Greg, just thanks ! In a few hours I learn a lot from you and Luis. Always, you, the experts , help the others new people in linux. Remember what appened in 1991 to Linus T. and how we get Gnu/linux !
B. Regards GNOGBO. Le 2 juil. 2015 21:54, "Greg Freemyer" <greg.freem...@gmail.com> a écrit : > On Thu, Jul 2, 2015 at 5:18 PM, Gnoleba GNOGBO <gnognol...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > Luis. > > > > Can you give somes docs link for the order : > > 2, 3, 1, 4 and 5 please > > > > Thanks > > Gnogbo > > Gnogbo, > > You should be aware this is the linux kernel newbies list. It is > expected most people coming here are already very comfortable working > with Linux. If you're not, you need to find a Linux Newbies resource. > > Regardless: > > Have you picked a distribution? I get the impression you're very new to > Linux. > > Ubuntu has a reputation as easy to learn. (I've been doing Unix/Linux > for 30+ years, so I haven't felt the urge to look into it. openSUSE > is my personal choice.). > > Assumuning you have Ubuntu installed, here is a very basic intro: > > http://www.tecmint.com/useful-linux-commands-for-newbies/ > > Most of the commands will apply to any version of linux. The > exception being package management tools like "apt". Typically a > distribution supports DEBs or RPMs and the ways to work with them are > different. apt is typically used with DEBs. openSUSE uses rpm and > zypper for package management from the command line. > > If that is too basic for you, then here is the next tier: > > http://www.tecmint.com/20-advanced-commands-for-middle-level-linux-users/ > > Most of those are in the basic skill set of a Linux admin. > > All 40 of the above commands have been around for at least a decade > and most since 1980 or before. > > After that, you move in to more advanced topics and in some cases the > tools are newer. You need to make sure you have current docs. An > example is systemd. It is now mainstream, but 5 years ago I had not > heard of it. > > Things like ifconfig from decades ago still work and is commonly used > by documentation, but they are no longer the preferred way to work > with the NICs and especially not with IPv6. > > If by chance you want to go with openSUSE, they have a set of books > available at: https://activedoc.opensuse.org/ > > As an example here is the section on openSUSE services: > https://activedoc.opensuse.org/book/opensuse-reference/part-iv-services > > Greg > -- > Greg Freemyer > www.IntelligentAvatar.net >
_______________________________________________ Kernelnewbies mailing list Kernelnewbies@kernelnewbies.org http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies