Linux & Unix Tuition Set - Solaris, Red Hat, SUSE...

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Linux & Unix Tuition Set - Solaris, Red Hat, SUSE...

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Start time 06/21/2008
End time 07/01/2008
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Your pages title here     Linux and Unix Tuition Set & Workshop - 142 tutorials UPDATED - 2008/2009 version! Covering: Linux, Unix, Red Hat, Fedora, Suse, BSD and Solaris Please read the full description before buying. By buying, you accept the information stated in the description. By buying you agree that you have read the whole description and agree to the purchase the product that is for sale. Please see our FAQ before buying. A huge collection of text-based tutorials on disc for you to use as needed to learn, improve or reference! Unlock the potential of the Linux and Unix operating systems! Packed with tutorials on Red Hat, Fedora and SUSE as well as many Linux general tutorials covering areas such as: Palm development Kernel module Programming Firewalls and proxies in Linux System Administration Shell scripting Network administration Game programming Linux programming Mainframe Linux Kylix * Linux+* Assembly Language programming KDE … Also covering Solaris and BSD as well as great general UNIX tutorials covering: System administration Unix programming SAMBA RPM TCPIP Network programming … And perhaps, most importantly, the set covers migrating from using Windows operating systems to using Linux. So all PC users can learn to use Linux quickly and easily! General Linux 69 Tutorials "Linux (also known as GNU/Linux) is a computer operating system. It is one of the most prominent examples of open source development and free software; unlike proprietary operating systems such as Windows or Mac OS, all of its underlying source code is available to the public for anyone to freely use, modify, and redistribute. Initially, Linux was primarily developed and used by individual enthusiasts on personal computers. Since then, Linux has gained the support of major corporations such as IBM, Sun Microsystems, Hewlett-Packard, and Novell for use in servers and is gaining popularity in the desktop market[1]. It is used in systems ranging from supercomputers to mobile phones. Proponents and analysts attribute its success to its low cost, security, reliability, and freedom from vendor lock-in" [Wikipedia] Including: Using Linux as a router Selecting a distro Live CDs Differences between distros Dual booting Windows and Linux Installing Linux Linux GUIs GNOME Subnetting ifconfig netstat DNS Named Authentication Firewalls inetd Remote logins UUCP Redirecting I/O Command-line interface Different accounts Groups Development tools Customising the interface Logging in Linux Commands Using FTP and Telnet Compiling source code ICMP Installing Ethernet Running applications Logging out Using the internet Configuring multimedia devices   Passwords File organisation File permissions TCP/IP networks IP routing Directory creation (mkdir) sort command grep command Setting system properties The kernel The text editors RPM Word processing Creating spreadsheets Image editing and graphical design Booting Root Super users GIMP Networking Backing up Managing an internet server User security Linux hosts Migrating from windows KDE System administration Printing Network security Network file transfer File manipulation Open office File systems Security File deletion The terminal window Virtual desktops Installing packages Using Wireless networks Setting up your LAN Linux compatible hardware Emailing Instant messaging Programming Shell scripting: Variables and Arrays Assigning Data to Variables Characters and Quotes Flow Control If/else Statements Case Statements For Loops While Loops Until Loops Programming in C Programming in Perl Red Hat & Fedora 12 Tutorials "Red Hat Linux was one of the most popular Linux distributions, assembled by Red Hat. It is one of the "middle-aged" Linux distributions; 1.0 was released in November 3, 1994. It is not as old as Slackware, but certainly older than many other distributions. It was the first Linux distribution to use RPM as its packaging format, and over time has served as the starting point for several other distributions, such as the desktop-oriented Mandriva Linux (originally Red Hat Linux with KDE), Yellow Dog Linux (which started from Red Hat Linux with PowerPC support), and ASPLinux (Red Hat Linux with better non-Latin character support). Since 2003, Red Hat has discontinued the Red Hat Linux line in favor of its new Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Red Hat Linux 9, the final release, hit its official end-of-life on April 30, 2004, although the Fedora Legacy project continues to publish updates." [Wikipedia] Including: Network administration System administration Security Installation Logging in Virtual workspaces The text editors The internet with Firefox FTP Workstations Editing images Print servers Playing music Playing games NFS Virtual consoles Shell tasks Editing text files Math tasks The shell Using systems remotely The terminal application Mail servers X Desktop Web servers System automation X settings News servers File dialogs Trash can File servers Desktop customising Audio and video conversion Setting up user accounts Backing up Running a web server The command line Executable files SWAT Open office Making spreadsheets Word processing Creating presentations SUSE 7 Tutorials "The SUSE Linux distribution was originally a German translation of Slackware Linux. In mid-1992, Softlanding Linux System (SLS) was founded by Peter MacDonald, and was the first comprehensive distribution to contain elements such as X and TCP/IP. The Slackware distribution (maintained by Patrick Volkerding) was initially based largely on SLS. S.u.S.E was founded in late 1992 as a UNIX consulting group, which among other things regularly released software packages that included SLS and Slackware, and printed UNIX/Linux manuals. They released the first CD version of SLS/Slackware in 1994, under the name S.u.S.E Linux 1.0. It later integrated with the Jurix distribution of Florian La Roche (also based on Slackware), to release the first really unique S.u.S.E Linux 4.2 in 1996. Over time, SUSE Linux incorporated many aspects of Red Hat Linux (e.g., using RPMs and /etc/sysconfig)." [Wikipedia] Including: Installation Booting Security BASH shell The kernel Secure File transfters System settings Directories /boot directory explained /dev directory explained /bin directory explained /sbin directory explained /var directory explained /etc directory explained /opt directory explained /home directory explained File management Text files Shell scripting Multimedia Using Open office Window manager Enterprise architecture Python programming System administration KDE Module management Cross-platforms Creating websites GNOME Installing software Task scheduling Databases X windows Performance tuning BIND Logging in Logging out Text editors Packages DNS Perl programming Networking Domain names Apache web server Network services LDAP UNIX 54 Tutorials "Unix or UNIX is a computer operating system originally developed in the 1960s and 1970s by a group of AT&T Bell Labs employees including Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, and Douglas McIlroy. Today's Unix systems are split into various branches, developed over time by AT&T, several other commercial vendors, as well as several non-profit organizations, such as individuals who write code under the GNU General Public License. Unix was designed to be portable, multi-tasking and multi-user in a time-sharing configuration. The Unix systems are characterized by various concepts: plain text files, command line interpreter, hierarchical file system, treating devices and certain types of inter-process communication as files, etc. In software engineering, Unix is mainly noted for its use of the C programming language and for the Unix philosophy." [Wikipedia] Including: System V File protection System information The filesystem File permissions Processes Superusers Backing up Network tools Emacs arp Disk quota VPN Network File Sytem Terminals Passwords TCP/IP networking UUCP Restoring Printing File types X Window ACLs NTP daemon Domain name system Shutting down File naming Crontab automation Network administration Log files Administration Network traffic monitoring Users Domain name system Web services The shell Package management Disk space Intranets Routing Kernel reconfiguration BIND Mounting Remote commands Media Encryption Named Shell scripting SNMP Pipelines Filters DHCP Secure shell NIS server Firewalls Dismounting eMail User accounts BSD 19 Tutorials BSD, FreeBSD and OpenBSD coverage. "Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD, sometimes called Berkeley Unix) is the Unix derivative distributed by the University of California, Berkeley, starting in the 1970s. The name is also used collectively for the modern descendants of these distributions. BSD was widely identified with the versions of Unix available for workstation-class systems. This can be attributed to the ease with which it could be licensed and the familiarity it found among the founders of many technology companies during the 1980s. This familarity often came from using similar systems—notably DEC's Ultrix and Sun's SunOS—during their education. While BSD itself was largely superseded by the System V Release 4 and OSF/1 systems in the 1990s (both of which incorporated BSD code), in recent years modified open source versions of the codebase have seen increasing use and development." [Wikipedia] Including: Free BSD Net BSD Open BSD Mac OS X The file system Networking Ethernet Upgrading Installation Backing up Email services Sendmail Postfix FTP services The Kernel File systems RAID Security levels /etc directory Resources Securing a web server Firewalls Sockets NIDS FreeBSD as a server Disks DNS Recovery Secuity Root Software management Groups Passwords Network services Packages X Windows Incident response Ports SMP Deployment System performance Handling crashes Mounting K desktop environment File Flags Multimedia Using SNORT File sharing ACID Permissions Solaris 8 Tutorials Covering versions 8, 9 and 10.  Also covering preparation for the "Solaris 10 System Administration" "Solaris is a computer operating system developed by Sun Microsystems. It is certified as a version of UNIX; although Solaris proper is still proprietary software, many core components have made their way into an open source CDDL version, OpenSolaris. During the 1980s, Sun's version of UNIX, SunOS, was based on BSD UNIX. In the early 1990s, Sun replaced SunOS 4 with a version of UNIX System V Release 4, jointly developed with AT&T. This was marked by changing the marketing name of the operating system to Solaris 2; however, the term "SunOS" was still used to refer to the underlying operating system itself, and Solaris is considered to be the SunOS 5 operating system plus a graphical user environment, ONC+, and networking and other components." [Wikipedia] Including: Installation The kernel SPARC Configuration Initialisation OpenBoot PROM Run levels Live upgrade Patching Dynamic host configuration protocol Network time protocol Tuning NIS and NIS+ LDAP Text editing Sendmail Services Logging Services SAMBA Security Procedures Firewalls File permissions File system Accounting Networking Remote access Scripting Network file system Web applications Printing Mounting Routing SMTP Directories Telnet Developing applications Caching file system Backing up Scheduling Process management Virtual management Users Groups Volume management Recovering data The SMC Pluggable Authentication Managing devices Resource management What is a Tutorial/Tuition Set? Listed above is not even 1% of the content in these tutorials.  They really are huge!  The tutorials are packed full of code examples, illustrations, diagrams, exercises and quizzes to aid the learning process, making our tutorials true learning workshops. Our Tuition sets contain many tutorials.  These tutorials are very in depth and real value for money.  For example, if we say the Java Set contained 43 tutorials, we do not mean that one tutorial is “How to create an array in Java” another is “How to manipulate strings in Java”.  43 tutorials means 43 huge text based tutorials.  Each tutorial has hundreds, and in some cases, thousands of pages.  So one Java tutorial may mean a 750 page tutorial on Java Beans!  An amazing electronic tuition set, supplied on a CD-ROM with software for viewing.  This is NOT paper based. Please see our FAQ for more information.   On the CD is everything you need to use the set. This is not information that can be downloaded from the internet and you will not find this collection for download anywhere on the web. All buyers are provided with the CD, not a link for downloading. These are not unauthorised copies. On 28-Oct-07 at 17:33:58 GMT, seller added the following information: Pay instantly with your debit or credit card through PayPal. function dw(nu){ if (nu == 3){ document.ppvidlogo.src="http://images.paypal.com/en_US/i/logo/logo_nosurcharge3.gif"; } } f1="document.links"; var itemId = itemId; var winner = winner; if((winner == true) || (winner == false)) { if (winner == true) { dw(3); } f14=itemId; for (i=0;i=0) { var p=new Array(); p[0]=document.links[i].protocol; p[1]=document.links[i].hostname; p[2]=document.links[i].pathname; for (j=0;j=0) {c2++;} else if ((((document.links[i].search)).indexOf("ListItemForSaleShow")>=0)||(((document.links[i].search)).indexOf("ListItemForSaleAutosShow")>=0)) {c3++;} else if ((((document.links[i].hash)).indexOf("ListItemForSaleShow")>=0)||(((document.links[i].hash)).indexOf("ListItemForSaleAutosShow")>=0)) {c4++;} else if (((document.links[i].search)).indexOf("relistid")>=0) {c6++;} } } if (window.itemState) { if (itemState.toLowerCase()=="state2") {c5++;} } if((c1>=1)||(c2>0)||(c3>0)||(c4>0)||((c1>0)&&(c5>0)&&(c6==0))){dw(3);}else{dw(2);} f11="xclick-auction"; f13="iid="; f14=""; for (i=0;i0) { s11=document.links[i].search; j=s11.indexOf(f13); if (j>0) { s11=s11.slice((j+(f13.length))); for(k=0;k

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