Interview Preparations
I haven’t really contributed much this month because I had an interview lined up and was rigorously preparing for it. It was for a Linux Engineer role. Although the requirements matched my skill set, I wanted to further enhance my knowledge to increase my chances of clearing the interview.
Most of my preparation involved revisiting what I already knew and finding better, more effective ways to perform tasks, especially since the role was Linux-focused. I also documented my learning for future reference, so I wouldn’t have to search the internet randomly each time.
Over the past month, I’ve learned many new things, improved several existing skills, and shared a lot of my findings.
Here are the posts:
- Linux: User & Group Management
- Linux: Fundamentals Of File Permissions And Ownership
- Linux: File Systems And Storage
- Linux: Systemd And Service Management
- Linux: Networking Tools
- Linux: Log Analysis and Journals
- Linux Tools: dd Utility Tool
- Linux: firewalld & iptables
- Linux: Assigning Permissions and Group Ownership Automatically For Newly Created Files & Directories (umask & chgrp)
- Linux: How To Mount And Un-Mount Permanently/Temporarily
- Linux: Manage File Permissions
- Linux: Creating and Customizing systemd Units
- Linux: Task Scheduling with systemd Timers
- Linux: Service Management with systemd
- Linux: Advanced Filtering and Analyzing System Logs with journalctl
- Linux Tools: Search & Filter
- Linux Tools: Transform & Edit
- Packaging: Introduction to Packaging in Linux
- Packaging: Conceptual Differences Between RPM and DEB
- Packaging: Build Your First RPM Package!
- Packaging: Build Your First Debian Package!
- Linux Tools: Data Extraction & Manipulation
- Linux Tools: Basic File Viewing & Handling
- Linux Tools: Getting Started with the tar Command
- Packaging: RPM Spec File Deep Dive
- Packaging: Debian File Deep Dive
- Fundamentals of Regular Expressions
- Linux Messaging Basics: mail, wall & write
- Linux Environment Variables
- What is LVM (Logical Volume Manager) and Why Use it?
- Package Management
- Linux: Booting Process