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1. IntroductionWhereas books shelved beside this one will get your feet wet, this one lets you actually paddle for a bit, then thrusts your head underwater while feeding you oxygen.
1.1 What This Book CoversThis book covers GNU/LINUX system administration, for popular distributions like RedHat and Debian, as a tutorial for new users and a reference for advanced administrators. It aims to give concise, thorough explanations and practical examples of each aspect of a UNIX system. Anyone who wants a comprehensive text on (what is commercially called) ``LINUX'' need look no further--there is little that is not covered here.
1.2 Read This Next...The ordering of the chapters is carefully designed to allow you to read in sequence without missing anything. You should hence read from beginning to end, in order that later chapters do not reference unseen material. I have also packed in useful examples which you must practice as you read.
1.3 What Do I Need to Get Started?You will need to install a basic LINUX system. A number of vendors now ship point-and-click-install CDs: you should try get a Debian or ``RedHat-like'' distribution. One hint: try and install as much as possible so that when I mention a software package in this text, you are likely to have it installed already and can use it immediately. Most cities with a sizable IT infrastructure will have a LINUX user group to help you source a cheap CD. These are getting really easy to install, and there is no longer much need to read lengthy installation instructions.
1.4 More About This BookChapter 16 contains a fairly comprehensive list of all reference documentation available on your system. This book supplements that material with a tutorial that is both comprehensive and independent of any previous UNIX knowledge. The book also aims to satisfy the requirements for course notes for a GNU/LINUX training course. Here in South Africa, I use the initial chapters as part of a 36-hour GNU/LINUX training course given in 12 lessons. The details of the layout for this course are given in Appendix A. Note that all ``LINUX'' systems are really composed mostly of GNU software, but from now on I will refer to the GNU system as ``LINUX'' in the way almost everyone (incorrectly) does.
1.5 I Get Frustrated with UNIX Documentation
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Dies ist ein Mirror des RUTE-Projekts von Paul Sheer (RUTE = Rute User's Tutorial and Exposition). Die offizielle Projekt-Homepage findet sich im Web unter www.icon.co.za/~psheer/rute-home.html. Dieser Mirror wurde zuletzt aktualisiert auf die Version 1.0.0 am Samstag, 28 Januar 2006 22:06 +0100. Das RUTE-Tutorial kann auch zum Offline-Lesen in verschiedenen Dateiformaten heruntergeladen werden. |