Current distributions are approaching perfection, but some fine-tuning is
still needed. Many new users are intimidated by the apparent complexity of
a Linux system, and as a result I note that the same questions crop up on
c.o.l.setup over and over again. To try and remedy this situation, and for
my own convenience, I wrote a to--do list that eventually became this
HOWTO. Here you will find configuration tips and examples for the most
common applications, programs, and services, which should save you a fair
amount of time and work.
I realise that this HOWTO is quite RedHat-centric. Currently, I only have
access to Red Hat and Mandrake machines, kernels ranging from 2.0.36 to
2.2.15; so don't take any of my tips as gospel if you have other
distributions. Previous versions of this HOWTO provided some information
for SuSE, Debian and Caldera; but as I no longer have access to those
machines, I can't keep the details up-to-date. No information is better
that inaccurate information, so it's up to you to to adapt my tips to your
distribution.
This HOWTO can't replace others, and it's not meant to. Reading docs and
HOWTOs always pays, so you're strongly advised to do so if you want to
know more. Also, no spoon--feeding here: if you realise you don't
understand something, please refer to the relevant HOWTO. Let me remind
you that the right place for seeking help with Linux configuration is
Usenet, i.e. news:comp.os.linux.setup.
Please, don't seek help from me because I'm quite
overloaded.
The official place for this document, which also hosts all other HOWTOs I
refer to and some translations, is http://www.linuxdoc.org
.
There can be endless hardware configurations for a PC, but in my
experience one is quite common: a PC fitted with a large HD split into
three partitions (one for DOS/Windows, one for Linux, one for the swap),
sound card, modem, CD-ROM drive, printer, mouse. A parallel port Zip Drive
is also very common. This machine is possibly part of a mixed
Windows-Linux network, where it acts as server.
This is the hardware I'll assume you want to configure, but it's easy to
adapt the following tips to different configurations. It's implicitly
assumed that you'll be root when editing/fixing/hacking.
And now, lads, sleeves up.