management, onsite consulting, device driver development, and so on), but needs vary according to customer circumstances and installations.
Join a local
Documentation
Nearly all Linux distributions include thousands of pages of documentation in the form of manual pages, HOWTO documents (in various formats, such as text and HTML), mini-HOWTO documents, or software package documentation (usually found under the /usr/share/doc/
directory). However, the definitive site for reading the latest versions of these documents is the Linux Documentation Project, found athttp://www.tldp.org.
Linux Guides
If you are looking for more extensive and detailed information concerning a Linux subject, try reading one of the many Linux guides. These guides, available for a number of subjects, dwell on technical topics in more detail and at a more leisurely pace than a HOWTO. You can find copies of the following through the web:
> 'Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide,' by Mendel Cooper; a guide to shell scripting using bash
> 'LDP Author Guide,' by Mark F. Komarinski; how to write LDP documentation
> 'Linux Administration Made Easy,' by Steve Frampton
> 'Linux Consultants Guide,' by Joshua Drake; a worldwide listing of commercial Linux consultants
> 'Linux from Scratch,' by Gerard Beekmans; creating a Linux distribution from software
> 'Linux Kernel Module Programming Guide,' by Peter J. Salzman, Michael Burian, and Ori Pomerantz; a good guide to building 2.4 and 2.6 series modules
> 'Securing and Optimizing Linux,' by Gerhard Mourani
> 'The Linux Network Administrator's Guide, Second Edition,' by Olaf Kirch and Terry Dawson; a comprehensive Net admin guide
The Fedora Project
> http://fedoraproject.org/ — The community home page for the Fedora Project. Also includes an ever-growing Wiki that provides a lot of tutorials and HOWTOs for Fedora.
> http://planet.fedoraproject.org — Find out what's going on in the lives of people closely connected with Fedora.
> http://fedoraforum.org — A good place to go if you need specific Fedora support.
Red Hat Linux
> http://www.redhat.com — The home page for Red Hat's distribution of Red Hat Enterprise Linux for multiple processors and architectures.
> http://www.redhat.com/apps/support/documentation.html — A web page with links to current official Red Hat manuals and guides, FAQs, HOWTOs, whitepapers, free books, mailing list archives, hardware compatibility lists, and other documentation.
Mini-CD Linux Distributions
Mini-CD Linux distributions are used for many different purposes. Some distributions are used to boot to a read-only firewall configuration; others are used to provide as complete a rescue environment as possible; whereas others are used to either install or help jump-start an install of a full distribution. Mini-CDs are available in a wide variety of sizes, such as 3' CD-Rs (or CD-RW) with sizes ranging from 185MB to 210MB. You can also download an ISO image and create a Linux bootable business card, typically fitting on a 40MB or 50MB credit card-sized CD-R (consider using a mini-CD-RW, especially if you want to upgrade your distribution often). Here are some links to these distributions:
> http://www.lnx-bbc.org — The home page for the Linux BBC, a 40MB image hosting a rather complete live Linux session with X, a web browser, and a host of networking tools.
> http://crux.nu/ — The home page of the CRUX i686-optimized Linux distribution.
> http://www.trustix.net/ — The home page for the free version of the Trustix Secure Linux distribution, which currently uses the latest 2.6 kernel. Trustix is RPM based.
> http://smoothwall.org/get/ — The 34MB SmoothWall distribution, which easily fits on a bootable business card and is used to install a web-administered firewall, router, or gateway with SSH, HTTP, and other services.
Floppy-Based Linux Distributions
> http://floppix.ccai.com/index.html — Debian-based floppy
> http://www.toms.net/rb/ — Tom's root and boot disk distribution
> http://www.coyotelinux.com/ — Secure routing and embedded Linux disk distributions
> http://trinux.sourceforge.net — Ultra-secure Linux distribution on floppy
> http://PenguinBackup.sourceforge.net/ — Unique, floppy-based distribution that allows quick backup of your Palm-type PDA
Various Intel-Based Linux Distributions
Choosing a Linux distribution (distro) for an Intel-based PC is generally a matter of personal preference or need. Many Linux users prefer Red Hat's distro because of its excellent support, commercial support options, and