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Fedora 31 Essentials

You're reading from   Fedora 31 Essentials Learn how to install, administer, and deploy Fedora 31 systems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800562790
Length 271 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Neil Smyth Neil Smyth
Author Profile Icon Neil Smyth
Neil Smyth
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Table of Contents (32) Chapters Close

1. Introduction 2. A Brief History of Linux FREE CHAPTER 3. Installing Fedora 31 on a Clean Disk Drive 4. Dual Booting Fedora 31 with Windows 5. Allocating Windows Disk Partitions to Fedora 31 6. A Guided Tour of the GNOME 3 Desktop 7. An Overview of the Fedora 31 Cockpit Web Interface 8. Using the Bash Shell on Fedora 31 9. Managing Fedora 31 Users and Groups 10. Understanding Fedora 31 Software Installation and Management 11. Configuring Fedora 31 systemd Units 12. Fedora 31 Network Management 13. Basic Fedora 31 Firewall Configuration with firewalld 14. Configuring SSH Key-based Authentication on Fedora 31 15. Fedora 31 Remote Desktop Access with VNC 16. Displaying Fedora 31 Applications Remotely (X11 Forwarding) 17. Using NFS to Share Fedora 31 Files with Remote Systems 18. Sharing Files between Fedora 31 and Windows Systems with Samba 19. An Overview of Virtualization Techniques 20. Installing KVM Virtualization on Fedora 31 21. Creating KVM Virtual Machines using Cockpit and virt-manager 22. Creating KVM Virtual Machines with virt-install and virsh 23. Creating a Fedora 31 KVM Networked Bridge Interface 24. Managing KVM using the virsh Command-Line Tool 25. An Introduction to Linux Containers 26. Working with Containers on Fedora 31 27. Setting Up a Fedora 31 Web Server 28. Configuring a Fedora 31 Postfix Email Server 29. Adding a New Disk Drive to a Fedora 31 System 30. Adding a New Disk to a Fedora 31 Volume Group and Logical Volume 31. Adding and Managing Fedora 31 Swap Space Index

8.1 What is a Shell?

The shell is an interactive command interpreter environment within which commands may be typed at a prompt or entered into a file in the form of a script and executed. The origins of the shell can be traced back to the early days of the UNIX operating system. In fact, in the early days of Linux before the introduction of graphical desktops the shell was the only way for a user to interact with the operating system.

A variety of shell environments have been developed over the years. The first widely used shell was the Bourne shell, written by Stephen Bourne at Bell Labs.

Yet another early creation was the C shell which shared some syntax similarities with the C Programming Language and introduced usability enhancements such as command-line editing and history.

The Korn shell (developed by David Korn at Bell Labs) is based on features provided by both the Bourne shell and the C shell.

The default shell on Fedora 31 is the Bash shell (shorthand for Bourne...

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