administering-linux
Manage Linux systems covering systemd services, process management, filesystems, networking, performance tuning, and troubleshooting. Use when deploying applications, optimizing server performance, diagnosing production issues, or managing users and security on Linux servers.
Best use case
administering-linux is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Manage Linux systems covering systemd services, process management, filesystems, networking, performance tuning, and troubleshooting. Use when deploying applications, optimizing server performance, diagnosing production issues, or managing users and security on Linux servers.
Teams using administering-linux should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/administering-linux/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How administering-linux Compares
| Feature / Agent | administering-linux | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Manage Linux systems covering systemd services, process management, filesystems, networking, performance tuning, and troubleshooting. Use when deploying applications, optimizing server performance, diagnosing production issues, or managing users and security on Linux servers.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Linux Administration Comprehensive Linux system administration for managing servers, deploying applications, and troubleshooting production issues in modern cloud-native environments. ## Purpose This skill teaches fundamental and intermediate Linux administration for DevOps engineers, SREs, backend developers, and platform engineers. Focus on systemd-based distributions (Ubuntu, RHEL, Debian, Fedora) covering service management, process monitoring, filesystem operations, user administration, performance tuning, log analysis, and network configuration. Modern infrastructure requires solid Linux fundamentals even with containerization. Container hosts run Linux, Kubernetes nodes need optimization, and troubleshooting production issues requires understanding systemd, processes, and logs. **Not Covered:** - Advanced networking (BGP, OSPF) - see `network-architecture` skill - Deep security hardening (compliance, pentesting) - see `security-hardening` skill - Configuration management at scale (Ansible, Puppet) - see `configuration-management` skill - Container orchestration - see `kubernetes-operations` skill ## When to Use This Skill Use when deploying custom applications, troubleshooting slow systems, investigating service failures, optimizing workloads, managing users, configuring SSH, monitoring disk space, scheduling tasks, diagnosing network issues, or applying performance tuning. ## Quick Start ### Essential Commands **Service Management:** ```bash systemctl start nginx # Start service systemctl stop nginx # Stop service systemctl restart nginx # Restart service systemctl status nginx # Check status systemctl enable nginx # Enable at boot journalctl -u nginx -f # Follow service logs ``` **Process Monitoring:** ```bash top # Interactive process monitor htop # Enhanced process monitor ps aux | grep process_name # Find specific process kill -15 PID # Graceful shutdown (SIGTERM) kill -9 PID # Force kill (SIGKILL) ``` **Disk Usage:** ```bash df -h # Filesystem usage du -sh /path/to/dir # Directory size ncdu /path # Interactive disk analyzer ``` **Log Analysis:** ```bash journalctl -f # Follow all logs journalctl -u service -f # Follow service logs journalctl --since "1 hour ago" # Filter by time journalctl -p err # Show errors only ``` **User Management:** ```bash useradd -m -s /bin/bash username # Create user with home dir passwd username # Set password usermod -aG sudo username # Add to sudo group userdel -r username # Delete user and home dir ``` ## Core Concepts ### Systemd Architecture Systemd is the standard init system and service manager. Systemd units define services, timers, targets, and other system resources. **Unit File Locations (priority order):** - `/etc/systemd/system/` - Custom units (highest priority) - `/run/systemd/system/` - Runtime units (transient) - `/lib/systemd/system/` - System-provided units (don't modify) **Key Unit Types:** `.service` (services), `.timer` (scheduled tasks), `.target` (unit groups), `.socket` (socket-activated) **Essential systemctl Commands:** ```bash systemctl daemon-reload # Reload unit files after changes systemctl list-units --type=service systemctl list-timers # Show all timers systemctl cat nginx.service # Show unit file content systemctl edit nginx.service # Create override file ``` For detailed systemd reference, see `references/systemd-guide.md`. ### Process Management Processes are running programs with unique PIDs. Understanding process states, signals, and resource usage is essential for troubleshooting. **Process States:** R (running), S (sleeping), D (uninterruptible sleep/I/O), Z (zombie), T (stopped) **Common Signals:** SIGTERM (15) graceful, SIGKILL (9) force, SIGHUP (1) reload config **Process Priority:** ```bash nice -n 10 command # Start with lower priority renice -n 5 -p PID # Change priority of running process ``` ### Filesystem Hierarchy Essential directories: `/` (root), `/etc/` (config), `/var/` (variable data), `/opt/` (optional software), `/usr/` (user programs), `/home/` (user directories), `/tmp/` (temporary), `/boot/` (boot loader) **Filesystem Types Quick Reference:** - **ext4** - General purpose (default) - **XFS** - Large files, databases (RHEL default) - **Btrfs** - Snapshots, copy-on-write - **ZFS** - Enterprise, data integrity, NAS For filesystem management details including LVM and RAID, see `references/filesystem-management.md`. ### Package Management **Ubuntu/Debian (apt):** ```bash apt update && apt upgrade # Update system apt install package # Install package apt remove package # Remove package apt search keyword # Search packages ``` **RHEL/CentOS/Fedora (dnf):** ```bash dnf update # Update all packages dnf install package # Install package dnf remove package # Remove package dnf search keyword # Search packages ``` Use native package managers for system services; snap/flatpak for desktop apps and cross-distro compatibility. ## Decision Frameworks ### Troubleshooting Performance Issues **Investigation Workflow:** 1. **Identify bottleneck:** ```bash top # Quick overview uptime # Load averages ``` 2. **CPU Issues (usage >80%):** ```bash top # Press Shift+P to sort by CPU ps aux --sort=-%cpu | head ``` 3. **Memory Issues (swap used):** ```bash free -h # Memory usage top # Press Shift+M to sort by memory ``` 4. **Disk I/O Issues (high wa%):** ```bash iostat -x 1 # Disk statistics iotop # I/O by process ``` 5. **Network Issues:** ```bash ss -tunap # Active connections iftop # Bandwidth monitor ``` For comprehensive troubleshooting, see `references/troubleshooting-guide.md`. ### Filesystem Selection **Quick Decision:** - **Default/General** → ext4 - **Database servers** → XFS - **Large file storage** → XFS or ZFS - **NAS/File server** → ZFS - **Need snapshots** → Btrfs or ZFS ## Common Workflows ### Creating a Systemd Service **Step 1: Create unit file** ```bash sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/myapp.service ``` **Step 2: Unit file content** ```ini [Unit] Description=My Web Application After=network.target postgresql.service Requires=postgresql.service [Service] Type=simple User=myapp Group=myapp WorkingDirectory=/opt/myapp Environment="PORT=8080" ExecStart=/opt/myapp/bin/server ExecReload=/bin/kill -HUP $MAINPID Restart=on-failure RestartSec=5s StandardOutput=journal # Security hardening PrivateTmp=true NoNewPrivileges=true ProtectSystem=strict ReadWritePaths=/var/lib/myapp [Install] WantedBy=multi-user.target ``` **Step 3: Deploy and start** ```bash sudo useradd -r -s /bin/false myapp sudo mkdir -p /var/lib/myapp sudo chown myapp:myapp /var/lib/myapp sudo systemctl daemon-reload sudo systemctl enable myapp.service sudo systemctl start myapp.service sudo systemctl status myapp.service ``` For complete examples, see `examples/systemd-units/`. ### Systemd Timer (Cron Replacement) Create service and timer units for scheduled tasks. Timer unit specifies `OnCalendar=` schedule and `Persistent=true` for missed jobs. Service unit has `Type=oneshot`. See `examples/systemd-units/backup.timer` and `backup.service` for complete examples. ### SSH Hardening **Generate SSH key:** ```bash ssh-keygen -t ed25519 -C "admin@example.com" ssh-copy-id admin@server ``` **Harden sshd_config:** ```bash sudo nano /etc/ssh/sshd_config ``` Key settings: ```bash PermitRootLogin no PasswordAuthentication no PubkeyAuthentication yes MaxAuthTries 3 AllowUsers admin deploy X11Forwarding no Port 2222 # Optional ``` **Apply changes:** ```bash sudo sshd -t # Test sudo systemctl restart sshd # Apply (keep backup session!) ``` For complete SSH configuration, see `examples/configs/sshd_config.hardened` and `references/security-hardening.md`. ### Performance Tuning Configure sysctl parameters in `/etc/sysctl.d/99-custom.conf` for network tuning (tcp buffers, BBR congestion control), memory management (swappiness, cache pressure), and file descriptors. Set ulimits in `/etc/security/limits.conf` for nofile and nproc. Configure I/O schedulers and CPU governors. For comprehensive tuning, see `references/performance-tuning.md` and `examples/configs/` for templates. ### Log Investigation Use `systemctl status myapp` and `journalctl -u myapp` to investigate issues. Filter logs by time `--since`, severity `-p err`, or search patterns with `grep`. Correlate with system metrics using `top`, `df -h`, `free -h`. Check for OOM kills with `journalctl -k | grep -i oom`. For detailed workflows, see `references/troubleshooting-guide.md`. ### Essential Commands **Interface Management:** ```bash ip addr show # Show all interfaces ip link set eth0 up # Bring interface up ip addr add 192.168.1.100/24 dev eth0 ``` **Routing:** ```bash ip route show # Show routing table ip route get 8.8.8.8 # Show route to IP ip route add 10.0.0.0/24 via 192.168.1.1 ``` **Socket Statistics:** ```bash ss -tunap # All TCP/UDP connections ss -tlnp # Listening TCP ports ss -ulnp # Listening UDP ports ss -tnp state established # Established connections ``` ### Firewall Configuration **Ubuntu (ufw):** ```bash sudo ufw status sudo ufw enable sudo ufw allow 22/tcp # Allow SSH sudo ufw allow 80/tcp # Allow HTTP sudo ufw allow from 192.168.1.0/24 # Allow from subnet sudo ufw default deny incoming ``` **RHEL/CentOS (firewalld):** ```bash firewall-cmd --state firewall-cmd --list-all firewall-cmd --add-service=http --permanent firewall-cmd --add-port=8080/tcp --permanent firewall-cmd --reload ``` For complete network configuration including netplan, NetworkManager, and DNS, see `references/network-configuration.md`. ## Scheduled Tasks ### Cron Syntax ```bash crontab -e # Edit user crontab # Format: minute hour day month weekday command 0 2 * * * /usr/local/bin/backup.sh # Daily at 2:00 AM */5 * * * * /usr/local/bin/check-health.sh # Every 5 minutes 0 3 * * 0 /usr/local/bin/weekly-cleanup.sh # Weekly Sunday 3 AM @reboot /usr/local/bin/startup-script.sh # Run at boot ``` ### Systemd Timer Calendar Syntax ```bash OnCalendar=daily # Every day at midnight OnCalendar=*-*-* 02:00:00 # Daily at 2:00 AM OnCalendar=Mon *-*-* 09:00:00 # Every Monday at 9 AM OnCalendar=*-*-01 00:00:00 # 1st of every month OnBootSec=5min # 5 minutes after boot ``` ## Essential Tools ### Process Monitoring - `top`, `htop` - Real-time process monitor - `ps` - Report process status - `pgrep/pkill` - Find/kill by name ### Log Analysis - `journalctl` - Query systemd journal - `grep` - Search text patterns - `tail -f` - Follow log files ### Disk Management - `df` - Disk space usage - `du` - Directory space usage - `lsblk` - List block devices - `ncdu` - Interactive disk analyzer ### Network Tools - `ip` - Network configuration - `ss` - Socket statistics - `ping` - Test connectivity - `dig/nslookup` - DNS queries - `tcpdump` - Packet capture ### System Monitoring - **Netdata** - Real-time web dashboard - **Prometheus + Grafana** - Metrics collection - **ELK Stack** - Centralized logging ## Integration with Other Skills ### Kubernetes Operations Linux administration is the foundation for Kubernetes node management. Node optimization (sysctl tuning), kubelet as systemd service, container logs via journald, cgroups for resource limits. Example: ```bash # /etc/sysctl.d/99-kubernetes.conf net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables = 1 net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1 ``` For Kubernetes-specific operations, see `kubernetes-operations` skill. ### Configuration Management Linux administration provides knowledge; configuration management automates it. Ansible playbooks automate systemd service creation and system tuning. For automation at scale, see `configuration-management` skill. ### Security Hardening This skill covers SSH and firewall basics. For advanced security (MFA, certificates, CIS benchmarks, compliance), see `security-hardening` skill. ### CI/CD Pipelines CI/CD pipelines deploy to Linux servers using these skills. Uses systemctl for deployment and journalctl for monitoring. For deployment automation, see `building-ci-pipelines` skill. ## Reference Materials ### Detailed Guides - **`references/systemd-guide.md`** - Comprehensive systemd reference (unit files, dependencies, targets) - **`references/performance-tuning.md`** - Complete sysctl, ulimits, cgroups, I/O scheduler guide - **`references/filesystem-management.md`** - LVM, RAID, filesystem types, permissions - **`references/network-configuration.md`** - ip/ss commands, netplan, NetworkManager, DNS, firewall - **`references/security-hardening.md`** - SSH hardening, firewall, SELinux/AppArmor basics - **`references/troubleshooting-guide.md`** - Common issues, diagnostic workflows, solutions ### Examples - **`examples/systemd-units/`** - Service, timer, and target unit files - **`examples/scripts/`** - Backup, health check, and maintenance scripts - **`examples/configs/`** - sshd_config, sysctl.conf, logrotate examples ## Distribution-Specific Notes ### Ubuntu/Debian Package Manager: `apt`, Network: `netplan`, Firewall: `ufw`, Repositories: `/etc/apt/sources.list` ### RHEL/CentOS/Fedora Package Manager: `dnf`, Network: `NetworkManager`, Firewall: `firewalld`, Repositories: `/etc/yum.repos.d/`, SELinux enabled by default ### Arch Linux Package Manager: `pacman`, Network: `NetworkManager`, Rolling release, AUR for community packages ## Additional Resources **Official Documentation:** - systemd: https://systemd.io/ - Linux kernel: https://kernel.org/doc/ **Related Skills:** - `kubernetes-operations` - Container orchestration on Linux - `configuration-management` - Automate Linux admin at scale - `security-hardening` - Advanced security and compliance - `building-ci-pipelines` - Deploy via CI/CD - `performance-engineering` - Deep performance analysis
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