List of Figures - RHCE Red Hat Certified Engineer Linux Study Guide (Exam RH302), Fourth Edition [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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RHCE Red Hat Certified Engineer Linux Study Guide (Exam RH302), Fourth Edition [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Michael Jang

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List of Figures



Chapter 1: RHCE Prerequisites




Figure 1-1: The vi editor



Figure 1-2: Adding a new user in /etc/passwd



Figure 1-3: Linux fdisk commands; p returns the partition table



Figure 1-4: The Red Hat Printer Configuration tool



Figure 1-5: /etc/passwd




Chapter 2: Installation




Figure 2-1: Ready to check the integrity of an installation CD



Figure 2-2: Configuring TCP/IP on your network card during installation



Figure 2-3: Red Hat Enterprise Linux base packages



Figure 2-4: Red Hat Enterprise Linux default package groups



Figure 2-5: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Mail Server package group details



Figure 2-6: Network Servers package group



Figure 2-7: Red Hat Installer boot options



Figure 2-8: Starting the installation process



Figure 2-9: Configuring TCP/IP for installation



Figure 2-10: Connecting to an NFS Server



Figure 2-11: Connecting to an HTTP Server



Figure 2-12: Connecting to an FTP Server



Figure 2-13: Disk Druid



Figure 2-14: Adding a partition



Figure 2-15: Disk Druid Exercise 2-2 results



Figure 2-16: Configuring a boot loader



Figure 2-17: Configuring a firewall



Figure 2-18: Selecting Package Groups



Figure 2-19: Configuring your graphics system



Figure 2-20: Customizing the graphics setup of your Linux system



Figure 2-21: First Boot configuration




Chapter 3: After Installation




Figure 3-1: dmesg boot messages



Figure 3-2: The GRand Unified Bootloader (GRUB)



Figure 3-3: Details of GRUB



Figure 3-4: The Kickstart Configurator



Figure 3-5: Using the Kickstart Configurator to set up partitions



Figure 3-6: Configuring package groups with Kickstart




Chapter 4: Basic Configuration and Administration




Figure 4-1: The Red Hat GNOME GUI



Figure 4-2: The Red Hat User Manager



Figure 4-3: Managing user account life



Figure 4-4: Configuring password information



Figure 4-5: Assigning groups



Figure 4-6: The Package Management utility



Figure 4-7: Network Configuration utility



Figure 4-8: Sample kill and start scripts in runlevel 5



Figure 4-9: The Date/Time Properties tool



Figure 4-10: The Service Configuration utility




Chapter 5: Kernel, cron, and User Administration




Figure 5-1: Quota information



Figure 5-2: Quotas with hard and soft limits



Figure 5-3: Quota grace period



Figure 5-4: Group quota



Figure 5-5: A quota report



Figure 5-6: A Red Hat Enterprise Linux 3 /proc directory



Figure 5-7: Detected memory information



Figure 5-8: Detected CPU information



Figure 5-9: Tuning the kernel through /proc



Figure 5-10: GRUB menu with original and recompiled kernels



Figure 5-11: Questions from the make config utility



Figure 5-12: The make menuconfig configuration menu



Figure 5-13: The make xconfig configuration menu




Chapter 6: X Window System




Figure 6-1: Running X Window Clients from remote or local computers



Figure 6-2: The Display Settings tool, started from the text console



Figure 6-3: Display settings



Figure 6-4: Selecting a graphics card



Figure 6-5: Selecting a monitor



Figure 6-6: An X Client on a plain X Server



Figure 6-7: The GNOME desktop



Figure 6-8: The KDE desktop



Figure 6-9: Set your preferred display manager in /etc/X11/prefdm.



Figure 6-10: The GNOME display manager, gdm



Figure 6-11: The KDE display manager, kdm



Figure 6-12: The xdm login screen



Figure 6-13: A GUI as configured through ~/.xinitrc



Figure 6-14: Configuring default GNOME clients




Chapter 7: Linux Sharing Services




Figure 7-1: Installing from the Package Management utility



Figure 7-2: The default Apache Web page



Figure 7-3: Apache configuration files



Figure 7-4: A secured Web site



Figure 7-5: Customized Apache logs



Figure 7-6: The Apache configuration tool, Main tab



Figure 7-7: A typical lftp session




Chapter 8: Linux Network Services




Figure 8-1: Samba Server Configuration utility



Figure 8-2: List of shared directories and printers from a remote PDC



Figure 8-3: Browsing remote shared directories



Figure 8-4: Using Startup Programs to connect to a shared Samba directory



Figure 8-5: Samba Server basic settings



Figure 8-6: Samba Server security settings



Figure 8-7: Basic components of Create Samba Share



Figure 8-8: Current Samba users



Figure 8-9: Adding another Samba user



Figure 8-10: Testing smb.conf syntax



Figure 8-11: Red Hat's Printer Configuration utility



Figure 8-12: Starting the printer configuration process



Figure 8-13: Naming the printer



Figure 8-14: Selecting the printer connection



Figure 8-15: Configuring a CUPS network printer



Figure 8-16: Selecting a driver



Figure 8-17: Sharing a CUPS printer



Figure 8-18: Status of configured printers



Figure 8-19: GNOME Print Manager



Figure 8-20: Typical print spool



Figure 8-21: CUPS Admin menu



Figure 8-22: Configuring a printer class



Figure 8-23: Your new printer class




Chapter 9: Network Management




Figure 9-1: /etc/named.conf, configured for a caching nameserver



Figure 9-2: The root DNS servers are stored in named.ca



Figure 9-3: The localhost .zone DNS data file



Figure 9-4: The named.local reverse DNS file



Figure 9-5: An example .com.zone file



Figure 9-6: Listing a working DNS zone



Figure 9-7: A reverse DNS zone file



Figure 9-8: DNS query using dig



Figure 9-9: The Red Hat Domain Name Service configuration tool



Figure 9-10: NFS Server Configuration



Figure 9-11: The Add NFS Share window



Figure 9-12: Active network interfaces MULTICAST



Figure 9-13: Sample DHCP configuration file



Figure 9-14: Configuring your network card



Figure 9-15: Date/Time Properties




Chapter 10: Systems Administration and Security




Figure 10-1: Authentic Configuration



Figure 10-2: Suspicious login activity



Figure 10-3: The PAM /etc/pam.d/login module



Figure 10-4: The /etc/pam.d/system-auth configuration file



Figure 10-5: The syslog.conf log configuration file



Figure 10-6: A typical set of log files in /var/log



Figure 10-7: Red Hat System Log Viewer



Figure 10-8: The Security Level Configuration tool



Figure 10-9: Customizing the use of the Red Hat Security Level tool in text mode




Chapter 11: Operational Administration Recovery and Security




Figure 11-1: /etc/passwd



Figure 11-2: Booting into linux rescue mode



Figure 11-3: Connecting to a network source



Figure 11-4: Three choices in the linux rescue environment



Figure 11-5: The linux rescue environment has found your root directory (/)



Figure 11-6: Labels, filesystems, and partitions



Figure 11-7: The dumpe2fs command gives a lot of information.



Figure 11-8: One possible error message



Figure 11-9: A second possible error message



Figure 11-10: A public key



Figure 11-11: Generating encryption keys



Figure 11-12: It's easy to decipher a clear text password.



Figure 11-13: Configuration of a Logical Volume (LV)



Figure 11-14: A boot failure




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