Chapter 18. Administrative Tasks (Topic 1.111)
As a system administrator in a multiuser environment, much of your activity is related to users and their system accounts, the automation of routine tasks, and system backup. This chapter covers these administrative aspects of Linux as required for Exam 102. This chapter has six Objectives:
- Objective 1: Manage Users and Group Accounts and Related System Files
Candidates should be able to add, remove, suspend, and change user accounts. Tasks include to add and remove groups, to change user/group info in password/group databases. This Objective also includes creating special purpose and limited accounts. Weight: 4.
- Objective 2: Tune the User Environment and System Environment Variables
Candidates should be able to modify global and user profiles. This includes setting environment variables, maintaining skel directories for new user accounts, and setting a command search path to the proper directory. Weight: 3.
- Objective 3: Configure and Use System Log Files to Meet Administrative and Security Needs
Candidates should be able to configure system logs. This Objective includes managing the type and level of information logged, manually scanning log files for notable activity, monitoring log files, arranging for automatic rotation and archiving of logs, and tracking down problems noted in logs. Weight: 3.
- Objective 4: Automate System Administration Tasks by Scheduling Jobs to Run in the Future
Candidates should be able to use cron or anacron ...
Get LPI Linux Certification in a Nutshell, 2nd Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.