Ubuntu Unleashed 2013 Edition, w. DVD-ROM
Covering 12.10 and 13.04
(Sprache: Englisch)
Ubuntu Unleashed 2013 Edition is filled with unique and advanced information for everyone who wants to make the most of the Ubuntu Linux operating system. This new edition has been thoroughly revised and updated by a long-time Ubuntu community leader to...
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Ubuntu Unleashed 2013 Edition is filled with unique and advanced information for everyone who wants to make the most of the Ubuntu Linux operating system. This new edition has been thoroughly revised and updated by a long-time Ubuntu community leader to reflect the exciting new Ubuntu 12.10 ("Quantal Quetzal") and the forthcoming Ubuntu 13.04. Former Ubuntu Forum administrator Matthew Helmke covers all you need to know about Ubuntu 12.10/13.04 installation, configuration, productivity, multimedia, development, system administration, server operations, networking, virtualization, security, DevOps, and more-including intermediate-to-advanced techniques you won't find in any other book. Helmke presents up-to-the-minute introductions to Ubuntu's key productivity and Web development tools, programming languages, hardware support, and more. You'll find new or improved coverage of navigation via Unity Dash, wireless networking, VPNs, software repositories, new NoSQL database options, virtualization and cloud services, new programming languages and development tools, monitoring, troubleshooting, and more.
* Configure and customize the Unity desktop and make the most of the Dash * Get started with multimedia and productivity applications, including LibreOffice * Manage Linux services, users, and software packages* Administer and run Ubuntu from the command line (with added coverage of stdin, stdout, sdterr, redirection, and file comparison)* Automate tasks and use shell scripting* Provide secure remote access and configure a secure VPN* Manage kernels and modules * Administer file, print, email, proxy, LDAP, and HTTP servers (Apache or alternatives)* Learn about new options for managing large numbers of servers* Work with databases (both SQL and the newest NoSQL alternatives)* Get started with virtualization* Build a private cloud with Juju and Charms* Learn the basics about popular programming languages including Python, PHP, Perl, and new alternatives such as Go and Rust
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Ubuntu Unleashed 2013 Edition, w. DVD-ROM “
Introduction 1 Licensing 2 Who This Book Is For 3 Those Wanting to Become Intermediate or Advanced Users 3 Sysadmins, Programmers, and DevOps 4 What This Book Contains 5 Conventions Used in This Book 5 Part I Installation and Configuration 1 Installing Ubuntu and Post-Installation Configuration 7 Before You Begin the Installation 7 Researching Your Hardware Specifications 8 Installation Options 8 Planning Partition Strategies 10 The Boot Loader 10 Installing from DVD or USB Drive 11 Step-by-Step Installation 11 Installing 12 First Update 16 Wubi: The Easy Installer for Windows 16 Shutting Down 18 Finding Programs and Files 19 Software Updater 19 The sudo Command 22 Configuring Software Repositories 23 System Settings 26 Detecting and Configuring a Printer 26 Configuring Power Management in Ubuntu 27 Setting the Time and Date 27 Configuring Wireless Networks 29 Troubleshooting Post-Installation Configuration Problems 31 References 32 Part II Desktop Ubuntu 2 Working with Unity 33 Foundations and the X Server 33 Basic X Concepts 34 Using X 35 Elements of the xorg.conf File 36 Starting X 41 Using a Display Manager 41 Changing Window Managers 42 Using Unity, a Primer 42 The Desktop 43 Customizing and Configuring Unity 48 Power Shortcuts 49 References 50 3 On the Internet 51 Getting Started with Firefox 52 Checking Out Google Chrome and Chromium 53 Choosing an Email Client 55 Mozilla Thunderbird 56 Evolution 56 Other Mail Clients 57 RSS Readers 58 Firefox 58 Liferea 58 Instant Messaging and Video Conferencing with Empathy 59 Internet Relay Chat 60 Usenet Newsgroups 62 Ubuntu One Cloud Storage 64 References 64 4 Productivity Applications 65 Introducing LibreOffice 67 Other Office Suites for Ubuntu 69 Working with GNOME Office 69 Working with KOffice 70 Other Useful Productivity Software 71 Working with PDF 71 Working with XML and DocBook 71 Working with LaTeX 73 Productivity Applications Written for Microsoft Windows 73 References 74 5 Multimedia Applications 75 Sound and
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Music 75 Sound Cards 76 Adjusting Volume 77 Sound Formats 78 Listening to Music 79 Buying Music in the Ubuntu One Music Store 81 Graphics Manipulation 83 The GNU Image Manipulation Program 83 Using Scanners in Ubuntu 85 Working with Graphics Formats 85 Capturing Screen Images 87 Using Digital Cameras with Ubuntu 88 Handheld Digital Cameras 88 Using Shotwell Photo Manager 88 Burning CDs and DVDs in Ubuntu 89 Creating CDs and DVDs with Brasero 89 Creating CDs from the Command Line 89 Creating DVDs from the Command Line 91 Viewing Video 94 TV and Video Hardware 94 Video Formats 95 Viewing Video in Linux 96 Personal Video Recorders 97 Video Editing 97 References 98 6 Other Ubuntu Interfaces 99 Desktop Environment 100 KDE and Kubuntu 101 Xfce and Xubuntu 102 LXDE and Lubuntu 103 GNOME3 and Gnobuntu 104 References 105 7 Games 107 Ubuntu Gaming 107 Installing Proprietary Video Drivers 108 Installing Games in Ubuntu 109 Warsow 110 Scorched 3D 110 Frozen Bubble 111 SuperTux 112 Battle for Wesnoth 112 Frets on Fire 114 FlightGear 114 Speed Dreams 114 Games for Kids 114 Commercial Games 115 Playing Windows Games 116 References 116 Part III System Administration 8 Managing Software 119 Ubuntu Software Center 119 Using Synaptic for Software Management 120 Staying Up-to-Date 122 Working on the Command Line 123 Day-to-Day Usage 124 Finding Software 127 Compiling Software from Source 128 Compiling from a Tarball 128 Compiling from Source from the Ubuntu Repositories 129 Configuration Management 130 Dotdee 130 OneConf 131 References 131 9 Command-Line Quickstart 133 What Is the Command Line? 134 Accessing the Command Line 135 Text-Based Console Login 136 Logging Out 137 Logging In and Out from a Remote Computer 137 User Accounts 138 Reading Documentation 140 Using Man Pages 140 Using apropros 140 Using whereis 141 Understanding the Linux File System Hierarchy 141 Essential Commands in /bin and /sbin 142 Configuration Files in /etc 143 User Directories: /home 143 Using the Contents of the /proc Directory to Interact with the Kernel 144 Working with Shared Data in the /usr Directory 145 Temporary File Storage in the /tmp Directory 146 Accessing Variable Data Files in the /var Directory 146 Navigating the Linux File System 146 Listing the Contents of a Directory with ls 146 Changing Directories with cd 148 Finding Your Current Directory with pwd 149 Working with Permissions 149 Assigning Permissions 150 Directory Permissions 151 Altering File Permissions with chmod 152 File Permissions with chgrp 153 Changing File Permissions with chown 153 Understanding Set User ID and Set Group ID Permissions 153 Working with Files 155 Creating a File with touch 155 Creating a Directory with mkdir 155 Deleting a Directory with rmdir 156 Deleting a File or Directory with rm 157 Moving or Renaming a File with mv 157 Copying a File with cp 158 Displaying the Contents of a File with cat 159 Displaying the Contents of a File with less 159 Using Wildcards and Regular Expressions 159 Working as Root 160 Understanding and Fixing sudo 160 Creating Users 164 Deleting Users 164 Shutting Down the System 165 Rebooting the System 166 Commonly Used Commands and Programs 166 References 167 10 Command-Line Master Class 169 Why Use the Command Line? 170 Using Basic Commands 171 Printing the Contents of a File with cat 172 Changing Directories with cd 173 Changing File Access Permissions with chmod 175 Copying Files with cp 175 Printing Disk Usage with du 176 Finding Files by Searching with find 177 Searches for a String in Input with grep 179 Paging Through Output with less 180 Creating Links Between Files with ln 182 Finding Files from an Index with locate 184 Listing Files in the Current Directory with ls 184 Reading Manual Pages with man 186 Making Directories with mkdir 187 Moving Files with mv 187 Listing Processes with ps 188 Deleting Files and Directories with rm 188 Printing the Last Lines of a File with tail 189 Printing Resource Usage with top 189 Printing the Location of a Command with which 191 Redirecting Output and Input 191 stdin, stdout, sdterr, and Redirection 193 Comparing Files 194 Finding Differences in Files with diff 194 Finding Similarities in Files with comm. 194 Combining Commands 195 Using Environment Variables 197 Using Common Text Editors 200 Working with nano 201 Working with vi 202 Working with emacs 203 Working with Compressed Files 204 Using Multiple Terminals with byobu 205 References 207 11 Managing Users 209 User Accounts 209 The Super User/Root User 210 User IDs and Group IDs 212 File Permissions 212 Managing Groups 213 Group Listing 213 Group Management Tools 214 Managing Users 216 User Management Tools 216 Adding New Users 218 Monitoring User Activity on the System 222 Managing Passwords 222 System Password Policy 222 The Password File 223 Shadow Passwords 224 Managing Password Security for Users 226 Changing Passwords in a Batch 227 Granting System Administrator Privileges to Regular Users 227 Temporarily Changing User Identity with the su Command 227 Granting Root Privileges on Occasion: The sudo Command 229 Disk Quotas 232 Implementing Quotas 233 Manually Configuring Quotas 233 Related Ubuntu Commands 234 References 235 12 Automating Tasks and Shell Scripting 237 Scheduling Tasks 237 Using at and batch to Schedule Tasks for Later 237 Using cron to Run Jobs Repeatedly 240 Basic Shell Control 242 The Shell Command Line 243 Shell Pattern-Matching Support 245 Redirecting Input and Output 246 Piping Data 247 Background Processing 247 Writing and Executing a Shell Script 248 Running the New Shell Program 249 Storing Shell Scripts for System-wide Access 250 Interpreting Shell Scripts Through Specific Shells 250 Using Variables in Shell Scripts 252 Assigning a Value to a Variable 252 Accessing Variable Values 253 Positional Parameters 253 A Simple Example of a Positional Parameter 253 Using Positional Parameters to Access and Retrieve Variables from the Command Line 254 Using a Simple Script to Automate Tasks 255 Built-In Variables 257 Special Characters 257 Using Double Quotes to Resolve Variables in Strings with Embedded Spaces 258 Using Single Quotes to Maintain Unexpanded Variables 259 Using the Backslash as an Escape Character 260 Using the Backtick to Replace a String with Output 260 Comparison of Expressions in pdksh and bash 261 Comparing Expressions with tcsh 266 The for Statement 270 The while Statement 271 The until Statement 273 The repeat Statement (tcsh) 274 The select Statement (pdksh) 274 The shift Statement 275 The if Statement 275 The case Statement 276 The break and exit Statements 278 Using Functions in Shell Scripts 279 References 280 13 The Boot Process 281 Running Services at Boot 281 Beginning the Boot Loading Process 282 Loading the Linux Kernel 283 System Services and Runlevels 284 Runlevel Definitions 284 Booting into the Default Runlevel 285 Understanding init Scripts and the Final Stage of Initialization 285 Controlling Services at Boot with Administrative Tools 286 Changing Runlevels 286 Troubleshooting Runlevel Problems 287 Starting and Stopping Services Manually 288 Using Upstart 289 References 290 14 System-Monitoring Tools 291 Console-Based Monitoring 291 Using the kill Command to Control Processes 293 Using Priority Scheduling and Control 294 Displaying Free and Used Memory with free 296 Disk Space 297 Disk Quotas 298 Graphical Process and System Management Tools 298 System Monitor 298 Conky 300 Other 305 KDE Process- and System-Monitoring Tools 305 Enterprise Server Monitoring 305 Landscape 306 Other 306 References 306 15 Backing Up 307 Choosing a Backup Strategy 307 Why Data Loss Occurs 308 Assessing Your Backup Needs and Resources 309 Evaluating Backup Strategies 311 Making the Choice 314 Choosing Backup Hardware and Media 314 Removable Storage Media 314 CD-RW and DVD+RW/-RW Drives 315 Network Storage 315 Tape Drive Backup 315 Cloud Storage 316 Using Backup Software 316 tar: The Most Basic Backup Tool 317 The GNOME File Roller 319 The KDE ark Archiving Tool 320 Deja Dup 320 Back In Time 322 Unison 324 Using the Amanda Backup Application 324 Alternative Backup Software 325 Copying Files 326 Copying Files Using tar 326 Compressing, Encrypting, and Sending tar Streams 327 Copying Files Using cp 327 Copying Files Using mc 328 Using rsync 328 Version Control for Configuration Files 330 System Rescue 332 The Ubuntu Rescue Disc 333 Restoring the GRUB2 Boot Loader 333 Saving Files from a Nonbooting Hard Drive 333 References 334 16 Networking 335 Laying the Foundation: The localhost Interface 336 Checking for the Availability of the Loopback Interface 336 Configuring the Loopback Interface Manually 336 Checking Connections with ping, traceroute, and mtr 338 Networking with TCP/IP 340 TCP/IP Addressing 341 Using IP Masquerading in Ubuntu 343 Ports 344 IPv6 Basics 344 Network Organization 347 Subnetting 347 Subnet Masks 348 Broadcast, Unicast, and Multicast Addressing 348 Hardware Devices for Networking 349 Network Interface Cards 349 Network Cable 351 Hubs and Switches 352 Routers and Bridges 353 Initializing New Network Hardware 353 Using Network Configuration Tools 355 Command-Line Network Interface Configuration 356 Network Configuration Files 360 Using Graphical Configuration Tools 363 Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol 365 How DHCP Works 365 Activating DHCP at Installation and Boot Time 366 DHCP Software Installation and Configuration 367 Using DHCP to Configure Network Hosts 369 Other Uses for DHCP 371 Wireless Networking 371 Support for Wireless Networking in Ubuntu 371 Advantages of Wireless Networking 373 Choosing from Among Available Wireless Protocols 373 Beyond the Network and onto the Internet 374 Common Configuration Information 374 Configuring Digital Subscriber Line Access 376 Understanding PPP over Ethernet 376 Configuring a PPPoE Connection Manually 377 Configuring Dial-Up Internet Access 378 Troubleshooting Connection Problems 379 References 380 17 Remote Access with SSH and Telnet 381 Setting Up a Telnet Server 381 Telnet Versus SSH 383 Setting Up an SSH Server 383 SSH Tools 383 Using scp to Copy Individual Files Between Machines 384 Using sftp to Copy Many Files Between Machines 385 Using ssh-keygen to Enable Key-Based Logins 385 Virtual Network Computing 387 References 389 18 Securing Your Machines 391 Understanding Computer Attacks 391 Assessing Your Vulnerability 393 Protecting Your Machine 394 Securing a Wireless Network 395 Passwords and Physical Security 395 Configuring and Using Tripwire 396 Devices 397 Viruses 397 Configuring Your Firewall 398 AppArmor 401 Forming a Disaster Recovery Plan 403 References 404 19 Performance Tuning 405 Hard Disk 405 Using the BIOS and Kernel to Tune the Disk Drives 406 The hdparm Command 407 File System Tuning 408 The tune2fs Command 408 The e2fsck Command 409 The badblocks Command 409 Disabling File Access Time 409 Kernel 410 Apache 411 MySQL 412 Measuring Key Buffer Usage 412 Using the Query Cache 414 Miscellaneous Tweaks 415 Query Optimization 416 References 416 20 Kernel and Module Management 417 The Linux Kernel 418 The Linux Source Tree 419 Types of Kernels 421 Managing Modules 422 When to Recompile 424 Kernel Versions 425 Obtaining the Kernel Sources 426 Patching the Kernel 426 Compiling the Kernel 428 Using xconfig to Configure the Kernel 431 Creating an Initial RAM Disk Image 434 When Something Goes Wrong 435 Errors During Compile 435 Runtime Errors, Boot Loader Problems, and Kernel Oops 436 References 436 Part IV Ubuntu as a Server 21 Sharing Files and Printers 439 Using the Network File System 440 Installing and Starting or Stopping NFS 440 NFS Server Configuration 440 NFS Client Configuration 442 Putting Samba to Work 443 Manually Configuring Samba with /etc/samba/smb.conf 444 Testing Samba with the testparm Command 447 Starting, Stopping, and Restarting the smbd Daemon 448 Mounting Samba Shares 449 Configuring Samba Using SWAT 450 Network and Remote Printing with Ubuntu 453 Creating Network Printers 454 Using the Common UNIX Printing System GUI 456 Avoiding Printer Support Problems 458 References 460 22 Apache Web Server Management 461 About the Apache Web Server 461 Installing the Apache Server 462 Installing from the Ubuntu Repositories 463 Building the Source Yourself 464 Starting and Stopping Apache 467 Starting the Apache Server Manually 467 Using /etc/init.d/apache2 468 Runtime Server Configuration Settings 469 Runtime Configuration Directives 470 Editing apache2.conf 470 Apache Multiprocessing Modules 473 Using .htaccess Configuration Files 473 File System Authentication and Access Control 475 Restricting Access with allow and deny 476 Authentication 477 Final Words on Access Control 479 Apache Modules 480 mod_access 481 mod_alias 481 mod_asis 481 mod_auth 482 mod_auth_anon 482 mod_auth_dbm 482 mod_auth_digest 482 mod_autoindex 483 mod_cgi 483 mod_dir and mod_env 483 mod_expires 483 mod_headers 483 mod_include 484 mod_info and mod_log_config 484 mod_mime and mod_mime_magic 484 mod_negotiation 484 mod_proxy 484 mod_rewrite 484 mod_setenvif 485 mod_speling 485 mod_status 485 mod_ssl 485 mod_unique_id 485 mod_userdir 485 mod_usertrack 485 mod_vhost_alias 485 Virtual Hosting 486 Address-Based Virtual Hosts 486 Name-Based Virtual Hosts 486 Logging 488 References 490 23 Other HTTP Servers 491 Nginx 491 Lighttpd 493 Yaws 494 Cherokee 494 Jetty 495 Thttpd . 495 Apache Tomcat 496 References 496 24 Remote File Serving with FTP 497 Choosing an FTP Server 497 Choosing an Authenticated or Anonymous Server 498 Ubuntu FTP Server Packages 498 Other FTP Servers 498 Installing FTP Software 499 The FTP User 500 Configuring the Very Secure FTP Server 502 Controlling Anonymous Access 503 Other vsftpd Server Configuration Files 504 Using the ftphosts File to Allow or Deny FTP Server Connection 505 References 506 25 Handling Email 507 How Email Is Sent and Received 507 The Mail Transport Agent 508 Choosing an MTA 510 The Mail Delivery Agent 510 The Mail User Agent 511 Basic Postfix Configuration and Operation 512 Configuring Masquerading 514 Using Smart Hosts 515 Setting Message Delivery Intervals 515 Mail Relaying 516 Forwarding Email with Aliases 516 Using Fetchmail to Retrieve Mail 517 Installing Fetchmail 517 Configuring Fetchmail 517 Choosing a Mail Delivery Agent 521 Procmail 521 Spamassassin 521 Squirrelmail 522 Virus Scanners 522 Autoresponders 522 Alternatives to Microsoft Exchange Server 522 Microsoft Exchange Server/Outlook Client 523 CommuniGate Pro 523 Oracle Beehive 524 Bynari 524 Open-Xchange 524 Phpgroupware 524 PHProjekt 524 Horde 524 References 525 26 Proxying, Reverse Proxying, and Virtual Private Networks (VPN) 527 What Is a Proxy Server? 527 Installing Squid 528 Configuring Clients 528 Access Control Lists 529 Specifying Client IP Addresses 533 Sample Configurations 534 Virtual Private Networks (VPN) 536 Setting Up a VPN Client 537 Setting Up a VPN Server 539 References 541 27 Administering Relational Database Services 543 A Brief Review of Database Basics 544 How Relational Databases Work 545 Understanding SQL Basics 547 Creating Tables 548 Inserting Data into Tables 549 Retrieving Data from a Database 550 Choosing a Database: MySQL Versus PostgreSQL 552 Speed 552 Data Locking 552 ACID Compliance in Transaction Processing to Protect Data Integrity 553 SQL Subqueries 554 Procedural Languages and Triggers 554 Configuring MySQL 554 Setting a Password for the MySQL Root User 555 Creating a Database in MySQL 556 Configuring PostgreSQL 558 Initializing the Data Directory in PostgreSQL 558 Creating a Database in PostgreSQL 559 Creating Database Users in PostgreSQL 559 Deleting Database Users in PostgreSQL 560 Granting and Revoking Privileges in PostgreSQL 561 Database Clients 561 SSH Access to a Database 562 Local GUI Client Access to a Database 563 Web Access to a Database 563 The MySQL Command-Line Client 564 The PostgreSQL Command-Line Client 566 Graphical Clients 566 References 567 28 NoSQL Databases 569 Key/Value Stores 571 Berkeley DB 572 Cassandra 572 Memcached and MemcacheDB 573 Redis 573 Riak 574 Document Stores 574 CouchDB 575 MongoDB 575 BaseX 576 Wide Column Stores 576 BigTable 577 HBase 577 Graph Stores 577 Neo4j 578 OrientDB 578 HyperGraphDB 578 FlockDB 578 References 579 29 Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) 581 Configuring the Server 582 Creating Your Schema 582 Populating Your Directory 584 Configuring Clients 586 Evolution 586 Thunderbird 587 Administration 587 References 588 30 Linux Terminal Server Project (LTSP) 589 Requirements 590 Installation 593 Using LTSP 594 References 595 31 Virtualization on Ubuntu 597 KVM 599 VirtualBox 603 VMware 605 Xen 605 References 605 32 Ubuntu in the Cloud 607 Why a Cloud? 608 Software as a Service (SaaS) 609 Platform as a Service (PaaS). 609 Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) 609 Metal as a Service (MaaS) 609 Before You Do Anything 610 Ubuntu Cloud and Eucalyptus 610 Deploy/Install Basics: Public or Private? 612 Public 612 Private 613 A euca2ools Primer 616 Ubuntu Cloud and OpenStack 618 Compute Infrastructure (Nova) 618 Storage Infrastructure (Swift) 619 Imaging Service (Glance) 619 Installation 619 Creating an Image 629 Instance Management 632 Storage Management 633 Network Management 633 An OpenStack Commands Primer 634 Learning More 634 Juju 634 Getting Started 635 Charms 638 Landscape 640 References 640 33 Managing Sets of Servers 641 Juju 641 Puppet 642 Chef 642 CFEngine 643 Landscape 643 References 643 Part V Programming Linux 34 Opportunistic Development 645 Version Control Systems 646 Managing Software Projects with Subversion 646 Managing Software Projects with Bazaar 647 Managing Software Projects with Mercurial 648 Managing Software Projects with Git 649 Introduction to Opportunistic Development 650 Launchpad 651 Quickly 653 Ground Control 657 Bikeshed and Other Tools 661 References 663 35 Helping with Ubuntu Development 665 Introduction to Ubuntu Development 666 Setting Up Your Development System 667 Install Basic Packages and Configure 667 Create a Launchpad Account 668 Set Up Your Environment to Work with Launchpad 668 Fixing Bugs and Packaging 670 Finding Bugs to Fix with Harvest 673 Masters of the Universe 673 References 673 36 Helping with Ubuntu Testing and QA 675 Community Teams 675 Ubuntu Testing Team 676 QA Team 676 Bug Squad 677 Test Drive 677 References 680 37 Using Perl 681 Using Perl with Linux . 681 Perl Versions 682 A Simple Perl Program 682 Perl Variables and Data Structures 684 Perl Variable Types 685 Special Variables 685 Operators 686 Comparison Operators 686 Compound Operators 687 Arithmetic Operators 687 Other Operators 688 Special String Constants 688 Conditional Statements: if/else and unless 689 If. 689 unless 690 Looping 690 For 690 Foreach 691 While 691 until 692 last and next 692 do ... while and do ... until 692 Regular Expressions 693 Access to the Shell 694 Modules and CPAN 695 Code Examples 695 Sending Mail 695 Purging Logs 697 Posting to Usenet 698 One-Liners 699 Command-Line Processing 700 References 700 38 Using Python 703 Python on Linux 704 The Basics of Python 705 Numbers 705 More on Strings 707 Lists 710 Dictionaries 712 Conditionals and Looping 713 Functions 715 Object Orientation 716 Class and Object Variables 717 Constructors and Destructors 718 Class Inheritance 719 The Standard Library and the Python Package Index 721 References 721 39 Using PHP 723 Introduction to PHP 724 Entering and Exiting PHP Mode 724 Variables 724 Arrays 726 Constants 728 References 728 Comments 729 Escape Sequences 729 Variable Substitution 730 Operators 731 Conditional Statements 733 Special Operators 734 Switching 735 Loops 737 Including Other Files 739 Basic Functions 740 Strings 740 Arrays 743 Files 745 Miscellaneous 747 Handling HTML Forms 751 Databases 751 References 754 40 C/C++ Programming Tools for Ubuntu 755 Programming in C with Linux 756 Using the C Programming Project Management Tools Provided with Ubuntu 757 Building Programs with make 757 Using Makefiles 757 Using the autoconf Utility to Configure Code 759 Debugging Tools 760 Using the GNU C Compiler 761 Graphical Development Tools 762 Using the KDevelop Client 762 The Glade Client for Developing in GNOME 763 References 764 41 Using Other Popular Programming Languages 767 Ada 768 Clojure 768 COBOL 769 Erlang 770 Forth 770 Go 771 Fortran 771 Groovy 771 Haskell 772 Java 772 JavaScript 772 Lisp 773 Lua 773 Mono 774 Ruby 774 Rust 775 Scala 775 Scratch 776 Vala 776 References 776 42 Beginning Mobile Development for Android 779 Introduction to Android 780 Hardware 780 Linux Kernel 780 Libraries 780 Android Runtime 780 Application Framework 780 Applications 781 Installing the Android SDK 781 Install Java 781 Install Eclipse 781 Install the SDK 781 Install the ADT Eclipse Plug-In 782 Install Other Components 782 Install Virtual Devices 783 Create Your First Application 784 References 785 Part VI Appendices A Ubuntu Under the Hood 787 What Is Linux? 787 Why Use Linux? 788 What Is Ubuntu? 790 Ubuntu for Business 791 Ubuntu in Your Home 792 64-Bit Ubuntu 793 Getting the Most from Ubuntu and Linux Documentation 793 Ubuntu Developers and Documentation 795 References 795 B Ubuntu and Linux Internet Resources 797 Websites and Search Engines 798 Web Search Tips 798 Google Is Your Friend 799 Ubuntu Package Listings 799 Certification 799 Commercial Support 800 Documentation 800 Linux Guides 800 Ubuntu 801 Mini-CD Linux Distributions 801 Various Intel-Based Linux Distributions 802 PowerPC-Based Linux Distributions 802 Linux on Laptops and PDAs 802 The X Window System 803 Usenet Newsgroups 803 Mailing Lists 804 Ubuntu Project Mailing Lists 805 Internet Relay Chat 805 Index 807
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Autoren-Porträt von Matthew Helmke
Matthew Helmke has written articles for magazines such as Linux+ and Linux Identity, helped write Prentice Hall's The Official Ubuntu Book, and has written and self-published two books about Arabic and Moroccan culture. He first used Unix in 1987 while studying Lisp on a Vax at the university. Currently, he is an active member of the Ubuntu Linux community as an Administrator and Forum Council member for the Ubuntu Forums (http://www.ubuntuforums.org) and a member of the membership approval committee for Ubuntu in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. He has run a business using only free software, has done some consulting, and is currently working on a master's degree in Information Resources and Library Science at the University of Arizona.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Matthew Helmke
- 2012, 8th rev. ed., 888 Seiten, Maße: 17,9 x 23 cm, Kartoniert (TB), Englisch
- Verlag: Que
- ISBN-10: 0672336243
- ISBN-13: 9780672336249
Sprache:
Englisch
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