List of Figures
Chapter 1:
RHCE Prerequisites
Figure 1-1:
The vi editor with/etc/inittab
Figure 1-2:
Adding a new user in /etc/passwd
Figure 1-3:
Linux fdisk commands; p returns the partition table
Figure 1-4:
/etc/passwd
Figure 1-5:
Using
elinks
Figure 1-6:
Using lftp
Chapter 2:
Hardware and Installation
Figure 2-1:
Configuring TCP/IP on your network card during installation
Figure 2-2:
Manual TCP/IP network card configuration
Figure 2-3:
Red Hat Installer boot options
Figure 2-4:
Starting the installation process
Figure 2-5:
Connecting to an NFS server
Figure 2-6:
Connecting to an HTTP server
Figure 2-7:
Connecting to an FTP server
Figure 2-8:
Basic partitioning
Figure 2-9:
Configuring a boot loader
Figure 2-10:
Configuring networking
Figure 2-11:
Basic package customization
Figure 2-12:
Red Hat Enterprise Linux package groups
Figure 2-13:
Red Hat Enterprise Linux Mail Server package group details
Figure 2-14:
Network Servers package group
Figure 2-15:
First Boot configuration
Figure 2-16:
Text-mode First Boot configuration
Figure 2-17:
Configuring a firewall
Figure 2-18:
Configuring SELinux
Chapter 3:
The Boot Process
Figure 3-1:
The BIOS initialization process
Figure 3-2:
The GRand Unified Bootloader (GRUB)
Figure 3-3:
Details of GRUB
Figure 3-4:
Sample kill and start scripts in runlevel 5
Figure 3-5:
The GRUB boot loader
Figure 3-6:
Controlling services with
ntsysv
Figure 3-7:
The Service Configuration tool
Figure 3-8:
The Date/Time Properties window
Chapter 4:
Linux Filesystem Administration
Figure 4-1:
parted Command Options
Chapter 5:
Package Management
Figure 5-1:
Pup, the Package Updater
Figure 5-2:
The Package Manager
Figure 5-3:
The Kickstart Configurator doesn't quite work.
Figure 5-4:
The Kickstart Configurator
Figure 5-5:
Using the Kickstart Configurator to set up partitions
Chapter 6:
User Administration
Figure 6-1:
Managing user account life
Figure 6-2:
Configuring password information
Figure 6-3:
Assigning groups
Figure 6-4:
Quota information
Figure 6-5:
Quotas with hard and soft limits
Figure 6-6:
Quota grace period
Figure 6-7:
Group quota
Figure 6-8:
A quota report
Figure 6-9:
The PAM /etc/pam.d/login module
Figure 6-10:
The /etc/pam.d/system-auth configuration file
Figure 6-11:
Authentication Configuration
Chapter 7:
System Administration Tools
Figure 7-1:
Network Configuration utility
Figure 7-2:
Red Hat's Printer Configuration utility
Figure 7-3:
Connecting to a remote CUPS server
Figure 7-4:
Starting the printer configuration process
Figure 7-5:
Selecting a connection
Figure 7-6:
Selecting a manufacturer
Figure 7-7:
Selecting a printer and driver
Figure 7-8:
Sharing a CUPS printer
Figure 7-9:
Status of configured printers
Figure 7-10:
GNOME Default Printer manager
Figure 7-11:
CUPS Web-based interface
Figure 7-12:
CUPS Administration management page
Figure 7-13:
Configuring a printer class
Figure 7-14:
The new printer class
Figure 7-15:
The syslog.conf log configuration file
Figure 7-16:
A typical set of log files in /var/log
Chapter 8:
Kernel Services and Configuration
Figure 8-1:
A Red Hat Enterprise Linux/proc directory
Figure 8-2:
Detected memory information
Figure 8-3:
Detected CPU information
Figure 8-4:
GRUB menu with original and recompiled kernels
Figure 8-5:
Questions from the
make config
utility
Figure 8-6:
The
make menuconfig
configuration menu
Figure 8-7:
The
make xconfig
configuration menu
Figure 8-8:
The
make gconfig
configuration menu
Figure 8-9:
Configuration of a volume group (VG)
Figure 8-10:
The GUI LVM tool
Figure 8-11:
Creating a new volume group
Figure 8-12:
Creating a new logical volume
Figure 8-13:
Removing a logical volume
Figure 8-14:
Adding a physical volume
Chapter 9:
Apache and Squid
Figure 9-1:
The default Apache Web page
Figure 9-2:
Apache configuration files
Figure 9-3:
A password-protected Web site
Figure 9-4:
Customized Apache logs
Figure 9-5:
The Apache configuration tool, Main tab
Chapter 10:
Network File-Sharing Services
Figure 10-1:
NFS Server Configuration
Figure 10-2:
The Add NFS Share window
Figure 10-3:
Samba Server Configuration utility
Figure 10-4:
List of shared directories and printers from a remote PDC
Figure 10-5:
Browsing remote shared directories
Figure 10-6:
Using Startup Programs to connect to a shared Samba directory
Figure 10-7:
Samba Server basic settings
Figure 10-8:
Samba Server security settings
Figure 10-9:
Basic components of Create Samba Share
Figure 10-10:
Current Samba users
Figure 10-11:
Creating a New Samba User
Figure 10-12:
Testing smb.conf syntax
Chapter 11:
Domain Name Service
Figure 11-1:
/etc/named .caching-nameserver.conf
Figure 11-2:
The root DNS servers are stored in named.ca.
Figure 11-3:
The localhost.zone DNS datafile
Figure 11-4:
The named.local reverse DNS file
Figure 11-5:
An example.org .zone file
Figure 11-6:
A reverse DNS zone file
Figure 11-7:
Listing a working DNS zone
Figure 11-8:
DNS query using dig
Chapter 12:
Electronic Mail
Figure 12-1:
system-switch-mail
Chapter 13:
Other Networking Services
Figure 13-1:
A public key
Figure 13-2:
Generating encryption keys
Figure 13-3:
It's easy to decipher a clear text password.
Figure 13-4:
Active network interfaces
MULTICAST
Figure 13-5:
Sample DHCP configuration file
Figure 13-6:
Configuring your network card
Figure 13-7:
Configuring the Network Time Protocol
Chapter 14:
The X Window System
Figure 14-1:
Running X Window clients from remote or local computers
Figure 14-2:
Set your preferred display manager in /etc/X11/prefdm.
Figure 14-3:
The GNOME Display Manager,
gdm
Figure 14-4:
The KDE Display Manager,
kdm
Figure 14-5:
The
startx
script
Figure 14-6:
A GUI as custom configured through ~/.xinitrc
Figure 14-7:
The Display Settings tool, started from the text console
Figure 14-8:
Display settings
Figure 14-9:
Selecting a graphics card
Figure 14-10:
Selecting a monitor
Figure 14-11:
The GNOME desktop
Figure 14-12:
The KDE desktop
Chapter 15:
Securing Services
Figure 15-1:
The Security Level Configuration tool
Figure 15-2:
Customizing using the Red Hat Security Level Configuration tool
Figure 15-3:
ls -Z
output
Figure 15-4:
SELinux Management Tool
Figure 15-5:
SELinux Boolean options
Figure 15-6:
SELinux Management File Labeling
Figure 15-7:
SELinux Setroubleshoot Browser
Chapter 16:
Troubleshooting
Figure 16-1:
One possible error message
Figure 16-2:
A second possible error message
Figure 16-3:
Booting into
linux rescue
mode
Figure 16-4:
Networking interface options in
linux rescue
mode
Figure 16-5:
Networking interface configuration in
linux rescue
mode
Figure 16-6:
The linux
rescue environment options
Figure 16-7:
The
linux rescue
environment has found your root directory (/).
Figure 16-8:
Labels, filesystems, and partitions
Figure 16-9:
The
dumpe2fs
command provides a lot of information.