This course will teach the commands and methods needed to setup
and manage advanced features in a Unix system. The course will
also use a problem solving approach in the lab exercises to teach
system managers the proper application of advanced features.
Systems: HP-UX
HP-UX Training Prerequisites
It is assumed that the student has experience with interactive Unix
systems with user-level commands, basic shell or Perl scripting
techniques, and essential systems administrator functions.
HP-UX Training Course duration
This course requires five (5) days, approximately 70 % lecture,
and 30 % lab time.
HP-UX Training Course Objectives
On completion of this course, a system manager should be able to
implement networking features for the system and it's users; define
name service capabilities; and use advanced options and setups
for the shell command interpreters.
HP-UX Training Course outline
Review of System Concepts for Systems Administrators
Process concepts
Shell command usage and review
Advanced Network Features
Review of network basic setup
Subnet addressing
Using arp (address resolution protocol)
Network statistics
Controlling the inetd process
Miscellaneous network commands/tools
DHCP setup - client and server
File Transfer Capabilities
The ftp utility
setup
file capabilities
trivial ftp and anonymous ftp setups
Advanced Network File System (NFS) Features
Review of basic NFS setup
Advanced capabilities of server setup
Advanced capabilities in client setup
Using the automount feature
Using and Configuring Samba
Reasons for using samba features
Selecting aserver host
Defining client hosts
Name Services
Capabilities of DNS
BIND configurations
Configuring the resolver
Configuring the named process
Cache initialization
Using nslookup to obtain information
Configuring Remote Printers
Printer setup databases (and control)
Remote printer usage
Tape Device Access Through TCP/IP
Using data dump (dd)
Combining tar with dd
Remote file system dumping
Maintaining System Integrity
Specifying auditing events
Improving shell performance
Using the error report facility
Security Concepts for System Administrators
Overview of issues related to Unix security
System administrator functions related to security
System Security Features Updating
Security levels in a Unix system
Rebuilding the Unix kernel with auditing
Managing of System Users
Using the root account securely
Password issues
changing
encryption
ging and expirations
shadow files
Groups
File System Security
File permissions review
Special permissions: SUID,SGID,Sticky Bits
Device files
Using chown and chgrp
Backups
Using Unix Log Files
Users
lastlog,utmp,wtmp,pacct,syslog
System
shutdownlog
sulog/messages
Network Security
Proper maintenance of the /etc/hosts file
Using the "r" commands
The restricted shell
NFS security implications
Performance Basics
Factors affecting system performance
Performance metrics
Virtual system caching
Effects of Computer Architecture
Memory Management
Memory usage by the kernel
Process creation
Buffer Cache (and allocation control)
Shared Memory / Page Caching
Paging and Swapping
Monitoring Tools
CPU Management
Software priorities concepts
Impact of the nice parameter
Priority boosting
Differences in hardware implementations
Monitoring tools
I/O Management
Breakdown of Disk I/O
Measuring Disk I/O
File system structure concepts
File system caching
Name Lookup Caching
Monitoring tools
Network Management
TCP/IP Layers
Socket controls
Controlling network services
Setting network buffer values
Monitoring tools
NFS Performance
RPC Performance Considerations
Impact of NFS Blocking and Caching Sizes
Optimizing NFS Servers and Clients
Monitoring tools
X-window basics and implementation
Client-server communications
Optimizing a system with X
Reducing xterm memory usage
Monitoring tools
Modification of Performance Parameters
SUN Solaris
HP-UX
IBM AIX
Summaries
Memory management
CPU management
I/O management
Network management
User program management
Please contact your training representative for more details on having this course delivered onsite or online