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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Administration

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Administration

By : Miguel Pérez Colino, Pablo Iranzo Gómez, Scott McCarty
4.5 (4)
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Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Administration

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Administration

4.5 (4)
By: Miguel Pérez Colino, Pablo Iranzo Gómez, Scott McCarty

Overview of this book

Whether in infrastructure or development, as a DevOps or site reliability engineer, Linux skills are now more relevant than ever for any IT job, forming the foundation of understanding the most basic layer of your architecture. With Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) becoming the most popular choice for enterprises worldwide, achieving the Red Hat Certified System Administrator (RHCSA) certification will validate your Linux skills to install, configure, and troubleshoot applications and services on RHEL systems. Complete with easy-to-follow tutorial-style content, self-assessment questions, tips, best practices, and practical exercises with detailed solutions, this book covers essential RHEL commands, user and group management, software management, networking fundamentals, and much more. You'll start by learning how to create an RHEL 8 virtual machine and get to grips with essential Linux commands. You'll then understand how to manage users and groups on an RHEL 8 system, install software packages, and configure your network interfaces and firewall. As you advance, the book will help you explore disk partitioning, LVM configuration, Stratis volumes, disk compression with VDO, and container management with Podman, Buildah, and Skopeo. By the end of this book, you'll have covered everything included in the RHCSA EX200 certification and be able to use this book as a handy, on-the-job desktop reference guide. This book and its contents are solely the work of Miguel Pérez Colino, Pablo Iranzo Gómez, and Scott McCarty. The content does not reflect the views of their employer (Red Hat Inc.). This work has no connection to Red Hat, Inc. and is not endorsed or supported by Red Hat, Inc.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
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1
Section 1: Systems Administration – Software, User, Network, and Services Management
9
Section 2: Security with SSH, SELinux, a Firewall, and System Permissions
14
Section 3: Resource Administration – Storage, Boot Process, Tuning, and Containers
21
Section 4: Practical Exercises

Exercise 1 resolution

1. Configuring the time zone to GMT

We can check the current system date by executing the date command. At the very last part of the line that is subsequently printed, the time zone will be shown. In order to configure it, we can use the timedatectl command, or alter the /etc/localtime symbolic link.

So, to achieve this goal, we can use one of the following:

  • timedatectl set-timezone GMT
  • rm –fv /etc/localtime; ln –s /usr/share/zoneinfo/GMT /etc/localtime

Now date should report the proper time zone.

2. Allowing password-less login to the root user using SSH

Doing this will require the following:

  • SSH must be installed and available (that means installed and started).
  • The root user should have an SSH key generated and added to the list of authorized keys.

First, let's tackle this with SSH, as seen in the following:

dnf –y install openssh-server; systemctl enable sshd; systemctl start sshd...

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