Absolute Freebsd: The Complete Guide To FreeBSD, Third Edition
R**O
Always one of the best source of FreeBSD information.
This book is one of the few diving deep into FreeBSD and that touches most of set up and admin aspects of FreeBSD. If you like BSD or run some of them in your job, definitely an excellent book to help you learn more of it.If you are new in tech and admin systems other than BSD, the skills here are helpful on those other systems and can broaden your career.
R**N
Absolute 'Must Have' for FreeBSD
If you use FreeBSD and you're not proficient/expert enough to write this book, then you probably should have a copy on your shelf. Excellently written - with humour ;) - it gives very clear explanations of 'what' you need to know and 'how' to do it. I'd have been lost without it when I started with FreeBSD and it's still my goto whenever I'm not sure or don't know what/how to do....
F**S
Cubre muchos aspectos de freebsd, útil desde principiantes hasta expertos.
Excelente, muy bien explicado y muy ameno, totalmente recomendable.
R**O
Finally, a guide with a sense of humour
This book offers a solid foundation on how to manage and operate your FreeBSD server. The author guides you through everything you need and his writing style keeps you engaged. It doesn't come off as too technical like a long man page, written by a programmer. He has a great sense of humour and that really helps when you're going through this heavy tome. He does not go through everything BSD can possibly do in depth, but he even mentions that in the book (I can only imagine how many volumes it would take) and that's fine. Once you get a strong foundation you can build upon that.Would absolutely recommend it to anyone wanting to get a good grasp on FreeBSD.
C**E
Excellent value for sysadmin and user alike.
Disclaimers: I am not a system administrator and only a casual FreeBSD user.This book covers the FreeBSD operating system, system administration, and general UNIX in 620 pages (plus the Roman numeral pages in the preface). Given its broad scope, this is an impossible task, yet Lucas takes it on and delivers a really good product. Although it’s geared toward system administrators, anyone interested in any of those three topics can benefit from reading this publication.Expected audience skill level: relatively high. Lucas lays out in the preface what he expects readers to know prior to reading. For someone who has never used a UNIX-like system or done system administration, it would be substantial. When I came across things I didn’t know, a quick search on the internet got me back on track. As a teaching tool, the book best serves the reader by reinforcing the UNIX methodology of understanding a task concept -> testing it with a UNIX utility on the command line -> making the preferred setup for it permanent in a config file -> and optimizing the config file for ease of editing and readability. By the end of the book that pattern will become second nature to the reader. Lucas does a really nice job with that.The desktop: Lucas did this in his Absolute OpenBSD book with the cwm window manager description; he does not do that again here. There is too much else to cover. He does mention that he uses cwm and some other desktop applications. The desktop is a very personal realm and FreeBSD gives you a lot of choice; he probably did well to not spend valuable print space on this.Where Lucas does provide invaluable information for the desktop user is in a series of chapters on packaging and porting software in the middle of the book, as well as the chapter on operating system updates. He readily acknowledges the complexity of shared dependency library hell (he doesn’t call it that) and the UNIX make(1) system of managing it. Where to configure the network parameters for software downloads (if you are on a slow network, for example), how to run an older version of a program that uses different libraries, and how to run Linux programs are all covered.ZFS and filesystems: there are a few chapters towards the beginning of the book that cover these topics. They describe striping, mirroring, journaling, etc. ZFS itself, is a major change from the traditional Unix Filesystem (UFS) and it touches everything down to the kernel. Throughout the rest of the book Lucas makes it clear what you need to do depending on which filesystem you are using. In the performance monitoring chapter he spends a page or two covering how the UNIX top(1) utility output differs between ZFS and UFS. This was helpful for understanding how ZFS interacts with the kernel and uses and frees RAM.It was not possible or appropriate for Lucas to assume ZFS use for most systems at this date. If another edition of the book is published a decade or so from now, I suspect the focus on one filesystem will make the book a little shorter and more accessible.Read the whole book: there are useful nuggets throughout all 600+ pages. The performance monitoring and “fringe” chapters toward the end of the book included things I consider essential to using FreeBSD (how to switch between virtual terminals, for instance). The system administration topics are good for gaining comprehension (understanding how dhcp is administered on the server helps a user understand how to invoke it with dhclient, for instance).Physical book quality: no problems here. I abused the heck out of it while stuffing it in and out of a backpack on a train commute to work. Still in one piece.
ترست بايلوت
منذ شهر
منذ 3 أسابيع