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Christoph Doerbeck
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Karl Abbott
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Eddie Chen
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Gordon Keegan
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Matt St. Onge
First of all, THANK YOU for registering and participating in The Definitive Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8 Hands-on Lab. The lab team has worked very hard to assemble a series of exercises to introduce many of the new features and capabilities found in the next great release of RHEL. We hope you enjoy this experience and please don’t hesitate to ask questions.
Also, please don’t forget to review this session at the completion of this lab. Your reviews and feedback help keep labs like these as top attractions for the Red Hat Summit.
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This whole effort is done using official Red Hat software and although things can likely be set up to work with upstream software components (Fedora, CentOS, etc…), alternate derivatives of RHEL are not tested or validated with these exercises. |
This guide is intended to support a series of workshop exercises for individuals getting familiar with Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8. What follows are examples of how this document is formatted and expected to be consumed.
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Extra info which could be helpful, but not essential for a given task or discussion |
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Special information to pay attention |
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Critical information which could help you avoid major set backs |
Each block of commands to execute will be labeled with the expected user-id and host. To enhance cut & paste efficiency, the command prompt is omitted from each line.
systemctl status sshd
Sample output will be titled with 'Your output should look like this' (or 'Command Output') and also be indented to help with visual identification. Sometimes there will also be footnotes and/or callouts.
● sshd.service - OpenSSH server daemon
Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/sshd.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: active (running) since Tue 2019-02-26 12:04:16 EST; 27min ago // (1)
Docs: man:sshd(8)
man:sshd_config(5)
Main PID: 3094 (sshd)
CGroup: /system.slice/sshd.service
└─3094 /usr/sbin/sshd -D
...<snip>...
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This is the line we are interested in with a special note
The workshop often provides cheat-scripts to ease certain complex tasks. This helps the class stay focused and reduces the likelihood of errors and disruptions to the workshop delivery. Honestly, we are not here to learn vi
, emacs
or start debates about the merits of sed
and awk
.
The native commands which the cheat-scripts utilize will be documented in the following way.
cheat-service-status.sh
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Native command(s) to verify system service systemctl status sshd |
There are three options to complete the lab.
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Follow the instructions to download the ssh-key and use a local terminal for the majority of exercises
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Skip downloading the ssh-key and simply use a local terminal with credentials provided by your instructors
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The last bullet of the LAB INFORMATION page, provides a link 'to consoles'. By clicking that link, you can get true console access to "0WORKSTATION".
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you will need true console (GUI) on "0WORKSTATION" for the Wayland and Web Console units. |
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Workshop Preparation - DO THIS FIRST! (workstation)
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Web Console - (UPDATED) System Management (workstation, node2)
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eBPF Tracing - (NEW) Extended Berkeley Packet Filter for Linux Kernel Tracing (node2)
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App Stream - (NEW) Application Delivery (node1, node2, node3)
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Virtualizaion - (NEW) Virtualization Management (workstation)
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TLog - (NEW) Session Logging (node1)
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BOOM - (NEW) Boot Management (node3)
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Wayland - (NEW) Desktop GUI (workstation)
Please remember to fill out the survey. The RHEL 8 Lab team really appreciates your time spent with us today and we hope you enjoy the rest of your Summit experience.
- asciidoctor-version
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2.0.22
- safe-mode-name
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secure