Course Information
Course Overview
CompTIA Linux+ (LX0-103 and LX0-104) (Part 1 of 2)
The CompTIA Linux+ 2009 course covers the basic administration, security, networking, performance and maintenance tasks required to efficiently and smoothly run a Linux environment. The course contents are based on the recommended curriculum by CompTIA for the CompTIA Linux+ certification exams.
The CompTIA Linux+ course offers theoretical as well as practical knowledge to effectively install, configure and manage a Linux based IT environment. The course is equally helpful to guide the students towards pursuing the CompTIA Linux+ certification. It covers the required content as specified in CompTIA’s exam objectives. The course has been designed in such a way that candidates will be able to install Linux and end up with a useable and secure Linux system.
Course Content
- 10 section(s)
- 524 lecture(s)
- Section 1 Course Introduction
- Section 2 Unit 01 - Installation
- Section 3 Unit 02 - Using Linux
- Section 4 Unit 03 - File and Directory Management
- Section 5 Unit 04 - System Administration
- Section 6 Unit 05 - Application Management
- Section 7 Unit 06 - System Configuration
- Section 8 Unit 07 - Process and Module Management
- Section 9 Unit 08 - System Maintenance
- Section 10 Unit 09 - Networking
What You’ll Learn
- Understand the file system configuration on Linux
- earn advanced file system operations
- Manage user accounts
- Manage Linux packages
- Monitor and schedule processes
- Understand the system security options
- Configure networking parameters
- Learn to backup and restore Linux systems
- Troubleshoot day-to-day issues
Skills covered in this course
Reviews
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RReef Evans
Excellent course. Covers everything.
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JJay Kowalski
Course delivered as promised, however standards have changed, and the operating systems that were demonstrated have updated significantly since this release. Got some good hands-on troubleshooting on account of this, however, if you're looking to pass the comptia test, they've changed to a different exam format. On the whole, I'm not sure how applicable/ relevant all of this information is to the new test or upgraded systems of the last decade. To be clear, I enjoyed the course and learned a lot from it, and I've even switched my main desktop system to Linux during the course. However, this is a course from 2009 and should either be updated, modified, or removed.
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TTiziano Calvillo
The course is good and the instructor is knowledgeable. However, is seriously outdated and needs to be updated with new content and the non-essential stuff needs to be discarded. Has still a value and I learned new stuff but cannot be used as a primary reference to pass the exam.
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AAnonymized User
Informational was clearly presented and I appreciated the focus on security throughout. Unfortunately, much of the content is dated and most Linux distributions have already moved on to systemd (journald) which requires a totally different approach for administration.