Linux Foundations Master the Linux Command Line by Eslam Wahba(.ePUB)+

File Size: 10 MB

Linux Foundations: Master the Linux Command Line And system Administration (Modern Cloud & AI Engineering Series Book 1) by Eslam Wahba
Requirements: .ePUB, .PDF, .MOBI/.AZW reader, 10 MB
Overview: The Linux Book Written From Production Incidents, Not Textbooks. You have been paged at 3am. The server is down. The dashboard shows nothing useful. You know Linux — but the failure is happening in a layer you have never had to look at before. This book is for that moment. Linux Foundation: A Practical Guide covers twelve kernel subsystems — the ones that fail in production and take hours to diagnose without the right mental model. Every chapter opens with a real incident, contains commands you can run immediately, and ends with a concrete checklist. Every chapter in this book opens with a production incident. A real failure, or a composite of real failures, with the kind of context that matters: what the monitoring dashboard showed, why it was misleading, and what the actual root cause turned out to be. Every chapter contains real commands with real expected output. Every chapter ends with a concrete checklist — not “understand concept X” but “run this command and interpret this output.” The coverage is vertical, not horizontal. Each chapter covers one layer of the Linux stack at the depth required to diagnose failures in that layer. Boot, processes, memory, the filesystem, file descriptors, the network stack, storage I/O, systemd internals, the security model, observability tools, container primitives, and production tuning parameters. This is not documentation. It is not a reference manual. It is a map of the terrain built specifically for engineers who need to navigate it under pressure. This book is written for engineers with two to eight years of Linux experience. Not beginners. You already know how to write bash scripts, configure systemd services, push deployments, and debug application failures. You have been on-call. You have seen servers misbehave. What you may not have is a systematic mental model of what the kernel is actually doing underneath those abstractions. That is what this book provides — not at the academic level of a kernel developer, but at the operational level of an engineer who needs to diagnose production failures quickly and correctly.
Genre: Non-Fiction > Tech & Devices

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