CONTACT US   |    |  SIGNIN
 
Call 858-622-1201
to speak to a Training Specialist
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
 
 
Upcoming Classes

There are currently no UN3 classes scheduled. Please call for the next scheduled class.

If you have a group of four or more students, we can schedule this class for you.

 
Course Info Minimize

UN3 - UNIX Advanced Administration

Categories Operating Systems Training, UNIX Training
Duration 5 days (35 hours)
Pre-requisites

UN1 - Fundamentals of UNIX and UN2 - UNIX System Administration, or equivalent knowledge with Instructor approval.

Courseware UN3-UN-01 (450 pages)
Price $1975
Notes

Although we use the most recent version of Sun's Solaris OS to teach our UNIX courses, earlier versions are also available upon request.

This UNIX Advanced Administration Training Course provides the knowledge & information to achieve the Sun Microsystems System Administration II Certification. This course takes Administration to the advanced level by focussing on utilities such as NIS & Jumpstart that enable engineers to "Centralize" the work of the Administration itself, thus allowing one person to get more done. Topics include Device Management, Volume Management, Pseudo files and Swap, TCP/IP, Advanced Security, Syslog, NFS CacheFS, Naming, NFS and Jumpstart.


Device Management Review
      Describe the following - sector, track & cylinder
      Differentiate between logical, physical, and instance names
      List and review the functions of the format utility
      List the utilities used to create, check, and mount file systems
      Perform a reconfiguration boot
Solaris Volume Management
      Differintiate between physical pathnames and virtual pathnames
      List the advantages of using virtual disk management
      Compare Solstice Disk Suite and Veritas Volume Manager
      List the advantages of using a concatinated file system
      List the advantages of using a striped file system
      Install the Solstice Disk Suite application
      Use the SDS applicaion to grow a file system
Psuedo File Systems & Swap
      Define the different Solaris pseudo file system types
      Clarify the importance of the /proc directory
      Understand the relationship between /tmp and RAM
      Use the dumpadm command to configure system dumps
      Use the coreadm command to configure application core dumps
      Add and remove a swap file or device from swapfs control
Introduction to TCP/IP
      Describe the purpose and function of each network model layer
      Compare the 5-layer ISO/OSI model to the 7-layer TCP/IP model
      Identify and understand the protocols used at each network layer
      Understand and define encapsulation and de-encapsulation
      Relate hostnames to IP addresses to Ethernet addresses
      List network interface information with the ifconfig command
      Monitor network activity using the snoop command
Advanced Security
      Understand and work with Access Control Lists
      Set file Access Control Lists with the setfacl command
      Explain how to identify and define a shadow inode
      Display file Access Control Lists with the getfacl command
      Discuss the advantages of remote computing
      Define the format of the /etc/hosts.equiv & ~/.rhosts files
      Work with the r-commands in a trusted network environment
The syslog Facility
      Summarize the life of a message
      Define the function of the syslog daemon
      Control the behavior of syslogd using the /etc/syslog.conf
      Understand the format of the /etc/syslog.conf file
      Determine the effect of the LOGHOST variable on syslog
      Add entries to the system log using the logger utility
Understanding NFS
      Describe the files, commands, and daemons relative to an NFS server
      Describe the files, commands, and daemons relative to an NFS client
      List the conditions that are required for file sharing to occur
      Use the share command to make resouces available for mounting
      Use the dfshares command to display available server resources
      Mount a shared resource from a remote system
      Use the /etc/vfstab file to mount remote file systems at boot
      Define the following: mountall, umountall, shareall & unshareall
      Describe and configure NFS logging
CacheFS
      List the advantages and disadvantages of a Cache File System
      Explain the syntax and directory placement of cached information
      Learn the appropriate commands to configure a cache file system
      Perform status and consistancy checks on cached information
      Configure logging for a cache file system
The automount Utility
      List and discuss the benefits of the automount utility
      Compare the automount command to the automoountd daemon
      Understand and configure the automount maps
      Differintiate between direct and indirect automount maps
      Describe the format of the /etc/auto_master map
      Configure /etc/auto_direct to allow direct automounting
      Configure /etc/auto_home to allow indirect automounting
Naming Services
      Explain the Name Service Concept
      List the Naming Services available with Solaris
      Define what a namespace is and how it relates to naming services
      Understand and work with the NIS service
      Differintiate between NIS and NIS+
      Configure a naming service using the /etc/nsswitch.conf file
Configuring NIS
      Define the NIS components: Master, Slave and Client
      Match specified NIS processes to their respective yp daemons
      Understand the structure of the make utility and its Makefile
      Configure a NIS Client, NIS Slave, and NIS Master
      Access and test the NIS Naming Service
      Add additional maps to the existing NIS configuration
      Remove your NIS Master to test your failover configuration
      Outline the steps required to change the NIS Master
      List the steps to remove NIS services from any client
Jumpstart
      Describe the features and benefits of Jumpstart
      List the network components required for an automatic install
      Understand and define the elements of a jumpstart server
      Explain the importance of a boot server on a subnet
      Go through the steps to set up an Install Server
      Create tailored rules and class files for custom installations
      Add install clients to install servers and boot servers
      Work with the add_install_client & add_to_install_server scripts
      Perform a remote automatic install over the network
The Monster Lab
      Install Solaris in three methods
      Partition a disk to a specified format
      Create new file systems with different attributes
      Manually mount local and remote file systems
      Create and configure a cache file system
      Automatically mount local and remote file systems
      Configure automounting to work with cachefs
      Set up the NiS naming service to work with Jumpstart
      Add, remove, and configure swap files and swap devices
      Set up a home directory serer
      Set up a Jumpstart server
      Rebuild the root file system from a backup device

Print  
 
Affiliations

  

Blue Star is an Adobe Authorized Training Center

Blue Star is an Altova Authorized Training Partner

Blue Star is certified by the Bureau of Private Postsecondary and Vocational Education

 Click to verify BBB accreditation and to see a BBB report.

Blue Star is a certified General Services Administration contractor

Blue Star Learning is a proud Microsoft Certified Partner