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CompTIA Linux+ Certification Guide

You're reading from   CompTIA Linux+ Certification Guide A comprehensive guide to achieving LX0-103 and LX0-104 certifications with mock exams

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781789344493
Length 590 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Philip Inshanally Philip Inshanally
Author Profile Icon Philip Inshanally
Philip Inshanally
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Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Configuring the Hardware Settings FREE CHAPTER 2. Booting the System 3. Changing Runlevels and Boot Targets 4. Designing a Hard Disk Layout 5. Installing a Linux Distribution 6. Using Debian Package Management 7. Using YUM Package Management 8. Performing File Management 9. Creating, Monitoring, Killing, and Restarting Processes 10. Modifying Process Execution 11. Display Managers 12. Managing User and Group Accounts 13. Automating Tasks 14. Maintaining System Time and Logging 15. Fundamentals of Internet Protocol 16. Network Configuration and Troubleshooting 17. Performing Administrative Security Tasks 18. Shell Scripting and SQL Data Management 19. Mock Exam - 1 20. Mock Exam - 2 21. Assessment 22. Other Books You May Enjoy

Steps to format a hard disk

After we have created our partitions, the next step would be to make the partitions accessible by way of a filesystem. In Linux, when we format a partition(s), the system wipes the partition, and this enables the system to store data on the partition.

We have a number of filesystem types available in a Linux system. We use the mkfs command in combination with the desired filesystem type. To see the available filesystems, we can do this:

From the preceding screenshot, in this Ubuntu distribution, the ext4 type is primarily what the distribution is currently using. We can also use the lsblk command with the -f option to verify this:

root@ubuntu:/home/philip# lsblk -f

The output of the preceding command can be seen in the following screenshot:

From the preceding screenshot, we can see both hard disks: /dev/sda and /dev/sdb. Additionally, we see a column...

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