14 KiB
Topic 101: System Architecture
101.1 Determine and configure hardware settings
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should be able to determine and configure fundamental system hardware
Key Knowledge Areas:
Enable and disable integrated peripherals. Differentiate between the various types of mass storage devices. Determine hardware resources for devices. Tools and utilities to list various hardware information (e.g. lsusb, lspci, etc.). Tools and utilities to manipulate USB devices. Conceptual understanding of sysfs, udev and dbus. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
/sys/ /proc/ /dev/ modprobe lsmod lspci lsusb
101.2 Boot the system
Weight: 3
Description: Candidates should be able to guide the system through the booting process.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Provide common commands to the boot loader and options to the kernel at boot time. Demonstrate knowledge of the boot sequence from BIOS/UEFI to boot completion. Understanding of SysVinit and systemd. Awareness of Upstart. Check boot events in the log files. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
dmesg journalctl BIOS UEFI bootloader kernel initramfs init SysVinit systemd
101.3 Change runlevels / boot targets and shutdown or reboot system
Weight: 3
Description: Candidates should be able to manage the SysVinit runlevel or systemd boot target of the system. This objective includes changing to single user mode, shutdown or rebooting the system. Candidates should be able to alert users before switching runlevels / boot targets and properly terminate processes. This objective also includes setting the default SysVinit runlevel or systemd boot target. It also includes awareness of Upstart as an alternative to SysVinit or systemd.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Set the default runlevel or boot target. Change between runlevels / boot targets including single user mode. Shutdown and reboot from the command line. Alert users before switching runlevels / boot targets or other major system events. Properly terminate processes. Awareness of acpid. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
/etc/inittab shutdown init /etc/init.d/ telinit systemd systemctl /etc/systemd/ /usr/lib/systemd/ wall
Topic 102: Linux Installation and Package Management
102.1 Design hard disk layout
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should be able to design a disk partitioning scheme for a Linux system.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Allocate filesystems and swap space to separate partitions or disks. Tailor the design to the intended use of the system. Ensure the /boot partition conforms to the hardware architecture requirements for booting. Knowledge of basic features of LVM. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
/ (root) filesystem /var filesystem /home filesystem /boot filesystem EFI System Partition (ESP) swap space mount points partitions
102.2 Install a boot manager
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should be able to select, install and configure a boot manager.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Providing alternative boot locations and backup boot options. Install and configure a boot loader such as GRUB Legacy. Perform basic configuration changes for GRUB 2. Interact with the boot loader. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
menu.lst, grub.cfg and grub.conf grub-install grub-mkconfig MBR
102.3 Manage shared libraries
Weight: 1
Description: Candidates should be able to determine the shared libraries that executable programs depend on and install them when necessary.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Identify shared libraries. Identify the typical locations of system libraries. Load shared libraries. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
ldd ldconfig /etc/ld.so.conf LD_LIBRARY_PATH
102.4 Use Debian package management
Weight: 3
Description: Candidates should be able to perform package management using the Debian package tools.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Install, upgrade and uninstall Debian binary packages. Find packages containing specific files or libraries which may or may not be installed. Obtain package information like version, content, dependencies, package integrity and installation status (whether or not the package is installed). Awareness of apt. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
/etc/apt/sources.list dpkg dpkg-reconfigure apt-get apt-cache
102.5 Use RPM and YUM package management
Weight: 3
Description: Candidates should be able to perform package management using RPM, YUM and Zypper.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Install, re-install, upgrade and remove packages using RPM, YUM and Zypper. Obtain information on RPM packages such as version, status, dependencies, integrity and signatures. Determine what files a package provides, as well as find which package a specific file comes from. Awareness of dnf. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
rpm rpm2cpio /etc/yum.conf /etc/yum.repos.d/ yum zypper
102.6 Linux as a virtualization guest
Weight: 1
Description: Candidates should understand the implications of virtualization and cloud computing on a Linux guest system.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Understand the general concept of virtual machines and containers. Understand common elements virtual machines in an IaaS cloud, such as computing instances, block storage and networking. Understand unique properties of a Linux system which have to changed when a system is cloned or used as a template. Understand how system images are used to deploy virtual machines, cloud instances and containers. Understand Linux extensions which integrate Linux with a virtualization product. Awareness of cloud-init. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
Virtual machine Linux container Application container Guest drivers SSH host keys D-Bus machine id
Topic 103: GNU and Unix Commands
103.1 Work on the command line
Weight: 4
Description: Candidates should be able to interact with shells and commands using the command line. The objective assumes the Bash shell.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Use single shell commands and one line command sequences to perform basic tasks on the command line. Use and modify the shell environment including defining, referencing and exporting environment variables. Use and edit command history. Invoke commands inside and outside the defined path. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
bash echo env export pwd set unset type which man uname history .bash_history Quoting
103.2 Process text streams using filters
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should be able to apply filters to text streams.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Send text files and output streams through text utility filters to modify the output using standard UNIX commands found in the GNU textutils package. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
bzcat cat cut head less md5sum nl od paste sed sha256sum sha512sum sort split tail tr uniq wc xzcat zcat
103.3 Perform basic file management
Weight: 4
Description: Candidates should be able to use the basic Linux commands to manage files and directories.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Copy, move and remove files and directories individually. Copy multiple files and directories recursively. Remove files and directories recursively. Use simple and advanced wildcard specifications in commands. Using find to locate and act on files based on type, size, or time. Usage of tar, cpio and dd. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
cp find mkdir mv ls rm rmdir touch tar cpio dd file gzip gunzip bzip2 bunzip2 xz unxz file globbing
103.4 Use streams, pipes and redirects
Weight: 4
Description: Candidates should be able to redirect streams and connect them in order to efficiently process textual data. Tasks include redirecting standard input, standard output and standard error, piping the output of one command to the input of another command, using the output of one command as arguments to another command and sending output to both stdout and a file.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Redirecting standard input, standard output and standard error. Pipe the output of one command to the input of another command. Use the output of one command as arguments to another command. Send output to both stdout and a file. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
tee xargs
103.5 Create, monitor and kill processes
Weight: 4
Description: Candidates should be able to perform basic process management.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Run jobs in the foreground and background. Signal a program to continue running after logout. Monitor active processes. Select and sort processes for display. Send signals to processes. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
& bg fg jobs kill nohup ps top free uptime pgrep pkill killall watch screen tmux
103.6 Modify process execution priorities
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should should be able to manage process execution priorities.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Know the default priority of a job that is created. Run a program with higher or lower priority than the default. Change the priority of a running process. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
nice ps renice top
103.7 Search text files using regular expressions
Weight: 3
Description: Candidates should be able to manipulate files and text data using regular expressions. This objective includes creating simple regular expressions containing several notational elements as well as understanding the differences between basic and extended regular expressions. It also includes using regular expression tools to perform searches through a filesystem or file content.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Create simple regular expressions containing several notational elements. Understand the differences between basic and extended regular expressions. Understand the concepts of special characters, character classes, quantifiers and anchors. Use regular expression tools to perform searches through a filesystem or file content. Use regular expressions to delete, change and substitute text. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
grep egrep fgrep sed regex(7)
103.8 Basic file editing
Weight: 3
Description: Candidates should be able to edit text files using vi. This objective includes vi navigation, vi modes, inserting, editing, deleting, copying and finding text. It also includes awareness of other common editors and setting the default editor.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Navigate a document using vi. Understand and use vi modes. Insert, edit, delete, copy and find text in vi. Awareness of Emacs, nano and vim. Configure the standard editor. Terms and Utilities:
vi /, ? h,j,k,l i, o, a d, p, y, dd, yy ZZ, :w!, :q! EDITOR
Topic 104: Devices, Linux Filesystems, Filesystem Hierarchy Standard
104.1 Create partitions and filesystems
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should be able to configure disk partitions and then create filesystems on media such as hard disks. This includes the handling of swap partitions.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Manage MBR and GPT partition tables Use various mkfs commands to create various filesystems such as: ext2/ext3/ext4 XFS VFAT exFAT
Basic feature knowledge of Btrfs, including multi-device filesystems, compression and subvolumes. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
fdisk gdisk parted mkfs mkswap
104.2 Maintain the integrity of filesystems
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should be able to maintain a standard filesystem, as well as the extra data associated with a journaling filesystem.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Verify the integrity of filesystems. Monitor free space and inodes. Repair simple filesystem problems. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
du df fsck e2fsck mke2fs tune2fs xfs_repair xfs_fsr xfs_db
104.3 Control mounting and unmounting of filesystems
Weight: 3
Description: Candidates should be able to configure the mounting of a filesystem.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Manually mount and unmount filesystems. Configure filesystem mounting on bootup. Configure user mountable removable filesystems. Use of labels and UUIDs for identifying and mounting file systems. Awareness of systemd mount units. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
/etc/fstab /media/ mount umount blkid lsblk
104.4 Removed
104.5 Manage file permissions and ownership
Weight: 3
Description: Candidates should be able to control file access through the proper use of permissions and ownerships.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Manage access permissions on regular and special files as well as directories. Use access modes such as suid, sgid and the sticky bit to maintain security. Know how to change the file creation mask. Use the group field to grant file access to group members. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
chmod umask chown chgrp
104.6 Create and change hard and symbolic links
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should be able to create and manage hard and symbolic links to a file.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Create links. Identify hard and/or soft links. Copying versus linking files. Use links to support system administration tasks. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
ln ls
104.7 Find system files and place files in the correct location
Weight: 2
Description: Candidates should be thoroughly familiar with the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard (FHS), including typical file locations and directory classifications.
Key Knowledge Areas:
Understand the correct locations of files under the FHS. Find files and commands on a Linux system. Know the location and purpose of important file and directories as defined in the FHS. The following is a partial list of the used files, terms and utilities:
find locate updatedb whereis which type /etc/updatedb.conf