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
- 14 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
- Section 11 Unit 10 - File Sharing and Printing
- Section 12 Unit 11 - Interoperability
- Section 13 Unit 12 - Security
- Section 14 Unit 13 - Web Environment
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.