|
Size: 948
Comment:
|
Size: 1434
Comment:
|
| Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
| Line 3: | Line 3: |
| Documentation of an amateur Linux system administrator. | '''Linux''' is an operating system kernel that is meant to be a drop-in replacement for System V Unix. <<TableOfContents>> ---- == Distributions == * [[Linux/Alpine|Alpine Linux]] * [[Linux/Arch|Arch Linux]] * [[Linux/Debian|Debian]] * [[Linux/Fedora|Fedora]] |
| Line 7: | Line 19: |
| == Administration == | == General Administration == For distribution-specific administration details, see the relevant distribution's page. |
| Line 15: | Line 29: |
| * Or more specifically, [[Linux/ArchLinuxFileSystem|Arch Linux File System]] | |
| Line 22: | Line 35: |
For distribution-specific configuration files, see the relevant distribution's page. |
|
| Line 31: | Line 46: |
| == Related Utilities == | == POSIX Utilities == |
| Line 33: | Line 48: |
| These are not necessarily Linux utilities, but may be of interest to an amateur Linux system administrator. | POSIX utilities should be available on all distributions. This is the subset of utilities that warrant dedicated documentation. |
| Line 35: | Line 50: |
| * [[Awk|awk]] | |
| Line 36: | Line 52: |
| * [[Ed|ed]] (see also for ex) * [[Netctl|netctl]] * [[Vim|vim]] (see also for vi, and nvim) |
* [[Ed|ed]] * [[Sed|sed]] * [[Shell|sh]] * [[Vim|vi]] See also [[Bash|bash]] and [[Zsh|zsh]], two very common subsitutes for `sh(1)`. See also [[Git|git]], which was developed alongside the Linux kernel. |
Linux
Linux is an operating system kernel that is meant to be a drop-in replacement for System V Unix.
Distributions
General Administration
For distribution-specific administration details, see the relevant distribution's page.
Configuration Files
For distribution-specific configuration files, see the relevant distribution's page.
POSIX Utilities
POSIX utilities should be available on all distributions. This is the subset of utilities that warrant dedicated documentation.
See also bash and zsh, two very common subsitutes for sh(1).
See also git, which was developed alongside the Linux kernel.
