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I'm looking for a book (real one made from dead trees to hold in my hands) on networking, taught from GNU/Linux perspective so that I can experiment at the command line with different utilities. I am comfortable with the very basics (IP addresses, DHCP, DNS) but want to get a grip on jargon such as NAT, DMZ, MASQUERADE, etc. Details of routing and firewalls are especially intimidating and are the topics I want to learn the most.
I've looked around but the books I'm finding tend to have one or more of these problems:
- Too old
- Too advanced
- From Windows perspective
Do any of you have a favorite book that helped you go from noob to confident intermediate skills in networking (especially router and firewall settings)?
Last edited by GNUser (2017-08-10 16:54:14)
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I found this: http://lartc.org/howto/
Almost exactly what I'm looking for, but hoping to find a hard copy book.
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On-line sources will likely be more up to date.
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I figured. The book doesn't have to be super recent. I'd be happy with something 5 years old or less.
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Here's a cornucopia of online texts:
https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-best- … -hand-outs
I think I'm going to give up on finding a hardcopy book. I've been looking around for three days and the books that look interesting are at least 10 years old
Last edited by GNUser (2017-08-10 16:29:10)
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a hardcopy is what you print on your own
Yes, I think this is what I'll end up doing. I work at the computer all day and last thing I want when I'm reading "for fun" is more screen time.
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