Book Image

The Software Developer's Guide to Linux

By : David Cohen, Christian Sturm
5 (2)
Book Image

The Software Developer's Guide to Linux

5 (2)
By: David Cohen, Christian Sturm

Overview of this book

Developers are always looking to raise their game to the next level, yet most are completely lost when it comes to the Linux command line. This book is the bridge that will take you to the next level in your software development career. Most of the skills in the book can be immediately put to work to make you a more efficient developer. It’s written specifically for software engineers, not Linux system administrators, so each chapter will equip you with just enough theory to understand what you’re doing before diving into practical commands that you can use in your day-to-day work as a software developer. As you work through the book, you’ll quickly absorb the basics of how Linux works while you get comfortable moving around the command line. Once you’ve got the core skills, you’ll see how to apply them in different contexts that you’ll come across as a software developer: building and working with Docker images, automating boring build tasks with shell scripts, and troubleshooting issues in production environments. By the end of the book, you’ll be able to use Linux and the command line comfortably and apply your newfound skills in your day-to-day work to save time, troubleshoot issues, and be the command-line wizard that your team turns to.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
18
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19
Index

Poor man’s GitHub

In this section, we’ll show you how to set up a remote Git repository for yourself. You only need an SSH account on the remote machine and a Git binary on your local machine (as in, the Git command itself). If Git is already installed on the remote machine, you won’t even need root access.

This is a fun project that will make you comfortable with the basic OS-facing concepts involved with Git. This setup is not necessarily suggested for production use; rather, it will show you that there’s absolutely no magic when it comes to Git. Like everything else in Linux, it’s just files (in this case, remote files and an SSH tunnel).

Considerations

Depending on whether you have root access and whether you want to share the repository with others, you might want to consider creating a specific user for your shared Git service. This is completely optional.

We will use an SSH account for authentication, so if you share the Git...