A Practical Guide to Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux, 7/e Epub FreePosts about Download The Book A Practical Guide to Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux, 7/e [Kindle Edition] Epub Free for everyone book 4shared, mediafire, hotfile, and mirror link
“I have found this book to be a very useful classroom text, as well as a great Linux resource. It teaches Linux using a ground-up approach that gives students the chance to progress with their skills and grow into the Linux world. I have often pointed to this book when asked to recommend a solid Linux reference.”
– Eric Hartwell, Chair, School of Information Technology, ITT Technical Institute
Master All the Techniques You Need to Succeed with Fedora™ or Red Hat® Enterprise Linux®
The #1 Fedora and RHEL resource–a tutorial AND on-the-job reference
Master Linux administration and security using the command line, GUI tools, Python, systemd, and firewalld
Set up key Internet servers, step by step, including Samba, Apache, MariaDB/MySQL, sendmail, OpenSSH, DNS, LDAP, and more
Brand-new chapter on Virtual Machines and Cloud Computing!
In this comprehensive guide, one of the world’s leading Linux experts brings together all the knowledge and real-world insights you need to master and succeed with today’s versions of Fedora or Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Best-selling author Mark Sobell explains Linux clearly and effectively, focusing on skills you’ll actually need as a user, programmer, or administrator.
Sobell assumes no prior Linux knowledge. He starts at the beginning and walks you through every topic and task that matters, using easy-to-understand examples. Step by step, you’ll learn how to install and configure Linux from the accompanying DVD, navigate its graphical user interface, provide file/printer sharing, configure network servers, secure Linux desktops and networks, work with the command line, administer Linux efficiently, and automate administration using Python and bash.
Mark Sobell has taught hundreds of thousands of Linux and UNIX professionals. He knows every Linux nook and cranny–and he never forgets what it’s like to be new to Linux. Whatever you want to do with Linux–now or in the future–you’ll find it in this book.
Compared with other Linux books, A Practical Guide to Fedora™and Red Hat®Enterprise Linux ®, Seventh Edition, delivers
Complete, up-to-the-minute coverage of Fedora 19 and RHEL 7 (beta)
New programming chapters that cover Python and MariaDB/MySQL, plus a new tutorial on using GnuPG to encrypt communications
Information on state-of-the-art security: SELinux, ACLs, firewalld(firewall-config and firewall-cmd), iptables (system-config-firewall), GnuPG, and OpenSSH
New chapter on VMs (virtual machines) and cloud computing, including VMware, QEMU/KVM, virt-manager, virsh, GNOME Boxes, and AWS (Amazon Web Services)
Expanded command-line coverage, including a new chapter that details 32 important utilities
Practical information on Internet server configuration, including Apache, sendmail, NFSv4, DNS/BIND, the new LDAP Dynamic Server, and IPv6
Complete “meat-and-potatoes” information on system/network administration, now including GRUB 2, the XFS filesystem, the new Anaconda Installer, the systemd init daemon, firewalld, and NetworkManager
Detailed instructions on keeping Linux systems up to date, finding software packages, and working with repositories using yum and rpm
Full coverage of the LPI Linux Essentials exam objectives plus extensive coverage of the CompTIA Linux+ exam objectives; Appendix E provides a map from objectives to pages in the book
Download latest books on mediafire and other links compilation A Practical Guide to Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux, 7/e [Kindle Edition] Epub Free
This is a good book for getting up to speed on Fedora 19 however even on this, there are some gaps. As far as Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL), it is not a good resource. One glaring example of this the focus on Sendmail when with both Fedora and RHEL, the mail server of choice is Postfix; Red Hat doesn't even teach Sendmail in its training programs where Postfix is taught. I cannot recommend this book if your purpose is learning RHEL or preparing for the Red Hat Certification track. I also found the coverage of Virtualization very weak, kvm installation specifically, and I found the information on VMware's Player better than that on KVM; he doesn't even mention setting up VirtualBox on Fedora. Finally, he does provides some LPI pointers within the text but these are only for Linux Essentials and CompTIA; LPI is changing their certification exams and there is absolutely no mention of RHEL certification objectives. Mark Sobell is one of my favorite authors, this is the third version of this particular book I have purchased along with other Sobell books that I have and it was great to see this updated 7th edition released with the constantly changing Linux landscape featuring Fedora 19.
By Clint
Mark Sobell continues to make a dense subject enjoyable to digest. He covers a vast range of topics in great detail but organizes it all in a way that it can be used as quick reference just as easily as it can be consumed in context. Real-world examples and applications are referenced throughout the book making the the smallest commands "practical" and tangible in the greater scheme. The new chapter on virtual hosting is an extra boost to those working on cloud servers, but really much/most of the material elsewhere can easily translate to remote administration. The excises are fun, the tips are helpful, and the glossary is very useful.
Fedora and Red Hat are covered extensively, but much of the core concepts in this book apply to the Linux OS as a whole and would benefit all those working in the environment.
By Paul M. Lee