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Mastering Linux Administration

You're reading from   Mastering Linux Administration A comprehensive guide to installing, configuring, and maintaining Linux systems in the modern data center

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789954272
Length 772 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Alexandru Calcatinge Alexandru Calcatinge
Author Profile Icon Alexandru Calcatinge
Alexandru Calcatinge
Julian Balog Julian Balog
Author Profile Icon Julian Balog
Julian Balog
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Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Linux Basic Administration
2. Chapter 1: Installing Linux FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: The Linux Filesystem 4. Chapter 3: Linux Software Management 5. Chapter 4: Managing Users and Groups 6. Chapter 5: Working with Processes, Daemons, and Signals 7. Section 2: Advanced Linux Server Administration
8. Chapter 6: Working with Disks and Filesystems 9. Chapter 7: Networking with Linux 10. Chapter 8: Configuring Linux Servers 11. Chapter 9: Securing Linux 12. Chapter 10: Disaster Recovery, Diagnostics, and Troubleshooting 13. Section 3: Cloud Administration
14. Chapter 11: Working with Containers and Virtual Machines 15. Chapter 12: Cloud Computing Essentials 16. Chapter 13: Deploying to the Cloud with AWS and Azure 17. Chapter 14: Deploying Applications with Kubernetes 18. Chapter 15: Automating Workflows with Ansible 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Managing software packages

Each distribution has its own package managers. There are two types of package managers for each distribution, one for low-level and one for high-level package management. For an RPM-based distribution such as CentOS or Fedora, the low-level tool is the rpm command, and the high-level tools are the yum and dnf commands. For openSUSE, another major RPM-based distribution, the low-level tool is the same rpm command, and for high-level tools, there is the zypper command. For DEB-based distributions, the low-level command is dpkg and the high-level command is apt (or the now deprecated apt-get).

What is the difference between low-level and high-level package managers in Linux? The low-level package managers are responsible for the backend of any package manipulation, and are capable of unpacking packages, running scripts, and installing apps. The high-end managers are responsible for dependency resolution, installing and downloading packages (and groups of...

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