Hi Hank, I have just completed 46 minutes and now going onto the advanced where we put all the basics together. This is fantastic and just what I needed. Quite a few I have used whilst on our journey but lots I've not come across. I am going to go through my notes before progressing tomorrow morning. Very pleased. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful! There are a lot of basic commands that I didn't include because I figured you could find them easily. But the stuff that I thought would be useful to your job as a SysAdmin is what I included. I'm glad you like it.
@HankHacksHackers I'm so much into Cybersecurity. I wanted to start as a SOC Engineer, but I didn't know the path to follow. I saw the SOC tutorials on your playlist. Thanks again!
@@amaradave offensive pays more but has a higher skill requirement. Defensive doesn’t pay as well (but it still pays great) and has more opportunities, and less skill requirements
@@kevinhampton230 there are many routes, I can tell you mine. I started playing with Linux on my own time, familiarised with it and how it works. Then I did a course on networking that had a stage at the end in a company. They ended up hiring me and I was doing hardware replacement jobs and some basic sysadmin stuff. I tried to do more and more of the latter and eventually I was working as a system administrator full time. I changed a bunch of companies and they all offered training. At this point I was a senior system administrator and I was working with developers a lot. I started working with automation systems like Ansible and Jenkins, started doing a bit of basic coding and learning about development and deployment cycles. This is what led to DevOps coming from a sysadmin perspective. If you can, start learning some python and javascript right away, that would have been immensely useful in retrospect. Now I'm 20+ years into my career, without a university degree by the way, and there's always work for someone with these skills. Good luck!
@@HankHacksHackers yes I'm fully aware and have already downloaded it. I was watching it when I heard you mention about this particular video so I decided to come watch this first before making the deep dive. I'll get back to you when I'm done with that one.
Yes, Hank, completed the tutorial and lots of value here. I certainly know much more than I did. Very useful, so many thanks. Going to practice now so they all sink in.
Great video, i realize that i know the majority of the commands, and even more. So i feel that this course is very basic, and i was looking for something hardcore. But i learn all of this duting my master in information security. For a 2h video is a great video for beginners.
@@ibuanokpeavwerosuo3524 thank you so much, and I’m very happy it’s helpful. The Linux+ video will be dropping in a few weeks so stay tuned for that one.
Incredible video my man. I'm glad that the algo put you on my feed with how informative this video is! Going to be using it as reference from now on :D
Thanks. I'm having online course and I'm honestly tired of some videos that actually take the same amount of time to explain each command, 2hrs + 2hrs + 2hrs... I understand some of those need more time to get deep enough into the subject but as a beginner it's certainly better to learn as many commands as possible and dive into each later on.
I haven't seen the video, but I can assure you that this is not a deep dive, not at all, the deep dive would be to compare all greps from like FreeBSD, NetBSD, Mac, BusyBox, GNU, Solaris or other Unix-es. All of them can be slightly different. You can also do 20 hours on grep+awk alone, Perl's, grep's and Python's regexes are probably different too in some ways, this is an endless pit really, you just scratching the surface here, so good luck.
@@HankHacksHackers I thought about doing that, but my spoken english is terrible, plus it wouldn't make sense to make a few videos, they will have very few views. I don't want to do youtube professionally.
@@farrenperry5550 that’s a good one. It’s a gigantic topic though, and I don’t think one single video would cover it. I’ll probably dedicate a whole playlist to it. It’s definitely added to the stockpile of requests though.
@@richarddixon8365 I actually considered it, and will be putting it in the next SysAdmin video. With many more core concepts as well as advanced concepts.
@@HankHacksHackers .Yeah,I had one inside of my VS editor,so I was like why cant I have one for the kali command line. I'm doing a cut & paste but I saw GPTme on GitHub,so that might work.
Yeah you can also download GPT for your desktop, and train your own version of it for whatever you need. There are also trained versions of GPT that you can use.
@@HankHacksHackers .know what funny? By next sept,when the next class of AI is dropped,we'll come back to this comment section & laugh. We'll be in a different universe next summer.
Hi Hank , never saw your channel before , and after watching the first 3 minutes understood why i never saw , and wont come back to it ever again , thx for being so good at showing what you want encourage people to do in the first 3 minutes.
@@AyilaraAminatJumai it’s my pleasure. I’m glad you liked it! If you go to this link, you will see our “Join” page. RUclips.com/@HankHacksHackers/join The Python Automations start from the Cyber Agent tier and above. Look forward to seeing you there!
Unix is NOT a language. It's an OS that Linux and MacOS are based off of. They follow the POSIX standards that were assigned by bell labs (the creators of Unix) decades ago. The language that all of these systems have in common are Shell (.sh) or Bash (Bourne Again Shell). There are plenty of other shells, but bash has been the standard for decades, while ZSH is becoming the standard in recent years. I use Bash, but ZSH was ok, I couldn't really tell too many differences, but that old school bash prompt is just the way I like it!
@@darthkielbasa I think a lot of people use Linux/Windows as either OS or "languages" interchangeably. There are definitely the technical aspects of it where Bash would be considered the language for Linux, but I've seen a lot of job applications use "Linux" as their reference to the language that they want the applicant to know. Ultimately, I think this is one of those deep details, and it doesn't necessarily take anything away from the content.
@@darthkielbasa Unix is a family of multitasking, multi-user computer operating systems that derive from the original AT&T Unix, whose development started in 1969 at the Bell Labs research center by Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, and others. From Wikipedia…
@robotron1236 From my experience, a lot of people refer to Linux/Unix/Windows as languages as well as operating systems. You're technically correct, though. And I appreciate your focus on the details.
I’m trying to get my Linux + certification. I’m paying for a class but the instructor is not showing us the essentials we need hopefully this helps me because I’m not trying to fail
@@kxngandalcio125 I think if you combine what you learn here with your class, you’ll be good to pass your exam. If you don’t mind, May I ask where you’re taking the class and how much it costs?
@@HankHacksHackers i taking the class through my union its a 3 in one course linux,network and securtiy sorry for the late message one of family members pass away. but im trying to pass the exam to change my career path
@@HankHacksHackers the cost I don’t know because I got through it with my union at my job. So I’m just trying to switch career paths. I like Linux and want to understand it but at the same time I want to pass the exam because my union are paying for all 3 Linux, network and security
@@FloridaInvestor this would be a good start… I am currently working on the Linux+ training series and that will be much more complete (and much longer) than this one
Not a sys admin. An Electrical Engineer. Have been using Nix since 1990. Code in C using nano. Have set up and managed web, mail, and storage servers for over 20 years. Anyone hiring?
This video is part of my watch next after ITprotv, ive been preping for linux + 005 2nd take. I failed my first try being cocky and tried to study for 8days and i ended up getting 656 out of 720. Not bad tho but im pissed off.
I've seen tons of Linux videos and I've wasted a lot of time. I haven't invested much time into these videos just yet, but looking at the comments this video seems legit. Am I picking up the right vibes here?
@@BrianThomas I want to say it’s legit but I would be biased as I’m the creator. The time stamps will show you what the video covers and you can use that as a guide for finding the value you’re looking for
@@attribute-4677 lol actually no Gemini doesn’t generate images that well. I used the Meta Imagine AI. It’s great and most of my thumbnails come from that. Microsoft Edge browser has an image generator as well and it does pretty well.
will i be able to pass the linux + exam with your video because im trying to understand what my instructor is teaching and its not working and i have to take the exam in 2 weeks
@@kxngandalcio125 first off, congrats on preparing for your Linux+ exam. I would say that there are a lot of commands here that will be on the Linux+ exam, but I’m not sure if it covers everything. There are 4 general sections and I’d say this video covers the System Management section fairly well.
Hi Hank, I switched off before the 2 minute mark, because of your selling the subscription, before, I even have a chance to see if you are worth subscribing to. Your ducks aren't lined up in a row.
@@reaomaol you could’ve easily skipped to the content using any of the timestamps but that’s your prerogative. Thank you for your feedback. Best of luck to you.
Title misleading while scrolling down random videos. I work as a RHEL admin as there is so much more than just knowing Linux. You need to be proficient in shell Scripting and DevOps configuration management tools like Ansible, puppet or chef, solid background in Networking, virtualization, security, Databases and familiar with active directory services in the real world. You also need to be familiar with docker, kubernetes and cloud platforms working with openshift...
@@eman0828 I look forward to seeing your tutorials on everything that you just outlined in the future. Drop your IT channel name since I only see music production on your current channel.
@@aflyingshark it’s the sound that the terminal makes when you press a key that doesn’t have a response… for example when you delete something all the way, and then you press backspace again and there’s nothing left to delete.
@@hlubradio2318 I did it to make sure if someone who is brand new is watching, they would understand all of its use cases. Also, the time stamps are in the comments for a reason. You can skip to the parts that are most useful to you. Good luck.
It doen volgens mien iedere iter eeh mr robot gezien mo nie iedere iter loopt me open wonden up zen voet ! Ek dubbele persoonlijkheid aangemaakt ku zien ? Mo deen ging gon sleuren en trekken voe zen kot te kunnen betalen omda kleine een dak boven zen kop zoe den en nie wilde bie zen kloten wilde gehad worden
@@Brownnoise443 lmao not everything on Reddit is true bro. It all depends on what you’re using the OS for. There’s a reason why Kali is popular among hackers: it’s open-source, super flexible, and works well for pentesting. Windows is good for system administrators and defensive security. Basically, there’s a point for everything and most Reddit people are snobby and pretentious.
@@HankHacksHackers oh totaly I was was just being a tad sarcastic lol Bunch culls on Reddit some times lol but I know I ran into some haters myself recently was pretty sad really
@@Brownnoise443 lol I figured as much 😁 imagine the type of hate I get on here for having this channel. And of course it’s from people who would never do this themselves and they just want to pass on their opinions
@@raiden7821 if you know how to provision new users, groups and permissions of those entities, as well as the basics, then yes you can consider yourself a Linux admin
@@WPO-m8z that’s unfortunate because the content is good but you do you. Interesting that this is coming from the person with a generic username and an empty account. Best of luck to you in all of your ventures
@@HankHacksHackers Lol broo don't let these fools let u back down often u get obstacles while u r climbing the stairs of success.. btw love your content
@@exploitable0x1 I appreciate the kind words brother. I don’t get bothered by things like this and it’s definitely not going to stop the content from coming in.
@@DylanSegui-k2y when you say projects, what are you referring to? Yes, I have multiple Discords for the various tiers of our Hackaholics Anonymous members.
@@HankHacksHackers sorry I am new to the IT field. When I say projects, I’m referring to hands-on labs or setups where you test and implement cybersecurity tools, build personal home labs, or networks for security testing. I’m looking for practical projects that I can follow along with to gain experience and add to my resume. Do you have any content like that on your channel, or any recommendations? I achieved my security+ not too long ago.
@@kpwlek it’s hyperbolic. It’s not literal. These commands are what is required from a starting SysAdmin but it takes longer than 2 hours to memorize and internalize them. Good on you for your experience of 20 years. You obviously don’t need this video.
Individual Command Timestamps
-Basic CLI Commands-
03:09 uname
04:11 mount
05:39 whoami
07:01 ifconfig
10:02 date, uptime, man
-System Navigation-
13:00 echo & variables
15:04 pwd, ls, cd
20:00 ls -a
21:18 ls -la
24:57 ls -R
28:28 ls -r
28:47 ls -t, ls -S
29:32 ls -1
30:32 tree
-System Operation-
35:50 mkdir
36:42 touch
36:57 cat
39:30 cp
40:32 mv
42:37 head
44:11 tail
-Finding & Searching-
46:26 find by name
55:37 grep
01:02:14 locate
01:03:42 find by user
01:04:58 find by last modified time
-Find Users & Files By User Permissions-
01:07:34 /etc/passwd
01:08:55 find by permissions
-Modifying Permissions-
01:14:40 chmod
-User Provisioning & Modification-
01:22:56 useradd
01:24:46 passwd
01:27:40 deluser
01:28:33 groupdel
01:30:09 groupadd
01:30:54 usermod
01:31:30 groups
01:33:54 getent
01:34:57 gpasswd
01:37:29 /etc/group
01:38:51 Complete User Provisioning
01:44:17 Shared Folders / Group Permissions
01:45:27 chown
01:48:52 rm / rmdir
😊
@@Bukky3388 🤓
Thank you! I wish you in some Parallel Universe you make it with Ice Spice or Something! ☺☺☺
@@vasiovasio Why not in this universe? And why not someone hotter? 😆😁 thanks though 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
@HankHacksHackers Greed is Good! 😂😂😂
Thanks for taking the time to put this together. I need to refresh my terminal skills in linux. Being used to using mac os helps a ton.
You're very welcome! I'm glad this is helpful.
Hi Hank, I have just completed 46 minutes and now going onto the advanced where we put all the basics together. This is fantastic and just what I needed. Quite a few I have used whilst on our journey but lots I've not come across. I am going to go through my notes before progressing tomorrow morning. Very pleased. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful! There are a lot of basic commands that I didn't include because I figured you could find them easily. But the stuff that I thought would be useful to your job as a SysAdmin is what I included. I'm glad you like it.
Veel te loote om kali te leren 😢
Kaan do nooit moeten beginnen up die kut have
@@kevincalebout3244 Sorry I don't understand what you're saying here.
Kleine wil sport doen up schoole gen probleem doe woor daje goeste in et (kmeugen toch nog eigen mening en algelijk ?)
I've gone through the channel and I must say I'm impressed. Thank you for your time in creating and sharing these videos free of charge. Blessings!
@@amaradave it’s my pleasure and thank you! Welcome to the channel!
@HankHacksHackers I'm so much into Cybersecurity. I wanted to start as a SOC Engineer, but I didn't know the path to follow. I saw the SOC tutorials on your playlist. Thanks again!
@@amaradave you’re welcome! Cybersecurity is a big world, and there’s a lot to learn. You’ll have a blast!
@@HankHacksHackers allow me to ask, between offensive and defensive side of Cybersecurity, which one has more and better opportunities?
@@amaradave offensive pays more but has a higher skill requirement. Defensive doesn’t pay as well (but it still pays great) and has more opportunities, and less skill requirements
I absolutely enjoyed this video. I work as a DevOps Engineer and this was a good refresher for me. I look forward to more content. Cheers
@@Jay2Ops I’m very happy to hear that. Thank you for your perspective.
@Jay2Ops please how did you study to become an DevOps. I'm interested and wanna be a DevOps engineer
@Jay2Ops please how did you study to become an DevOps. I'm interested and wanna be a DevOps engineer
@@kevinhampton230 I spent hundreds of hours watching tutorials and practicing. There’s no other way
@@kevinhampton230 there are many routes, I can tell you mine. I started playing with Linux on my own time, familiarised with it and how it works. Then I did a course on networking that had a stage at the end in a company. They ended up hiring me and I was doing hardware replacement jobs and some basic sysadmin stuff. I tried to do more and more of the latter and eventually I was working as a system administrator full time. I changed a bunch of companies and they all offered training. At this point I was a senior system administrator and I was working with developers a lot. I started working with automation systems like Ansible and Jenkins, started doing a bit of basic coding and learning about development and deployment cycles. This is what led to DevOps coming from a sysadmin perspective. If you can, start learning some python and javascript right away, that would have been immensely useful in retrospect. Now I'm 20+ years into my career, without a university degree by the way, and there's always work for someone with these skills. Good luck!
Dude, seriously, THANK YOU for this
You are absolutely welcome
Awesome content. Just watched for now, but will definitely do a hands-on with it soon. Thank you very much.
@@doziemadu5411 you’re very welcome. I just uploaded an entire series on Linux+ as well so definitely check that out too
@@HankHacksHackers yes I'm fully aware and have already downloaded it. I was watching it when I heard you mention about this particular video so I decided to come watch this first before making the deep dive. I'll get back to you when I'm done with that one.
@doziemadu5411 awesome !
Yes, Hank, completed the tutorial and lots of value here. I certainly know much more than I did. Very useful, so many thanks. Going to practice now so they all sink in.
@@davidpickering6071 very happy to hear it David. I’m going to do a part 2 to this with more advanced content
Excellent news Hank. Looking forward to it. My confidence is growing.
Excellent!
Hank awesome video first of all. U are making open source really open for all. Great learning. Already made a fan out of me today that's for sure
@@abhijeetsarma3195 very happy to hear it, thank you so much for the kind words. That’s definitely the goal
Thank you for this video. Please make more. You are a good teacher and you explain very clearly.
@@kentprice9912 thank you for the kind words. Linux+ is on the way
Great video, i realize that i know the majority of the commands, and even more. So i feel that this course is very basic, and i was looking for something hardcore. But i learn all of this duting my master in information security.
For a 2h video is a great video for beginners.
@@PedroCorreia-e6t thank you Pedro. There’s a new video being released on Linux+ in the upcoming weeks. Stay tuned!
This is a really great video, Hank. It’s perfect for a beginner
@@ibuanokpeavwerosuo3524 thank you so much, and I’m very happy it’s helpful. The Linux+ video will be dropping in a few weeks so stay tuned for that one.
Great! Looking forward to it!
@@ibuanokpeavwerosuo3524 yeah!!
Incredible video my man. I'm glad that the algo put you on my feed with how informative this video is! Going to be using it as reference from now on :D
@@Mackintac thank you so much! 🙏🏼🙏🏼 Very happy that you found it useful 🤓
Learned so much, thank you for taking the time to share this,
@@vexy1987 I’m very happy to hear that. And You’re very welcome!
Amazing video, very thorough & a great refresher. Thanks!
@@Jordan-sk8pm I’m happy you think so!
truly appreciate your patient training and helpful post. thank you!
@@happy24seven it’s genuinely my pleasure
I am so bless with your teaching and clarity. Thanks. Pls can you generate a video on advance linux system administration in a large workload.
Thank you for the kind words. Yes, it's definitely in the plans to do an advanced version of the linux sysadmin.
this is so cool i am 2 years into IT thank you for this
@@eliasperez5168 you’re very welcome!!
Thanks a ton .Great content. You articulated so nicely.
@@girishchandra2236 my pleasure. Glad you got value from it. And thank you for the kind words
Well done! As a first step to begin mastering Linux shell I do appreciate your effort. Nevertheless it's a long way to Tipperary... Thanks a lot.
@@pietrogazzera5733 you’re very welcome! I tried my best with the time and resources that I had and I’m glad it was useful to you. 🙏🏼
Hy Hank thanks for the tutorial. Thanks for your time to explain especially for the beginners
@@peternyakonda8869 You’re very welcome
AMAZING thank you !! LIFE-SAVER
You are most welcome! I'm glad it's helpful :)
Thank you for everything you do!
It's my pleasure! Thank you for being here! :)
Wicked training. I’m transitioning into Soc analysis and yout training and this channel are really helpful
keep up the great work, your a good teacher
Appreciate it! Congrats on making the switch to SOC Analyst! You're going to love it!
Thanks Mr Hank got my sub top notch education.
@@prashlovessamosa it’s my pleasure. Welcome to the community!
Hank! I can't just thank you man. Please continue.
@@shamimhossen6902 will do!
Awesome Indeed... Great job Hank.
@@vusinkosi7971 thank you! Glad you like it
Thank you so much for this
@@arnoldbailey8803 you’re so very welcome!
Thanks. I'm having online course and I'm honestly tired of some videos that actually take the same amount of time to explain each command, 2hrs + 2hrs + 2hrs... I understand some of those need more time to get deep enough into the subject but as a beginner it's certainly better to learn as many commands as possible and dive into each later on.
@@HaloDenRAth you’re welcome! I agree with you
I haven't seen the video, but I can assure you that this is not a deep dive, not at all, the deep dive would be to compare all greps from like FreeBSD, NetBSD, Mac, BusyBox, GNU, Solaris or other Unix-es. All of them can be slightly different. You can also do 20 hours on grep+awk alone, Perl's, grep's and Python's regexes are probably different too in some ways, this is an endless pit really, you just scratching the surface here, so good luck.
@@JamesSmith-ix5jd you sound very knowledgeable James, have you considered putting out a video on Linux?
@@JamesSmith-ix5jd Read my comment again
@@HankHacksHackers I thought about doing that, but my spoken english is terrible, plus it wouldn't make sense to make a few videos, they will have very few views. I don't want to do youtube professionally.
Hank this is amazing content 💯
@@Net-Guru I’m so glad you like it thank you!
WohOoooo thanks! this is exactly what i need!
@@RickySupriyadi you’re very welcome! Happy to hear it
@@HankHacksHackers wow got replied, nice... good content really useful.
@@RickySupriyadi of course you get a reply! And I’m glad you’re finding the content useful
@@HankHacksHackers yea, well I've been looking around your videos... many are really useful, well yea I'm subscribing.
@@RickySupriyadi thank you so much, that means a lot.
You just got a new sub.
Awesome! Welcome to the community, Ismail!
thank you very much, this really help
@@Defender2101 You’re very welcome. I’m happy to hear it!
Thanks! 👊🏼
@@8itfrix881 you got it
Thanks for the video!! What Linux platform are you using in the video?
@@slydawg0811 You’re very welcome. I was using an Ubuntu desktop distribution that comes preconfigured with all of the TryHavkMe virtual machines
I thought I had already answered this comment. I was using the Ubuntu/Kali Linux distro's that come with the virtual AttachBoxes in TryHackMe.
Thank you!
@@cihancatal3285 you are very welcome!
THANK YOU
@@ahmedabdelazim862 you’re welcome!
I need a video to study rhcsa
@@farrenperry5550 that’s a good one. It’s a gigantic topic though, and I don’t think one single video would cover it. I’ll probably dedicate a whole playlist to it. It’s definitely added to the stockpile of requests though.
I was hoping you would go over the sed and awk commands. Those are very important for SysAdmin work. Will you go over these eventually?
@@richarddixon8365 I actually considered it, and will be putting it in the next SysAdmin video. With many more core concepts as well as advanced concepts.
In addition to your video,i also use an AI Assistant that helps with bash-linux commands and analysis of outputs
@@mrd6869 very smart move
@@HankHacksHackers .Yeah,I had one inside of my VS editor,so I was like why cant I have one for the kali command line. I'm doing a cut & paste but I saw GPTme on GitHub,so that might work.
Yeah you can also download GPT for your desktop, and train your own version of it for whatever you need. There are also trained versions of GPT that you can use.
@@HankHacksHackers .know what funny?
By next sept,when the next class of AI is dropped,we'll come back to this comment section & laugh.
We'll be in a different universe next summer.
@@mrd6869 yeah totally! I just did a video on SOAR that’s dropping soon and it’s basically AI designed just for security automation and response.
I like how the background music is the instrumental to Thong Song by Sisqo
Lmao it's a sample/remix (Copyrights and all that)
14:00 $ info=S(uname -a)
bash: syntax error near unexpected token `('
Why does it work for you, but I do get an error?
@@maanvol it should be info=$ … it looks like you’re using the letter S instead of a $
My ISP doesn't let me put my own router hardware. Can you make a video about how we can circumvent that? Thanks
@@keylanoslokj1806 I’ll do my best with that one. I’m not a specialist in networking so I’ll have to do some digging before I can pull that off.
@@HankHacksHackers thanks 👍🙏
@@keylanoslokj1806 you got it 🤓
Hi Hank , never saw your channel before , and after watching the first 3 minutes understood why i never saw , and wont come back to it ever again , thx for being so good at showing what you want encourage people to do in the first 3 minutes.
Best of luck to you
Thank you so much, i love to know the automation. And how do i join the community
@@AyilaraAminatJumai it’s my pleasure. I’m glad you liked it!
If you go to this link, you will see our “Join” page.
RUclips.com/@HankHacksHackers/join
The Python Automations start from the Cyber Agent tier and above.
Look forward to seeing you there!
GREAT!🎉😃
Thanks! 😃
Unix is NOT a language. It's an OS that Linux and MacOS are based off of. They follow the POSIX standards that were assigned by bell labs (the creators of Unix) decades ago. The language that all of these systems have in common are Shell (.sh) or Bash (Bourne Again Shell). There are plenty of other shells, but bash has been the standard for decades, while ZSH is becoming the standard in recent years. I use Bash, but ZSH was ok, I couldn't really tell too many differences, but that old school bash prompt is just the way I like it!
@@robotron1236 🫡👍🏼
Wrong
@@darthkielbasa I think a lot of people use Linux/Windows as either OS or "languages" interchangeably. There are definitely the technical aspects of it where Bash would be considered the language for Linux, but I've seen a lot of job applications use "Linux" as their reference to the language that they want the applicant to know. Ultimately, I think this is one of those deep details, and it doesn't necessarily take anything away from the content.
@@darthkielbasa Unix is a family of multitasking, multi-user computer operating systems that derive from the original AT&T Unix, whose development started in 1969 at the Bell Labs research center by Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, and others.
From Wikipedia…
@robotron1236 From my experience, a lot of people refer to Linux/Unix/Windows as languages as well as operating systems. You're technically correct, though. And I appreciate your focus on the details.
Hi
This video is
Which Linux software are you using?
@@fullran8001 Ubuntu
Hey Hank. Thanks for your videos. Can you make a video like this Linux one but learning Python instead. Thanks
@@John-yx2is great idea! Absolutely!
can i do this using chrome OS command prompt?
@@cold-frontin_penguin7902 I’m not sure if it’s a Linux based command prompt… you can run a few of the commands and see if they work.
Very good. Resume at 35:40.
@@Tomty369 you think that would be a good place to start the advanced Linux video?
I’m trying to get my Linux + certification. I’m paying for a class but the instructor is not showing us the essentials we need hopefully this helps me because I’m not trying to fail
@@kxngandalcio125 I think if you combine what you learn here with your class, you’ll be good to pass your exam. If you don’t mind, May I ask where you’re taking the class and how much it costs?
There is also a great series on ITpro TV for linux+ its 20 hours but really in depth and specific to that exact cert
Great recommendation, Paul.
@@HankHacksHackers i taking the class through my union its a 3 in one course linux,network and securtiy sorry for the late message one of family members pass away. but im trying to pass the exam to change my career path
@@HankHacksHackers the cost I don’t know because I got through it with my union at my job. So I’m just trying to switch career paths. I like Linux and want to understand it but at the same time I want to pass the exam because my union are paying for all 3 Linux, network and security
COOL
@@MISTYEYED. 😎
Will this video be enough to help me land a job?
@@FloridaInvestor this would be a good start… I am currently working on the Linux+ training series and that will be much more complete (and much longer) than this one
Not a sys admin. An Electrical Engineer. Have been using Nix since 1990. Code in C using nano. Have set up and managed web, mail, and storage servers for over 20 years. Anyone hiring?
i feel like electrical engineers are pretty in demand, no?
@@HankHacksHackers Not once they hit 60 years old.
@@raydall3734 oh I see… well more power to you sir. It’s the perfect time to reinvent yourself.
@@raydall3734 Same boat. I feel you.
I know damn well you're not playing the Thong Song as background music lol
@@dockdowdell lmao I sampled it and made a slower version of the beat. Great catch though! 🤣🤣
@@HankHacksHackers it's super nice. I want it!! Great vid btw
@@sh0k0nes I’m gonna have to release it.
@@HankHacksHackers lemme know👍
@ will do
This video is part of my watch next after ITprotv, ive been preping for linux + 005 2nd take. I failed my first try being cocky and tried to study for 8days and i ended up getting 656 out of 720. Not bad tho but im pissed off.
you'll definitely pass next time
I've seen tons of Linux videos and I've wasted a lot of time. I haven't invested much time into these videos just yet, but looking at the comments this video seems legit. Am I picking up the right vibes here?
Oh yeah this is legit! 8 minutes in and I've seen stuff that others took an hour to talk about if at all. Thank you 👍🏾 Hank! Thank you very much 😊
@@BrianThomas I want to say it’s legit but I would be biased as I’m the creator. The time stamps will show you what the video covers and you can use that as a guide for finding the value you’re looking for
@@BrianThomas I’m glad you came to that conclusion after 8 minutes!!
If you can make command specific timestamps for this video that’ll be greatly appreciated man.
oh damn lol ok bro I'll do my best. If you can give me a couple of days I got you.
@@HankHacksHackers You’re a fucking god appreciate it 💪🏼
@@Albo_AK Of course, bro you got it.
Alright, the command timestamps are pinned at the top of the comment section. Enjoy!
Did you use Gemini to generate that image? Lol
@@attribute-4677 lol actually no Gemini doesn’t generate images that well. I used the Meta Imagine AI. It’s great and most of my thumbnails come from that. Microsoft Edge browser has an image generator as well and it does pretty well.
Really good Video. Thank u. Like and sub.
@@zeus_sec thank you so much! Happy to hear it. Welcome to the community!!
Wow. ❤
:)
i love the thong song remix music 😂😂😂
@@lilham9044 nice catch!!
Geneva Convention, Geneva Convention.......
@@maxoverridemax …?
🥺💬 Good content and explanation, directory, and user permission access management too.
@@Jirayu.Kaewprateep thank you!
will i be able to pass the linux + exam with your video because im trying to understand what my instructor is teaching and its not working and i have to take the exam in 2 weeks
@@kxngandalcio125 first off, congrats on preparing for your Linux+ exam. I would say that there are a lot of commands here that will be on the Linux+ exam, but I’m not sure if it covers everything. There are 4 general sections and I’d say this video covers the System Management section fairly well.
Hi Hank, I switched off before the 2 minute mark, because of your selling the subscription, before, I even have a chance to see if you are worth subscribing to. Your ducks aren't lined up in a row.
@@reaomaol you could’ve easily skipped to the content using any of the timestamps but that’s your prerogative. Thank you for your feedback. Best of luck to you.
Bro is that the thong song in the background
@@justblaz604 🤣 it’s a sampled version of the beat. Nice catch! 🤣
Unix is not a language. C and C++ are languages. Unix is an operating system. OS X has a BSD kernel and Linux is a derivative.
@@drtoothpaste thank you for the detailed observation
Title misleading while scrolling down random videos. I work as a RHEL admin as there is so much more than just knowing Linux. You need to be proficient in shell Scripting and DevOps configuration management tools like Ansible, puppet or chef, solid background in Networking, virtualization, security, Databases and familiar with active directory services in the real world. You also need to be familiar with docker, kubernetes and cloud platforms working with openshift...
@@eman0828 I look forward to seeing your tutorials on everything that you just outlined in the future. Drop your IT channel name since I only see music production on your current channel.
Blah blah. Overhyped credentials.
Hay Hank, new to your channel. Very interested in python automation. Loving this video.
@@SancLogic definitely going to be releasing a Python video soon. Welcome to the community!
Is no one gonna mention the massive clickbait, I only saw one monitor 😂
@@calwoods3762 what’s the clickbait?
Harris Larry Hernandez Matthew Gonzalez Kevin
@@EquipteHarry 🤓
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏🏅🎖🏆🦾🤜🤛
Thank you!!
Wtf is that droplet sound?
@@aflyingshark it’s the sound that the terminal makes when you press a key that doesn’t have a response… for example when you delete something all the way, and then you press backspace again and there’s nothing left to delete.
@@HankHacksHackers got it! I thought I was going mad
@ LOL I completely understand… things like that drive me nuts too
Wilson Jason Taylor Jennifer Anderson Christopher
@@NicolaHartman-e6p 💪🏼
Please answer me
@@fullran8001 what’s your question
Davis Laura Brown Timothy Moore Susan
@@jackymarcel4108 🤓
Dude you seriously had to spend that much time with find?
@@hlubradio2318 I did it to make sure if someone who is brand new is watching, they would understand all of its use cases. Also, the time stamps are in the comments for a reason. You can skip to the parts that are most useful to you. Good luck.
What if the whole point is to be a tyrannacle system admin ? All of this has been for nothing
@@mikepict9011 😂🤣 what???
It doen volgens mien iedere iter eeh mr robot gezien mo nie iedere iter loopt me open wonden up zen voet ! Ek dubbele persoonlijkheid aangemaakt ku zien ? Mo deen ging gon sleuren en trekken voe zen kot te kunnen betalen omda kleine een dak boven zen kop zoe den en nie wilde bie zen kloten wilde gehad worden
Even after the translation, basically all I understood was a Mr. Robot reference. 😅
Just don’t use kali, Reddit told me kali is the worst and I’m a terrible person for using it
@@Brownnoise443 lmao not everything on Reddit is true bro. It all depends on what you’re using the OS for. There’s a reason why Kali is popular among hackers: it’s open-source, super flexible, and works well for pentesting. Windows is good for system administrators and defensive security. Basically, there’s a point for everything and most Reddit people are snobby and pretentious.
@@HankHacksHackers oh totaly I was was just being a tad sarcastic lol
Bunch culls on Reddit some times lol but I know I ran into some haters myself recently was pretty sad really
@@Brownnoise443 lol I figured as much 😁 imagine the type of hate I get on here for having this channel. And of course it’s from people who would never do this themselves and they just want to pass on their opinions
@@HankHacksHackers same asshats that use Hanna Montana Linux
LOLOLOL asshats is a good word
Another joker, you can't be anything in two hours 😂😂😂. Stop it!
@@kimutaifelix9092 it is obviously hyperbolic, but thanks for your opinion
Aren't these just basics info of linux otherwise i'll call myself linux administrator
@@raiden7821 if you know how to provision new users, groups and permissions of those entities, as well as the basics, then yes you can consider yourself a Linux admin
@@HankHacksHackers okay okay good to know i am one lol.
@@raiden7821 congrats!
AI thumbnail = Automatic dislike and channel not-recommend.
@@WPO-m8z that’s unfortunate because the content is good but you do you. Interesting that this is coming from the person with a generic username and an empty account. Best of luck to you in all of your ventures
I hate unproductive comments like this. Your life must be full of misery and hate. If you have nothing nice to say why say it?
my thoughts exactly
@@HankHacksHackers Lol broo don't let these fools let u back down often u get obstacles while u r climbing the stairs of success.. btw love your content
@@exploitable0x1 I appreciate the kind words brother. I don’t get bothered by things like this and it’s definitely not going to stop the content from coming in.
thanks
@@77seban you got it 💪🏼
Do you have any projects on your channel? Also do you have a discord?
@@DylanSegui-k2y when you say projects, what are you referring to?
Yes, I have multiple Discords for the various tiers of our Hackaholics Anonymous members.
@@HankHacksHackers sorry I am new to the IT field. When I say projects, I’m referring to hands-on labs or setups where you test and implement cybersecurity tools, build personal home labs, or networks for security testing. I’m looking for practical projects that I can follow along with to gain experience and add to my resume. Do you have any content like that on your channel, or any recommendations? I achieved my security+ not too long ago.
@@HankHacksHackers thank you for the quick response as well.
@@DylanSegui-k2y congrats on your cert! TryHackMe has many free rooms for you to do exactly what you’re talking about.
@@DylanSegui-k2y you’re very welcome. ☺️
lol wait 2 h :) what have I been doing for the last 20 years... cool video but dude come on..
@@kpwlek it’s hyperbolic. It’s not literal. These commands are what is required from a starting SysAdmin but it takes longer than 2 hours to memorize and internalize them. Good on you for your experience of 20 years. You obviously don’t need this video.