk output

Here, we can see that the 10 GB devices are sdb, sdc, sbd, sbe, and sbf. We will need this info to make the Btrfs volume.

How to do it…

Now that we know the devices, let’s manually create a RAID1C3 volume. We will use all five devices in a RAID1C3 configuration and name the volume data.

We will then use the following command...