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Linux Command Line and Shell Scripting Techniques

Linux Command Line and Shell Scripting Techniques

By : Vedran Dakic, Jasmin Redzepagic
4.4 (5)
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Linux Command Line and Shell Scripting Techniques

Linux Command Line and Shell Scripting Techniques

4.4 (5)
By: Vedran Dakic, Jasmin Redzepagic

Overview of this book

Linux Command Line and Shell Scripting Techniques begins by taking you through the basics of the shell and command-line utilities. You’ll start by exploring shell commands for file, directory, service, package, and process management. Next, you’ll learn about networking - network, firewall and DNS client configuration, ssh, scp, rsync, and vsftpd, as well as some network troubleshooting tools. You’ll also focus on using the command line to find and manipulate text content, via commands such as cut, egrep, and sed. As you progress, you'll learn how to use shell scripting. You’ll understand the basics - input and output, along with various programming concepts such as loops, variables, arguments, functions, and arrays. Later, you’ll learn about shell script interaction and troubleshooting, before covering a wide range of examples of complete shell scripts, varying from network and firewall configuration, through to backup and concepts for creating live environments. This includes examples of performing scripted virtual machine installation and administration, LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) stack provisioning and bulk user creation for testing environments. By the end of this Linux book, you’ll have gained the knowledge and confidence you need to use shell and command-line scripts.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
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Using firewall-cmd and ufw

Using built-in firewalls has been a de facto standard in Linux for more than two decades now. Ever since the invention of ipfwadm (kernel v2.0), Linux kernel developers have been piling up functionality and a firewall has been one of those things. ipfwadm was followed by ipchains (kernel v2.2), iptables (kernel v2.4), and today it's all about firewalld (CentOS) and ufw (Ubuntu). Let's go through both of these concepts so that we can use them when we need them regardless of the Linux distribution we're working on.

Getting ready

As a part of this recipe, we are going to go through a list of dozens of different scenarios covering firewalld and ufw. In other words, we are going to introduce the necessary commands to do configuration changes for some of the most commonly used scenarios. First, let's install the necessary packages for CentOS (on our client2 machine) and Ubuntu (client1 machine). So, for CentOS, we need to type the following...

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