[Cialug] New Linux User orientation?

Josh More morej at alliancetechnologies.net
Wed Nov 18 10:43:37 CST 2009


Matt,

You can deal with the driver issue by rebuilding your kernel and
changing the drivers you need to be built-in instead of modules.  It's a
bit of a pain, but that's kinda the "standard" way to do it.

I do have to ask, though, why you'd want to mount /var.  Given what I
suspect of what you'll be doing, you should be fine with mounting a
single /srv volume and redirecting Apache logs to /srv/www/$site/logs. 
You can lock their home directory to /srv/www/$site, and just basically
move everything there.







-Josh More, RHCE, CISSP, NCLP, GIAC 
 morej at alliancetechnologies.net 
 515-245-7701

>>> "Matt Breitbach" <matthewb at flash.shanje.com> 11/17/09 7:28 PM >>>
Generally, I need to make some modifications to CentOS systems and
manage
them once we have installed Cpanel on them.

One of my main goals is to get all of the user files on to our iSCSI
system
since storage is tight on our blade.  The folders that will need to be
moved
are /home /var and /usr.  From what I've seen moving just the /home
folder,
I'm probably going to run into some circular dependencies by moving /var
and
/usr - IE - lots of drivers appear to be in /var, but if I mount an
iscsi
device and bind /var to a mount point of /iscsi/var, it won't be
available
until networking is initialized and iSCSI services are started, many of
which probably reside on /var.

Past the initial installation and configuration, there are probably
going to
be a lot of day-to-day headaches that I'll need to know where things are
typically stored at, easy search methods, etc.

I've done a lot of this before, but I haven't done it enough to have it
committed to long-term memory.  IE - I know how to use grep, but I don't
remember all of the switches and what they do.  I don't have any clue
what
the shortcuts for VI are, and as such will be installing a different
text
editor, as I have no desire to learn VI.  I can configure networking,
and
can muddle my way through things, but I'd love to have a desk reference
that
gives me something within arms reach that has lots of good information.


-----Original Message-----
From: cialug-bounces at cialug.org [mailto:cialug-bounces at cialug.org] On
Behalf
Of Morris Dovey
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2009 4:17 PM
To: Central Iowa Linux Users Group
Subject: Re: [Cialug] New Linux User orientation?

Matt Breitbach wrote:
> So I'm foraying into the linux world hot and heavy.
> 
> I'd love to find some good resources for new linux users - I don't
need to
> know how to use GIMP, I don't need to know how to tweak the user
interface,
> I need to know the meat and potatoes of Linux.  Mounts, permissions,
file
> sharing, user management, etc.
> 
> Anyone know of a good book or site that covers this information
without
> going into extra crap that I don't need? 

It'd help people to help you if you told from whence you come into the 
Linux world...

I have an old copy of "Linux in a nutshell" ISBN:1-56592-167-4 
(O'Reilly) that provides a large serving of the meat and potatoes you've

asked for.

For a bit (a /big/ bit, actually) more depth, I've resorted to "Advanced

Programming in the UNIX Environment" ISBN:0-201-563-17-7 (Addison
Wesley).

What constitutes "extra crap" depends very much on the specifics of what

you'll be doing, and at what level - and you haven't provided any clues 
in that direction, either.



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