Rating:  Summary: Excellent! Review: This is a great book for anyone who uses Linux. Many of the tips are simple and straight forward. Anyone who has a specific need would probably come up with the same idea by doing a little research on the web. But most of the tips are head-slapping, "Wow, I shoulda thought of that!" kind of tips! Rob Flickenger not only shows some really cool tips, but is a great example of how linux commands should be used: by combining them into features that the original coders hadn't even thought of! The sections on server performance and backups were especially helpful for me. I'm guessing that this 100 tips is only the tip of the iceberg and I would really like to see more.
Rating:  Summary: Good but not great Review: This is a very helpful book, and contains a lot of useful material. It wouldn't be the first linux book I'd recommend to someone, but it's certainly worth having on your shelf.My biggest problem with this book was that the hacks are nearly all one-shot actions that you'll perform when first setting up your environment. As long as that's what you're looking for, this is the book for you. After trying out some of the hacks for myself, I ended up giving my copy to a friend who needed to 'take the next step' with Linux.
Rating:  Summary: I reserve my highest rating for this book Review: This is a wonderful little book. It's as if Flickenger carefully picked thru onLAMP, LDP, 5 years' worth of Linux Journals, Linux mags, etc., and chose the 100 best hacks/idioms/recipes/whatever to make the linux admin's life easier (almost everything is relevant to FreeBSD too). These are the most powerful, efficient, and time-saving, not the most clever hacks. I've only had it a week but already i'm doing things different w/CVS, apache, SSH, etc. Also learned a little bit of bash shell and perl. I keep this book within reach, next to A.Frisch, Nemeth/Snyder/Hein's books, Complete FreeBSD and FreeBSD handbook.
Rating:  Summary: Linux Server Hacks Review: This well written guidebook covers a hundred real-life time saving scripts and command-line magic. Everything your local *nix guru knows that you don't; narrow the gap! Highlights include CVS commands, creating unchangeable files (even by root!), filtering and organizing apache log files (for example, listing the top 20 broken links, sorted and numbered by frequency of occurrence), modifying the titlebar to display load average, host, current directory, etc., ntop and httptop and much more. I've been using *nix for 6 years now, and I found this book both a refreshing review of previously known concepts as well as a great introduction to some new utilities and tools.
Rating:  Summary: A Fine Addition to your Desk Review: Those who love UNIX (and UNIX-inspired operating systems) will surely adore Linux Server Hacks by Rob Flickenger. For decades, a mysterious sect of bearded wizards has dominated the inner sanctums of our network infrastructures, inspiring the awe of onlookers by crafting clever scripts and piping output in ingenious ways most of us never even thought of. This small but marvelous book attempts to steer apprentice wizards in the noble direction of clever system administration, with examples taken from experience in O'Reilly's own LAMP networks. The book begins with a refreshing introduction (by esr) detailing what it means to be a hacker. No, not the hax0ring w4r3z d00dz of frequent media attention, but the aforementioned bearded variety who spend most of their waking effort forging uncommon techniques for solving otherwise dull problems. Kudos to Mr. Flickenger (and O'Reilly) for not only acknowledging the difference, but celebrating it. As the title would indicate, the audience of this book is the administrator in charge of a server--that is, a Linux box performing only a couple of dedicated tasks, probably of a network-oriented nature. Although Linux enthusiasts from the desktop realm are not part of the intended audience, they will almost certainly pick up a thing or two from the material anyway. The book is organized into the following sections: * Sever Basics is a variety of general purpose tips that don't fit into the other major categories. Some of the more interesting items include: + Persistent daemons with init + Building complex command lines + Using xargs with tricky arguments + Effectively using sudo + Makefiles for automating administrative tasks I think the real magic of this chapter isn't necessarily the tips themselves, but the creative process behind them; the author is demonstrating a methodology for dealing with common problems by introducing clever solutions. This will ideally inspire the reader to deal with other problems in the same creative manner. * Revision Control. Servers with multiple administrators may benefit from using a revision control system to handle changes to configuration files. This section illustrates using RCS, with examples of checking config files in and out of the system. This provides a segway into using CVS for controlling revision of large software projects. * Backups becoming a nuisance? Approach them from a new angle by implementing some of the tips from this chapter. Examples including automated incremental backups over tar, rsync, and ssh; archiving with pax; and even some very creative (if not a little scary) ideas like piping your backups over ssh directly into cdrecord. The UNIX philosophy is illustrated well: simple tools working well together as an efficient solution. * The Networking chapter covers material that is no doubt already familiar to security-conscious Linux users. However, iptables newbies (or those transitioning from ipf or pf) will appreciate the netfilter primer and discussion of masquerading (NAT) and TCP port forwarding. Some tunneling and encapsulation techniques are also detailed here. * Monitoring details the use of syslog, and a great deal more. Networking aspects are given ample attention, without any redundant information in respect to the previous chapter. Some simple tips are given (like using lsof to track down elusive processes) as well as more advanced ideas (like a short shell script to perform an IP fail-over.) * SSH tips: are you still tapping out a password every time you hop to a new machine? If you administrate more than a few, this can be distracting and tedious. This chapter illustrates some of the inner beauty beneath SSH's surface functionality. * Scripting details a handful of ways to make your command-line life a bit easier. * Information Servers (like BIND, MySQL, and Apache servers) are the topic of the final chapter, with an emphasis on commercial web administration. Certificates, load distribution, and flexible Apache configurations are just a few examples of the items covered. Although administrators of mid-to-high-traffic servers are given special attention, those of you who run a humble Apache box from the broom-closet will find plenty of useful information as well. For someone already familiar with the basics, Linux Server Hacks is a fun way to spend an afternoon tinkering with Linux machines. Truly expert administrators may find very little new information in this book, but the sheer number of tips (and breadth of topics) would make it difficult not to learn at least a couple of shortcuts... and that makes it a worthwhile read for anybody. I'm eagerly looking forward to more titles from the Hack series. This title is available online from O'Reilly and Safari[1]. [1] No, I don't work for O'Reilly. I do think their books are excellent, however, and would love to see their Safari service thrive!
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