NewLinuxInfo
Revision as of 09:33, 11 September 2016 by Jamie (talk | contribs) (→Guides, Information and Tips on New Modern Linux Server Administration)
Guides, Information and Tips on New Modern Linux Server Administration
Modern Server Administration of Critical Systems
This information pertains to very modern recent relases of Redhat based distributions, including the latest releases of CentOS and Fedora, which has had most of these service upgrades and replacements for the last few years now!
The first such service upgrade actually replaced most, if not all of the service init.d startup & shutdown scripts with a very different way of managing the startup, status and shutdown of services, such as the Apache webserver, the CUPS print server, the secure shell, aka the SSH server, and all of the other services that used to be controlled by shell scripts located in the /etc/init.d/ directory. This directory still exists so that in the event that an old legacy service needs to still be managed by the init.d shell scripts, due to the service not yet having the required setup to be managed by the replacement of all of those scripts:
systemctl
For instance, here is an example of systemctl being used first to query the Apache httpd webserver, and then to stopt it, and then start it up back again:
[root@fc24 ~]# systemctl status sshd.service ● sshd.service - OpenSSH server daemon Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/sshd.service; enabled; vendor pres Active: active (running) since Sun 2016-09-11 01:12:21 PDT; 1h 20min ago Docs: man:sshd(8) man:sshd_config(5) Process: 791 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/sshd $OPTIONS (code=exited, status=0/SUCCE Main PID: 810 (sshd) Tasks: 1 (limit: 512) CGroup: /system.slice/sshd.service └─810 /usr/sbin/sshd Sep 11 01:12:20 fc24.dawgland.com systemd[1]: Starting OpenSSH server daemon. Sep 11 01:12:21 fc24.dawgland.com systemd[1]: sshd.service: PID file /var/run Sep 11 01:12:21 fc24.dawgland.com sshd[810]: Server listening on 0.0.0.0 port Sep 11 01:12:21 fc24.dawgland.com systemd[1]: Started OpenSSH server daemon. lines 1-15/15 (END)