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Red Hat Linux Internet Server | 
enlarge | Authors: Paul G. Sery, Jay Beale Publisher: Red Hat Category: Book
List Price: $50.00 Buy Used: $0.90 You Save: $49.10 (98%)
New (7) Used (11) from $0.90
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 1202919
Media: Paperback Edition: 1st Pages: 572 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.3 x 1.2
ISBN: 0764547887 Dewey Decimal Number: 005 UPC: 785555059658 EAN: 9780764547881 ASIN: 0764547887
Publication Date: November 29, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: THIS ITEM IS UNUSED AND IN GOOD CONDITION. IT MAY HAVE SLIGHT SHELFWEAR BUT OTHERWISE IT IS FINE.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description * Red Hat Linux X Internet Server takes the reader through all of the steps of setting up an Internet server using the Red Hat Linux operating system. * It begins by describing Red Hat Linux networking basics, two example networks and the basics of DSL Internet connections, firewalls and troubleshooting in Part 1.This sets the foundation for all subsequent examples and provides readers with problem solving tools. * Part 2 describes how to construct and manage a secure web server that is connected to a database. Part 3 shows the reader how to construct basic Internet services such as DNS, sendmail, FTP and Samba. Part 4 deals with advanced management techniques. * The final part describes how to secure your network and servers. This part goes beyond the average coverage by showing advanced as well as basic security techniques and tools. ABOUT THE CD-ROM The CD-ROM has an open-source high-availability system/server created by the author and appropriate GPL server and security software.
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| Customer Reviews:
this is only a walk-through, not really a content based book December 29, 2003 Guido Patanella (Netherlands) This is not a detailed narrative or technical language book. I was expecting a more detailed technical explaination of the topic, but instead i was faced to extensive examples that made no sense to help with learning. The book uses examples that were not well introduced, such as the network topology of the examples, server names, etc... there is no reference or apendix that remembers what is the topology of each example, so if you cannot use the book as just a reference as you lose track of what the examples are about. For this type of topic a more graphic book is important. To conclude, I believe the book has some good content but it was poorly structured and written, so it vanishes among its pages. I gave up of trying to learn from this book.
Is there any page without an error????? December 29, 2003 A. Rungta (Bloomfield Hills, Michigan United States) The book is good, but like I said before is there any page without an error????? There is no published errata for the book too!!!
Technical Errors Found August 13, 2003 Steve Amerige (Morgan Hill, CA USA) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
I like the book's "get right to work" attitude, providing code that implements configurations that are not academic, but actually useful. But, once a book as adopted this philosophy, I expect that they provide correct code, or else the value significantly is diminished.An example of this is found in Chapter 4, "Building a Firewall" in which firewall code is provided. On p. 84 (and 89-90), one sees code such as: iptables -A INPUT -i eth0 -p -s $PRIV -j ACCEPT The problem is that the environment variable PRIV has not been defined in the book (and never is). This is a "show stopper" error in the book for us. I looked to the publisher's website, wiley.com, for errata but found no support for the book. I contacted Wiley by e-mail and they forwarded us an unpublished URL: [website] Unfortunately, the updates (errata) section is empty and the downloads section not only has the above error in the online version of the firewall rules collection, but has additional variables that are referenced without being defined (SWCP, SRC, SON). These types of errors make me wonder if the code in the book was properly tested... and worse, increase my concern that the code in the book in other areas will prove to be unreliable. The errors in the book, compounded by poor website support, compel me to reduce the rating of this book to only 3 stars.
Need to setup a Red Hat Internet Server? This is the book. February 26, 2003 Henry E. Alubowicz (Lafayette, CA USA) 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
Setting up a Red Hat Internet Server? Then "Red Hat Linux Internet Server" is the book for you. I had previously read Red Hat Press's "Red Hat Linux Networking and System Administration" by Collings and Wall. Though a good book, I had expected a bit more from one blessed by Red Hat. "Red Hat Linux Internet Server" does live up to its expectations of being blessed by Red Hat. "Red Hat Linux Internet Server" is the better of the two books.This book is better focused on its subject of setting up an Internet server and its more common Internet services. There is lots of practical advice based on what is considered SOP for good Unix/Linux Internet server schemes. (From my own experiences, I did not find anything to disagree with them on and I liked their take on learning the CLI first before going off into GUI-land.) At least a quarter of the book is focused on security (a good thing). I suspect this has much to do with Jay Beale, being from the Bastille Project. Noteworthy are chapter 3 on setting up DSL, chapter 10 on the Postfix mail server and chapter 13 doing backups via Amanda. If you are new to Red Hat Linux and can afford it, buy both books. If you've been around awhile in the Red Hat world, then Sery & Beale's book is the better choice.
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