English | MP4 | AVC 1920×1080 | AAC 44KHz 2ch | 179 Lessons (17h 11m) | 12.74 GB
This intermediate Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE) training prepares systems admins to automate Red Hat Enterprise Linux tasks, integrate Red Hat emerging technologies, and apply automation for efficiency and innovation.
Red Hat Linux is one of the world’s preferred operating systems for enterprise networks. As powerful as the OS is natively, it’s hard to overstate the impact of unlocking automation in a Red Hat Linux enterprise environment. Productivity, profitability, and efficiency all skyrocket when automation is properly applied. And the people who know how to do that are Red Hat Certified Engineers.
If you’re already a Red Hat Certified System Administrator (RHCSA) or you’re an experienced sysad who wants to unlock some of enterprise Linux’s deepest functionality, this course will prepare you for an RHCE certification while also exposing Red Hat Linux’s most interesting secrets.
After finishing this Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE) training, you’ll know how to automate Red Hat Enterprise Linux tasks, integrate Red Hat emerging technologies, and apply automation for efficiency and innovation.
For managers with Linux products, this Linux training can be used to onboard new systems admins, curated into individual or team training plans, or as a Linux reference resource.
Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE): What You Need to Know
This Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE) training has videos that cover topics including:
- Advanced Linux administration skills in user management, file system operations, package management, and systems maintenance
- Configuring advanced and complex enterprise network setups
- Securing and hardening Linux systems with powerful tools like SELinux and firewalls
Who Should Take Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE) Training?
This Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE) training is considered professional-level Linux training, which means it was designed for systems admins. This Red Hat skills course is designed for systems admins with three to five years of experience with Linux distribution.
New or aspiring systems admins. This RHCE course could be too advanced for brand new systems administrators. The RHCE certification and exam depend on a deep familiarity with the internal workings and systems of Red Hat Linux, which typically can only be gained through years of hands-on experience. Nonetheless, taking this course can help you leap-frog ahead to topics of automation and advanced enterprise configuration that could specialize your career field years ahead of normal.
Experienced systems admins. If you’ve got a couple years of experience as a Red Hat administrator, this RHCE course will hone your skills and knowledge and turn you into a legitimate systems engineer. Learn to set up automation, deployment, and configuration solutions that integrate with DevOps environments with this RHCE course. Make a career out of automating the most powerful and interesting Red Hat tools and services.
Table of Contents
Introduction to RHCE
1 Introduction
2 VMWare and Red Hat Enterprise Linux
3 Setting Up the Lab Environment
4 SSH Configuration
5 Ansible Basics
6 Configuring Ansible
Create Ansible Playbooks
7 Intro
8 Understanding YAML Basics
9 Key-Value Pairs
10 Arrays
11 Ansible Ad-Hoc Commands
12 Writing a Playbook
13 Validation Part 1
14 Validation Part 2
Manage Variables and Secrets
15 Introduction
16 Host Variables
17 Group Variables
18 Accessing Nested Variables
19 Defining Variables within Playbooks
20 Managing Secrets with Ansible Vault
21 Validation Part 1
22 Validation Part 2
Create Loops and Conditions
23 Introduction
24 Understanding Loops
25 Accessing Elements in Loops
26 Understanding Conditional Logic
27 Writing Conditions in Ansible
28 Creating Loops with Conditions
29 Validation Part 1
30 Validation Part 2
Render Configurations with Jinja
31 Introduction
32 The Template Module
33 Creating Vars
34 Creating a Template
35 Looping in Templates
36 Conditional Logic in Templates
37 Rendering DNS Configurations
38 Validation
39 Solution
Automate with Ansible Roles
40 Introduction
41 Preparation
42 Understanding Ansible Roles
43 Directories in an Ansible Role
44 Writing a Role
45 External Roles
46 Validation
47 Solution
Understand Facts, Registers and Handlers
48 Introduction
49 Gathering Facts
50 Creating Custom Facts
51 Registering Variables
52 Using Handlers
53 Validation
54 Solution
Understand Ansible Navigator and Documentation
55 Introduction
56 Ansible Navigator Setup
57 Running Playbooks with Ansible Navigator
58 Ansible Documentation
59 Exploring the stat module with ansible-doc
60 Exploring the lineinfile module with ansible-doc
61 Validation
62 Solution
Manage Users with Ansible
63 Introduction
64 Ansible Posix Collection
65 The User Module
66 The Group Module
67 Sharing Public Keys
68 Creating Passwords
69 Superuser Privileges
70 Validation
71 Solution
Manage and Schedule Tasks and Services
72 Introduction
73 The Service Module
74 Manage Boot Targets
75 Task Scheduling with At
76 The Cron Module
77 Validation
78 Solution
Configure Networking with Ansible
79 Introduction
80 Linux Networking
81 The NMCLI Module
82 Testing the Module
83 The Network Role
84 Interface Configuration
85 Static Route Configuration
86 Validation
87 Solution
Automate Storage Configuration with Ansible
88 Introduction
89 Partitioning Basics
90 Automate Partitioning with Parted
91 Automate LVM
92 Storage Roles
93 Validation
94 Solution
Automate File System Configurations and Mounting
95 Introduction
96 File System Basics
97 The Filesystem Module
98 Managing File Systems with Ansible Roles
99 Mount Basics
100 The Mount Module
101 Managing Mounting with Roles
102 Validation
103 Solution
Configure RAID Storage and Encryption
104 Introduction
105 Understanding RAID
106 Automate RAID Deployments
107 Testing RAID
108 Understanding LUKS
109 Automate LUKS Encryption
110 Validation
111 Solution
Troubleshoot Ansible
112 Introduction
113 The Debug Module
114 Check Mode
115 Connection Issues
116 Syntax Errors
117 Validation
118 Solution
Automate Tests and System Monitoring
119 Introduction
120 Testing Memory Usage
121 Working with Numbers
122 Testing CPU Usage
123 The Assert Keyword
124 Validation
125 Solution
Automate Security Controls
126 Introduction
127 SELinux Basics
128 Manual SELinux
129 Automate HTTPD Deployment with SELinux
130 Managing SELinux with Roles
131 Managing Firewalld
132 Validation
133 Solution
Automate Package Management
134 Introduction
135 Understanding Package Management
136 Repository Configuration
137 Configuring the Repository Server
138 Client Configuration
139 Validation
140 Solution
Create Archives and Handle Errors
141 Introduction
142 Compression and Archives
143 The Archive Module
144 The Unarchive Module
145 The Unarchive Module
146 Multiple Plays
147 Validation
148 Solution
Ansible Automation Controller
149 Introduction
150 Setting Up The Controller
151 Organizations, Teams and Users
152 Inventories and Credentials
153 Running Playbooks
154 Validation
155 Solution
RHCE Exam Preparation 1
156 Introduction
157 Preparing for the RHCE Exam
158 Setting Up the Nodes
159 Inventory and Ansible Configuration File
160 Setting Up The Local Repository Server
161 Managed Nodes Repo Configuration
162 Lab Wrap-Up
RHCE Exam Preparation 2
163 Introduction
164 Question 1 – Creating Users and Groups
165 Solution
166 Question 2 – Installing Collections
167 Solution
168 Question 3 – Creating A Role
169 Solution
170 Question 4 – Time Synchronization
171 Solution
172 Question 5 – File Encryption
173 Solution
174 Question 6 – Gathering Device Information
175 Solution
176 Question 7 – Logical Volume Management
177 Solution
178 Question 8 – Scheduling Tasks
179 Solution
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