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Maintaining a Server | LandChad.net
Here are some important topics you should be familiar with whenever you are managing a server. Keep packages up to date. All GNU/Linux distributions use package managers to easily be able to install and update packages without manually down...
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Here are some important topics you should be familiar with whenever you are managing a server. Keep packages up to date. All GNU/Linux distributions use package managers to easily be able to install and update packages without manually downloading them. On Debian, which we use here for these tutorial the package manager is apt-get or apt for short. It's a good idea to use apt to keep your software reasonably up to date. apt update apt upgrade Not only do up-to-date packages often come with more features, but they can also fix any possible security bugs. Troubleshooting general problems Often when you are installing something new, you might miss a step and run into an error, so it's important to know how to check and see what errors have happened on your computer. On Debian and other GNU/Linux distributions that use systemd (most of them), you can use the command journalctl to look at the system's general log. You will probably want to run journalctl -xe as the -x and -e as that gives the most information and starts you at the bottom of the log to see the most recent errors. Some programs do not use this system log, but have their own logs stored in /var/log/ , or sometimes it's more convenient to look at a specific program's log to see only its issues. For example, we can see that in /var/log/nginx/ , nginx produces both error and access files. The access files show you all the times people connect to files on your server and much more. We can look at the most recent errors by running: tail -n 25 /var/log/nginx/error.log The command tail -n 25 means "show me the last 25 lines of this file." You can replace that with less to browse the whole file. In less , navigate with arrows or vim-keys and exit with q . systemctl Another tool on systemd distributions is systemctl . At a basic level, use systemctl status put-service-name-here to see if a system service is running and its most recent log. But there's much more to systemctl . For example, you can run systemctl stop nginx to stop NginX and systemctl start nginx to start it back up (or use restart for both). When you make changes to a program's configuration files, reload well make them reload them. If you no longer want a service to start when the system is rebooted, use disable , or conversely, to make a service start on reboot use enable . Finding Files Especially if you're new to how a GNU/Linux system is arranged, you might need help finding files. To find program-related files, you can just use whereis : $ whereis nginx: /usr/sbin/nginx /usr/lib/nginx /etc/nginx /usr/share/nginx /usr/share/man/man8/nginx.8.gz This command lists the directories related to that program. For example, /etc/nginx is where the configuration files are and /usr/share/nginx is where the library and module-like files are. But whereis can be used only with installed programs. A more general tool is the pair of updatedb and locate . updatedb is a command that quickly indexes every file and directory on your computer. Then you can run locate to find a file containing a given name. After running updatedb , try running locate nginx to find all files with "nginx" in their name. You can make your search more specific by chaining other Unix commands through pipes. For example, grep takes input and returns only lines that match an extra argument. In the example below, we locate all files with "nginx" in the name, but we use grep to only show us those with the word "available" in them. root@landchad:~# locate nginx | grep available /etc/nginx/modules-available /etc/nginx/sites-available /etc/nginx/sites-available/default /etc/nginx/sites-available/landchad /usr/share/nginx/modules-available /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-http-auth-pam.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-http-dav-ext.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-http-echo.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-http-geoip.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-http-image-filter.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-http-subs-filter.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-http-upstream-fair.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-http-xslt-filter.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-mail.conf /usr/share/nginx/modules-available/mod-stream.conf updatedb is an ideal candidate for a cronjob so you don't have to worry about running each time. For example, adding the following to your crontab will run updatedb every 30 minutes: */30 * * * * /usr/bin/updatedb