Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Solid read Comment: Pretty good book, unfortunately it has no information on setting up NIS or LDAP. Other than that a solid read.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great Linux Sys Admin Book Comment: 'Linux System Administration' by Tom Adelstein is a wonderful little book for doing exactly what the title says. For anyone that uses Linux on a daily basis in their jobs or is new to said role, this is a great book/tool for learning and configuring Linux. The only negative that I really have is I usually applaud brevity but in this case I will have to say that this book is a wee bit short. Covering 250+ pages, I felt like for a book to have 'system administration' in the title for such a big topic more content should have been put within the confines of this binding. What is covered is as follows:
01. Requirements for a Linux System Administrator
02. Setting Up a Linux Multifunction Server
03. The Domain Name System
04. An Initial Internet-Ready Environment
05. Mail
06. Administering Apache
07. Load-Balanced Clusters
08. Local Network Services
09. Virtualization in the Modern Enterprise
10. Scripting
11. Backing Up Data
Solid writing, nice layout and good content make this an easy recommendation but limited size also limits how high of a recommendation I can make. Hopefully in the 2nd Edition there is more content covered.
**** RECOMMENDED
Customer Rating:      Summary: Useful survey of interesting software & technology Comment: I've just finished reading O'Reilly's latest GNU/Linux title, Linux
System Administration (full disclosure: I was sent a reviewer's copy).
Bottom line up front: it's a handy introduction for the beginner
GNU/Linux sysadmin, and a useful addition to an experienced sysadmin's
bookshelf.
The book is essentially a survey of various Linux system-administration
tasks: installing Debian; setting up LAMP; configuring a load-balancing,
high-availability environment; working with virtualisation. None of the
chapters are in-depth examinations of their subjects; rather, they're
enough to get you started and familiar with the concepts involved, and
headed in the right direction. I like this approach, as it increases
the likelihood that any particular admin will be able to use the
material presented. I've been working with Apache for almost a decade
now, but I've not done any virtualisation; some other fellow may have
played with Linux for supercomputing, but never done any web serving
with it; we both can use the chapters which cover subjects new to us.
I really like some of the choices the authors made. A lot of GNU/Linux
'administration' books focus on GUI tools--I've seen some which don't
even bother addressing the command line! I've long said that if one
isn't intimately familiar with the shell--if one cannot get one's job
done with it--then one isn't really a sysadmin. Linux System
Administration approaches nearly everything from the CLI, right from the
get-go. Kudos!
The authors also deserve praise for showing, early on, how to replace
Sendmail with Postfix. In 2007, there's very, _very_ little reason to use
Sendmail: unless you know why you need it, you almost certainly don't.
Postfix is more stable and far more secure.
Another nice thing is how many alternatives are showcased: Xen & VMware;
Debian, Fedora & Xandros; CIFS/SMB & NFS; shell, Perl, PHP & Python and
so forth. One really great advantage of Unix in general and GNU/Linux
in particular is choice--it's good to see a reference work which
implicitly acknowledges that.
The authors are also pretty good about calling out common
pitfalls--several got me, once upon a time. It'd have been nice to have
had a book like this when I was cutting my teeth...
Lastly, I liked that the authors & their editor weren't afraid to refer
readers to books from other publishers, in addition to O'Reilly's
(uniformly excellent) offerings. Not all publishers would be so
forthright; O'Reilly merits recognition for their openness.
The book's not quite perfect, though. I wish that PostgreSQL had at
least been mentioned as a more powerful, more stable (and often faster
in practice) alternative to MySQL, and one doesn't actually need to
register a domain in order to set up static IP addressing. Still, these
are pretty minor quibbles.
I'd say that the ideal audience for this book is a small-to-medium
business admin who'd like to start using Linux, or who already is but
doesn't really feel confident yet. It covers enough categories that at
least a few are likely to be relevant. Even an experienced admin will
probably find some useful stuff in here.
Customer Rating:      Summary: More in the description than in the book Comment: I was a little disappointed with the book. I was looking for something lower level and comprehensive, more like "Essential System Administration". While this book is useful, it is not as useful as some others.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Linux System Administration Good for MCSE and a seasoned Linux or UNIX administrator Comment: Linux System Administration is a book for a seasoned Linux or UNIX administrator. The book attempts to describe day-to-day administration, maintenance and advanced issues commonly faced by Linux system administrator. Book covers wild verity of topics.
Both Tom Adelstein and Bill Lubanovic has done an extraordinary work to put together Linux System Administration. Tom is not just a system administrator but a good technical writer.
So what's unique about this book?
Generally most Linux classes and books cover topics such as user administration, setting up mail and web servers, printers, new hard disk / file system etc. But very few books or classes deals with scalability and availability issues. The book teaches you how to setup a reverse proxy in front of Apache, setting up a load balancing server, hot backups and running Linux based server 24×7.
The entire book is divided into 11 chapters that cover from practical advice on building everything from SOHO hubs, web servers, and LAN servers to load-balanced clusters and servers consolidated through virtualization.
Sure you will find most of the information mentioned in this book throughout mailing lists, forums, blogs, and discussion groups but not in one handy guide. Overall, a great book that touches all Linux administrative aspects not covered in many books and classes. This book is highly recommended to all Linux administrators or admins with Windows Sever background.
a) Level of experience needed: Intermediate Linux / UNIX sys admin / MCSE etc
b) Who will find useful: Linux/UNIX sys admin / IDC Tech support staff / Linux fan boys ;)
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