I enjoyed reading every line of it. I read many technical books and this is one of those books that really makes me feel I am getting smarter as I am reading it. I am learning so many tips from this book. I am now a much more efficient Linux system admin than I have ever been. I would like to than
Beginning the Linux Command Line
β Scribed by Sander van Vugt
- Publisher
- Apress
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 381
- Series
- Expert's voice in open source
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This is Linux for those of us who donβt mind typing. All Linux users and administrators tend to like the flexibility and speed of Linux administration from the command line in byteβsized chunks, instead of fairly standard GUIs. Beginning the Linux Command Line follows a taskβoriented approach and is distribution agnostic.
- Work with files and directories.
- Administer users and security.
- Understand how Linux is organized.
What youβll learn
- Finding help from inβsystem resources
- Finding the right command for the task you have to accomplish
- Working with text editors and intelligent filters
- Shell programming
- Managing partitions and file systems
- Configuring access to hardware devices
Who is this book for?
Everyone who uses Linux. No exceptions.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>This is Linux for those of us who don't mind typing. All Linux users and administrators tend to like the flexibility and speed of Linux administration from the command line in byteβsized chunks, instead of fairly standard graphical user interfaces. <em>Beginning the Linux Command Line</em> fol
This is Linux for those of us who donβt mind typing. All Linux users and administrators tend to like the flexibility and speed of Linux administration from the command line in byteβsized chunks, instead of fairly standard graphical user interfaces. Beginning the Linux Command Line is verified agains
<p><p>This is Linux for those of us who don't mind typing. All Linux users and administrators tend to like the flexibility and speed of Linux administration from the command line in byteβsized chunks, instead of fairly standard graphical user interfaces. <em>Beginning the Linux Command Line</em> fol