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Linux book/course for beginners?
Friends, advise a book, a course (online or full-time), a YouTube channel, maybe some kind of resource for learning Linux Ubuntu. In Russian. Water minimum.
You need to learn how to deploy and configure a web server: PHP-FPM, Nginx, Firewall. No matter how deep knowledge is required.
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Brian Ward The Internals of Linux . I have not seen a simpler book, it affects the entire Linux device, but briefly and to the point. 380 pages. Easy to read.
From the video tutorials, I recommend the channel of Kirill Semaev on YouTube. Searching is easy. You need an LPIC-1 playlist. Explains clearly and interestingly.
I advise you not to read articles and not to watch fleeting videos of numerous video bloggers.
Take the fundamental books of the authors Robachevsky and Tenenbaum.
The time spent reading will pay off.
But what, this article is no good, the first result in Yandex?
https://habr.com/ru/post/320036/
I just installed ngnix just sudo apt install nginx and figured out the configs by typing quickly. (yes, I knew about /etc/nginx/sites-available and sites-enabled, before that I used this assembly with ready-made ngnix https://modx.pro/hosting/225 and then I stuck nginx and php just intuitively, through sudo apt install. It seems that it didn’t take long to set up. But it was a long time ago, I already removed nginx from the computer.
On the review of the image with modx.pro, there is a link to Naumkin’s article, which has long been transferred to the modx.pro site itself
https:// modx.pro/hosting/3149
https://modx.pro/hosting/678
I also like digitalocean.com. But I set up and install something in Linux not often, not an expert
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/h...
and of course also authoritative https://www.nginx.com/resources/ wiki/start/topics/...
To be honest, I think Valker888 already googled everything a long time ago and did
And since everyone advises "Read Tenenbaum", and "Look at LPIC-1", then to study the terminal green-green, this chapter of the book is just right. The whole book is for amateurs. The author has a very specific style of presentation, + if he went to the "help" section of the program, he will definitely tell about it in detail and tell how the help section has changed over time. It creates the illusion that you are studying mint in every detail, but no. The author has tasted mint only as needed and there will be enough questions after reading. But he used the terminal well, and here his schizophrenic meticulousness is very useful
https://www.alv.me/linux-mint-i-ego-cinnamon-Ocher...
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