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📁 Linux系统管理员指南中文手册0.5.zip 中文的哦。
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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN"><!--Converted with LaTeX2HTML 96.1-h (September 30, 1996) by Nikos Drakos (nikos@cbl.leeds.ac.uk), CBLU, University of Leeds --><HTML><HEAD><TITLE>Introduction</TITLE><META NAME="description" CONTENT="Introduction"><META NAME="keywords" CONTENT="sag"><META NAME="resource-type" CONTENT="document"><META NAME="distribution" CONTENT="global"><LINK REL=STYLESHEET HREF="sag.css"></HEAD><BODY LANG="EN" > <A NAME="tex2html283" HREF="node3.html"><IMG WIDTH=37 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="next" SRC="./next_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html281" HREF="sag.html"><IMG WIDTH=26 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="up" SRC="./up_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html275" HREF="node1.html"><IMG WIDTH=63 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="previous" SRC="./previous_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html285" HREF="node1.html"><IMG WIDTH=65 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="contents" SRC="./contents_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html286" HREF="node108.html"><IMG WIDTH=43 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="index" SRC="./index_motif.gif"></A> <BR><B> Next:</B> <A NAME="tex2html284" HREF="node3.html">Typographical conventions</A><B>Up:</B> <A NAME="tex2html282" HREF="sag.html">Linux System Administrators' Guide </A><B> Previous:</B> <A NAME="tex2html276" HREF="node1.html">Contents</A><BR> <P><H1><A NAME="SECTION00200000000000000000">简介</A></H1><P>	<P> <I>        In the beginning, the file was without form, and void; and <BR>         emptiness was upon the face of the bits.  And the Fingers of <BR>         the Author moved upon the face of the keyboard.  And the Author <BR>         said, Let there be words, and there were words. <BR> 	</I><P><P>	This manual, the Linux System Administrators'	Guide, describes the system administration aspects of	using Linux.  It is intended for people who know next	to nothing about system administration (as in ``what	is it?''), but who have already mastered at least the	basics of normal usage.  This manual also doesn't tell	you how to install Linux; that is described in the	Installation and Getting Started document. See below	for more information about Linux manuals.<P>	System administration is all the things that one has	to do to keep a computer system in a useable shape.	It includes things like backing up files (and restoring	them if necessary), installing new programs, creating	accounts for users (and deleting them when no longer	needed), making certain that the filesystem is not	corrupted, and so on.  If a computer were, say, a house,	system administration would be called maintenance,	and would include cleaning, fixing broken windows,	and other such things.	System administration is	not called maintenance, because that would be too	simple.<A NAME="tex2html1" HREF="footnode.html#80"><IMG  ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="gif" SRC="./foot_motif.gif"></A><P>	The structure of this manual is such that many of the chapters	should be usable independently, so that if you need	information about, say, backups, you can read just that	chapter.<A NAME="tex2html2" HREF="footnode.html#75"><IMG  ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="gif" SRC="./foot_motif.gif"></A>	This hopefully makes the book easier to use as a	reference manual, and makes it possible to read just a small	part when needed, instead of having to read everything.  	However, this manual is first and foremost a	tutorial, and a reference manual only as a lucky coincidence.<P>	This manual is not intended to be used completely by itself.	Plenty of the rest of the Linux documentation is also	important for system administrators.  After all, a system	administrator is just a user with special privileges and	duties.  A very important resource are the manual pages, which	should always be consulted when a command is not familiar.<P>	While this manual is targeted at Linux, a general principle	has been that it should be useful with other UNIX based	operating systems as well.  Unfortunately, since there is so	much variance between different versions of UNIX in	general, and in system administration in particular, there is	little hope to cover all variants.  Even covering all	possibilities for Linux is difficult, due to the nature of	its development.<P>	There is no one official Linux distribution, so different	people have different setups, and many people have	a setup they have built up themselves.	This book is	not targeted at any one distribution, even though I	use the Debian GNU/Linux system almost exclusively.	When possible, I have tried to point out differences,	and explain several alternatives.<P>	I have tried to describe how things work, rather	than just listing ``five easy steps'' for each task.	This means that there is much information here that is	not necessary for everyone, but those parts are marked	as such and can be skipped if you use a preconfigured	system.  Reading everything will, naturally, increase	your understanding of the system and should make using	and administering it more pleasant.<P>	 <P>	Like all other Linux related development, the	work was done on a volunteer basis: I did it because I	thought it might be fun and because I felt it should be	done.  However, like all volunteer work, there is a limit to	how much effort I have been able to spend, and	also on how much knowledge and experience I have.  This means	that the manual is not necessarily as good as it would be if a	wizard had been paid handsomely to write it and had spent a	few years to perfect it.  I think, of course, that it is	pretty nice, but be warned.<P>	One particular point where I have cut corners 	is that I have not covered very thoroughly many	things that are already well documented in other freely	available manuals.  This applies especially to program	specific documentation, such as all the details of using	<tt>mkfs)</tt><A NAME="82">&#160;</A>.  I only describe the purpose of the program,	and as much of its usage as is necessary for the purposes of	this manual.  For further information, I refer the gentle	reader to these other manuals.  Usually, all of the referred	to documentation is part of the full Linux documentation	set.<P>	While I have tried to make this manual as good as possible,	I would really like to hear from you if you have any ideas on	how to make it better.  Bad language, factual errors, ideas	for new areas to cover, rewritten sections, information about	how various UNIX versions do things, I am interested in	all of it.	My contact information is available via the World Wide	Web at <tt>http://www.iki.fi/liw/mail-to-lasu.html</tt>.	You need to read this web page to bypass my junkmail filters.<P>	Many people have helped me with this book, directly or indirectly.	I would like to especially thank Matt Welsh for inspiration and	LDP leadership, Andy Oram for	getting me to work again with much-valued feedback, Olaf Kirch	for showing me that it can be done, and Adam Richter at Yggdrasil	and others for showing me that other people can find it interesting	as well.<P>	Stephen Tweedie, H.&nbsp;Peter Anvin, R&#233;my Card, Theodore	Ts'o, and Stephen Tweedie have let me borrow their	work<A NAME="tex2html3" HREF="footnode.html#79"><IMG  ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="gif" SRC="./foot_motif.gif"></A> (and thus make the book look thicker and much	more impressive).  I am most grateful for this, and	very apologetic for the earlier versions that sometimes	lacked proper attribution.<P>	In addition, I would like to thank Mark Komarinski for sending his	material in 1993 and the many system administration columns	in Linux Journal.  They are quite informative and inspirational.<P>	Many useful comments have been sent by a large number	of people.  My miniature black hole of an archive	doesn't let me find all their names, but some of them	are, in alphabetical order: Paul Caprioli, Ales Cepek,	Marie-France Declerfayt, Dave Dobson, Olaf Flebbe,	Helmut Geyer, Larry Greenfield and his father, Stephen	Harris, Jyrki Havia, Jim Haynes, York Lam, Timothy Andrew	Lister, Jim Lynch, Michael J. Micek, Jacob Navia, Dan	Poirier, Daniel Quinlan, Philippe Steindl, G.B. Stotte.	My apologies to anyone I have forgotten.<P><HR><A NAME="tex2html283" HREF="node3.html"><IMG WIDTH=37 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="next" SRC="./next_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html281" HREF="sag.html"><IMG WIDTH=26 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="up" SRC="./up_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html275" HREF="node1.html"><IMG WIDTH=63 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="previous" SRC="./previous_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html285" HREF="node1.html"><IMG WIDTH=65 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="contents" SRC="./contents_motif.gif"></A> <A NAME="tex2html286" HREF="node108.html"><IMG WIDTH=43 HEIGHT=24 ALIGN=BOTTOM ALT="index" SRC="./index_motif.gif"></A> <BR><B> Next:</B> <A NAME="tex2html284" HREF="node3.html">Typographical conventions</A><B>Up:</B> <A NAME="tex2html282" HREF="sag.html">Linux System Administrators' Guide </A><B> Previous:</B> <A NAME="tex2html276" HREF="node1.html">Contents</A><P><ADDRESS><I>Lars Wirzenius <BR>Sun Jun 29 13:31:22 EEST 1997</I></ADDRESS></BODY></HTML>

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