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

Conclusion

In this chapter, you learned the basic concepts, commands, and workflows that you need to use Git effectively. Some of the often-used advanced features and terminology should be clearer to you now, and we passed on some advice for “soft” Git skills like writing good commit messages.

The shell aliases we showed you save us hundreds of keystrokes in a day of programming; we hope they are as useful to you as they have been to us, and that you’ll use command aliases for all the hard-to-remember or hard-to-type commands you run daily.

We also hope that you followed along with the Poor man’s GitHub project! Running the commands only takes a few minutes, but if you take an afternoon and really try it out (rent a Linux VM for a few hours, set up a remote repository there, and push some example commits), you’ll get a feel for how powerful and effective your newfound Linux skills can be when they’re combined to solve real-world problems...