linux,faqs,howtos,man,forum,squid,mount,ntfs,bandwidth,gnu,opensource,directory
 
Home | Forum | MAN Pages | Tutorials | Directory | HOWTOs | About Me | Contact
You are Browsing Linux HOWTOS
 
FAQS
- Advanced Routing & Traffic Control
- General FAQ
- Squid Proxy Server
- Sendmail
- Fetchmail
- Postfix
- Connecting Mobile Phone
- Paging from Linux
- Standard Commands
- Some common terms
Linux HOWTOs
- Single List of HOWTOs
- 4mb-Laptops
- Bash-Prog-Intro-HOWTO
- Clone-HOWTO
- DVD Playback HOWTO
- Italian HOWTO
- Hard Disk Upgrade
- - Infrared-HOWTO
- LBX
- Linux-Promise-RAID1-HOWTO
- Mozilla-Optimization
- Nvidia-OpenGL-Configuration
- Psion-HOWTO
- Sendmail+UUCP
- SLIP-PPP-Emulator
- TimeSys-Linux-Install-HOWTO
- Ultra-DMA
- VPN-HOWTO
- Web-Browsing-Behind-ISA-Server-HOWTO
- XFree86-Touch-Screen-HOWTO

- ADSL Bandwidth Management
- Compile Apache
- Make a Bootdisk
- Linux-Windows9x-Grub
- Linux-Windows
- Linux Crash Recovery
- Optimise Squid
- Block websites in Squid
- Broadcast webcam in linux
- Compile RedHat Linux kernel
- Implement Firewall Security
- Increase Harddrive Performance
- Mount NTFS filesystem
- Patch / rebuild SRPM
- Secure Linux
- Set up a DHCP Server
- Set up an FTP server
- Set up Linux as a Router
- Use Cron
- Samba
Miscellaneous
- All Ports
- Spammers fetch email addresses
- Mounting NTFS in linux
- Linux Gazette
- Linux Directory
- Linux Man

linux,man,pages,linux man pages,squid,ntfs,mount
 

Chapter 6. Other Useful/Important Documents

Users are advised to read :-

  • The documentation that comes with the PPP package.

  • The pppd and chat man pages; (use man chat and man pppd to explore these.)

  • The Linux Network Administration Guide (NAG); see The Network Administrators' Guide.

  • The Net-2/3 HOWTO; see Linux Networking-HOWTO.

  • Linux kernel documentation installed in /usr/src/linux/Documentation when you install the Linux source code.

  • The modem setup information page - see Modem Setup Information.

  • The excellent Unix/Linux books published by O'Reilly and Associates. See (O'Reilly and Associates On-Line Catalogue). If you are new to Unix/Linux, run (don't walk) to your nearest computer book shop and invest in a number of these immediately!

  • The PPP-FAQ maintained by Al Longyear, available from Linux PPP-FAQ. This contains a great deal of useful information in question/answer format that is very useful when working out why PPP is not working (properly).

  • The growing number of Linux books from various publishing houses and authors; You are actively encouraged to check the currency of these books. Linux development and distributions tend to evolve fairly rapidly, whilst the revision of books move (generally) much more slowly! Buying an excellent book (and there are many) that is now out of date will cause new users considerable confusion and frustration.

  • The documentation associated with the PPP tool(s) you are using The package specific documentation, usually easily available, is often the most useful when dealing with a specific tool.

The best general starting point for Linux documentation is The Linux Documentation Project Home Page. The HOWTO's tend to be revised reasonably regularly.

Whilst you can use this document to create your PPP link without reading any of these documents, you will have a far better understanding of what is going on if you do so! You will also be able to address problems yourself (or at least ask more intelligent questions on the comp.os.linux... newsgroups or Linux mailing lists).

These documents (as well as various others, including the relevant RFCs) provide additional and more detailed explanation than is possible in this HOWTO.

If you are connecting a LAN to the Internet using PPP, you will need to know a reasonable amount about TCP/IP networking. In addition to the documents above, you will find the O'Reilly books "TCP/IP Network Administration" and "Building Internet Firewalls" of considerable benefit!

6.1. Useful Linux Mailing Lists

There are many Linux mailing lists that operate as a means of communication between users of many levels of ability. By all means subscribe to those that interest you and contribute your expertise and views.

A word to the wise: some lists are specifically aimed at "high powered" users and/or specific topics. Whilst no-one will complain if you 'lurk' (subscribe but don't post messages), you are likely to earn heated comments (if not outright flames) if you post 'newbie' questions to inappropriate lists.

This is not because guru level users hate new users, but because these lists are there to handle the specific issues at particular levels of difficulty.

By all means join the lists that offer open subscription, but keep your comments relevant to the subject of the list!

A good starting point for Linux mailing lists is Linux Mailing List Directory

 
Random Linux Commands
Tar
Tape Archive, a Tape Archive is a program that joins together a series of files into one large file. Commonly used with the gzip utility to compress the resulting file, it's the standard way of distributing source code. Such archives typically have a .tar.gz or .tgz extension.

Common Linux terms
Linux-FAQs Search
linux,faqs,howto,howtos,man,manpages,directory,forum


Linux-FAQs Forum Categories
- About Forum
- Hardware Troubleshooting in Linux
- Linux Entertainment
- Resources
- Software toubleshooting and configuration
Linux-FAQs Man Pages
- About Forum
- Hardware Troubleshooting in Linux
- Linux Entertainment
- Resources
- Software toubleshooting and configuration
All Linux-FAQs Forums
- Crash Recovery
- FAQs
- Forum Talk
- Games
- General
- Linux Audio Support
- Linux Hardware / Driver
- Linux Installation Support
- Linux misc.
- Linux Networking
- Linux Newbies
- Linux Printing Support
- Linux Security
- Linux Video Support
- Mail Server
- Multimedia
- Tutorials
- Web Proxy Server
- Web Server

linux,man,man pages,faqs,howtos,forum
 
Powered by HTML
Linux-faqs.com Copyright, All rights reserved www.linux-faqs.com. Peeyush Maurya.