LinuxCBT OpenLDAP Edition
LinuxCBT OpenLDAP Edition | 762 MB
Price: $195 | 15 hours on 1-DVD
LinuxCBT feat. OpenLDAP Edition focuses on the common Linux | Unix directory services application: OpenLDAP. It is a module of LinuxCBT Directory Services Edition.
OpenLDAP provides a lightweight, central information directory service for countless applications, including general user authentication services. This results in reduced administrative overhead. OpenLDAP also supports replication and encryption, promoting high-availability and security. Furthermore, knowledge of OpenLDAP prepares you to work comfortably with Open Source and commercial LDAP variants.
Let LinuxCBT feat. OpenLDAP Edition cost-effectively teach you Linux | Unix directory skills.
Recommended Prerequisites for:
- Any LinuxCBT Operating System Course (Classic/EL-4|5/SUSE/Debian Editions)
- Open mind & determination to master Linux and related open-source applications
- Access to a Linux or Solaris system to follow the exercises
Home:
http://www.linuxcbt.com/products_linuxcbt_openldap_edition.php
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Anyone who's done programming work knows that you spend half your coding time looking for other people's solutions to the problems you're facing in your project. Particularly when you're dealing with times, dates, standard calculations, and other common problems, you find yourself saying, "Someone must have solved this before." And, indeed, someone usually has. Linux Programming by Example is a dense compendium of Linux software solutions--tools, algorithms, and procedures that solve data-processing challenges of the sort that crop up in all sorts of software projects.
Unlike a lot of code-oriented books, this one manages to keep its samples concise, and devote more space to discussions of why things are done than to the code that actually does them. This promotes understanding: You can always mess around with the code yourself on your own. Overall, Arnold Robbins does an excellent job of stripping away some of the hacker mystique to reveal the code behind the curtain. This book shows how to work Linux magic. --David Wall
Topics covered: Linux programming in C, mostly at a level concerned with user input from the command line, file I/O, interprocess signalling, and memory management.
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