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Linux Foundations Master the Linux Command Line And system Administration | 1.33 MB
Title: Linux Foundations: Master the Linux Command Line And system Administration (Modern Cloud & AI Engineering Series Book 1)
Author: Wahba, Eslam
Category: System Administration, Linux, Network Security
Language: English | 172 Pages | ISBN: 9798880008308
Description:
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.
Chapters Cover
- Boot - GRUB2 recovery, initramfs internals, why yum update kernel can silence a server
- Process Model - fork(), zombie accumulation, D-state processes, fork() failing with 384GB free RAM
- Memory - Page cache, OOM killer scoring, THP latency spikes, and what free gets wrong
- Filesystem & File Descriptors - VFS, deleted-but-open files, inode exhaustion, epoll, inotify limits
- Kernel Network Stack - NIC receive path, TCP state machine, conntrack table exhaustion, Netfilter hooks
- Storage I/O - The fsync() durability stack, blk-mq schedulers, NVMe queue depth
- systemd - After= vs. Requires=, Type=notify, journald rate limiting, socket activation
- Linux Security Model - Five capability sets, user namespaces, SELinux, seccomp-bpf
- Observability - perf_events, eBPF, bpftrace, flamegraph interpretation
- Containers from First Principles - Namespaces, cgroup v2 accounting, overlayfs, PID 1
- Production Tuning Reference - Every sysctl that matters, with workload-specific profiles
Real Case Studies
- 14 database servers unbootable after patching - zero-byte initramfs on a full /boot
- Load balancer dropping 3.1% of traffic for 3 days - conntrack table at its 2002 default
- PostgreSQL at 947% higher throughput with no hardware change - NVMe queue depth fix
- Java service 100% CPU with 88% invisible to the profiler - THP scanner in kernel space
- Container OOM-killed at 287MB heap with 64GB free RAM - page cache counted against cgroup limit
Also Includes
- Diagnostic commands by symptom, sysctl quick reference, and 33-term X-Ray glossary
- ? Mental Models · ⚠️ Common Mistakes · ? Deep Insights · ? Production Tips in every chapter
- Kernel version: Linux 6.1 with RHEL 9.2 distribution notes throughout
If you run Linux in production and have ever spent more than thirty minutes on a failure that should have taken five, this is the map you needed before it happened.
DOWNLOAD:
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