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008 | 090630s2005 njua | 001 0 eng | ||
016 | 7 |
_a013239686 _2Uk |
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020 | _a0131478230 (pbk. : alk. paper) | ||
039 | 9 |
_a201402040155 _bVLOAD _c201008091219 _dmalmash _c200906301254 _dvenkatrajand _c200906301254 _dvenkatrajand _y200906301253 _zvenkatrajand |
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_aQA76.76.O63 _bS59483 2005 |
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_a005.4/46 _222 |
100 | 1 |
_aSobell, Mark G. _94371 |
|
245 | 1 | 2 |
_aA Practical Guide to Linux Commands, Editors, and Shell Programming / _cMark G. Sobell. |
260 |
_aUpper Saddle River, NJ : _bPrentice Hall Professional Technical Reference, _cc2005. |
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300 |
_axxxvii, 965 p. : _bill. ; _c24 cm. |
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500 | _aIncludes index. | ||
505 | _aPreface xxviiChapter 1: Welcome to Linux 1 The GNU-Linux Connection 2 The Heritage of Linux: UNIX 5 What Is So Good About Linux? 6 Overview of Linux 10 Additional Features of Linux 15 Chapter Summary 16 Exercises 17 Part I: The Linux Operating System 19Chapter 2: Getting Started 21 Conventions Used in This Book 22 Logging In 24 Working with the Shell 25 Curbing Your Power: Superuser Access 28 Getting the Facts: Where to Find Documentation 29 More About Logging In 35 Chapter Summary 38 Exercises 39 Advanced Exercises 39 Chapter 3: Command Line Utilities 41 Special Characters 42 Basic Utilities 43 Working with Files 45 (Pipe): Communicates Between Processes 52 Four More Utilities 53 Compressing and Archiving Files 56 Locating Commands 61 Obtaining User and System Information 63 Communicating with Other Users 67 Email 69 Chapter Summary 69 Exercises 72 Advanced Exercises 73 Chapter 4: The Linux Filesystem 75 The Hierarchical Filesystem 76 Directory and Ordinary Files 77 Working with Directories 88 Access Permissions 91 Links 96 Chapter Summary 102 Exercises 103 Advanced Exercises 105 Chapter 5: The Shell 107 The Command Line 108 Standard Input and Standard Output 113 Running a Program in the Background 125 Filename Generation/Pathname Expansion 127 Builtins 132 Chapter Summary 133 Exercises 134 Advanced Exercises 136 Part II: The Editors 137Chapter 6: The vim Editor 139 History 140 Tutorial: Creating and Editing a File with vim 141 The compatible Parameter 148 Introduction to vim Features 148 Command Mode: Moving the Cursor 154 Input Mode 158 Command Mode: Deleting and Changing Text 160 Searching and Substituting 164 Miscellaneous Commands 170 Yank, Put, and Delete Commands 171 Reading and Writing Files 174 Setting Parameters 175 Advanced Editing Techniques 180 Units of Measure 184 Chapter Summary 188 Exercises 193 Advanced Exercises 194 Chapter 7: The emacs Editor 195 History 196 Tutorial: Getting Started with | ||
520 | _aPraise for Mark Sobell's Books I keep searching for books that collect everything you want to know about a subject in one place, and keep getting disappointed. Usually the books leave out some important topic, while others go too deep in some areas and must skim lightly over the others. A Practical Guide to Red Hat(R) Linux(R) is one of those rare books that actually pulls it off. Mark G. Sobell has created a single reference for Red Hat Linux that cannot be beat! This marvelous text (with a 4-CD set of Linux Fedora Core 2 included) is well worth the price. This is as close to an 'everything you ever needed to know' book that I've seen. It's just that good and rates 5 out of 5. --Ray Lodato, Slashdot contributorMark Sobell has written a book as approachable as it is authoritative. --Jeffrey Bianchine, Advocate, Author, JournalistExcellent reference book, well suited for the sysadmin of a linux cluster, or the owner of a PC contemplating installing a recent stable linux. Don't be put off by the daunting heft of the book. Sobell has striven to be as inclusive as possible, in trying to anticipate your system administration needs. --Wes Boudville, InventorA Practical Guide to Red Hat(R) Linux(R) is a brilliant book. Thank you Mark Sobell. --C. Pozrikidis, University of California at San DiegoThis book presents the best overview of the Linux operating system that I have found...It should be very helpful and understandable no matter what the reader's background is: traditional UNIX user, new Linux devotee, or even Windows user. Each topic is presented in a clear, complete fashion and very few assumptions are made about what the reader knows...The book is extremely useful as a reference, as it contains a 70-page glossary of terms and is very well indexed. It is organized in such a way that the reader can focus on simple tasks without having to wade through more advanced topics until they are ready. --Cam Marshall, Marshall Information Service LLC, Member of Fron | ||
630 | 0 | 0 |
_aLinux. _94372 |
650 | 0 |
_aOperating systems (Computers) _91424 |
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