wiki:ubuntuinstall

Version 11 (modified by admin, 7 years ago) ( diff )

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Linux Hands - On

Through this hands-on you will install Ubuntu Server on a vm and you will make additional two clones of the installed ubuntu server for your lab sessions in next two days.

Setting up virtualbox

Installation of virtualbox and Downloading Ubuntu iso image

  • Download and install virtualbox 5.0.x
  • Download Ubuntu image from the LEARN mirror
  • Note down the location of downloaded iso file

Creating the VM

  • Start virtualbox and Click on New button (at top-right) to create new virtual machine
  • Enter name of the VM as: pc.'your domain'.ws.learn.ac.lk. You can get your domain from here

eg: linux.user1.ws.learn.ac.lk

  • Select OS Type: Linux
  • Select Version: Ubuntu (64-bit)
  • Then click on Continue button
  • Set VM's memory size to 1024MB and click on Continue button
  • Set VM's hard disk option to Create a virtual hard disk now and then click on Continue
  • Select disk type to VDI
  • Select storage type to Fixed size and Continue
  • Make sure virtual hard disk file name in following format pc.'your domain'.ws.learn.ac.lk
  • adjust the disk size to 10.0GB and click on Create to create the VM

This might take couple of minutes

(Note down the location of vdi image file when virtualbox flashes it on the screen)

Setting up Network Interface

  • Select the VM from left panel on Virtual box, right click and open Settings
  • Click on the Network title
  • On Adapter 1 While Enable Network Adapter selected choose Attached to be Bride Adapter. This virtual interface will work as the WAN port of the firewall (Can be connect from out side).

Setting up boot device and Booting

  • Click on Storage title and select CD ROM icon under the Controller:IDE Click on CD ROM icon under the Attribute on the left side to select
  • Choose Virtual Optical Disk File
  • Locate the Ubuntu CD Image file you downloaded from the LEARN ftp
  • Right click on VM to make a Normal Start VM. You should now see a separate window with Installation screen

Installation

Initial Installation options

  • Select English as language for the installation wizard
  • Select Ubuntu Server
  • Select English for VM's OS language
  • Select location by Others->Asia->Sri Lanka
  • Keep locales as default United States
  • Press No for configure Keyboard
  • Select English (US) for country of origin for the keyboard

Now it might take sometime to detect the hardware and load the necessary Linux modules

Note that it configure network with DCHP

  • Type host name as: linux.'your domain'.ws.learn.ac.lk
  • When it asked, add a User by entering Your Name, your username, password
  • You may select No for not to encrypt home directory
  • Select Yes confirm the time-zone

Disk Configuration

Your have 10GB hard drive previously configured for your VM

  • Select Manual
  • Select the Disk SCSI3(0,0,0) (sda) - 10.0 GB ATA VBOX HARDDISK and Select Yes to create new partition table
  • Select Free Space to create following partitions and mount them as follows. Use EXT4 for all partitions except for SWAP partition
    • a primary partition for /boot 512MB - turn on Bootable flag
    • a primary partition for Linux SWAP (two times the RAM) SWAP 2GB
    • a primary partition for Linux Logical Volume for remaining disk space.
  • Then use Logical Volume Manager to create a Volume Group named as "linux" and logical volumes for followings
    • a logical volume root for / 2GB
    • a logical volume usr for /usr 3GB
    • a logical volume var for /var rest of the free space
  • Get above partitions mounted as /, /usr and /var with the file system EXT4 selected.
  • Then finish the partitioning and confirm it to write to the disk

Now it might take sometime to install the OS base.

Final Configuration

  • At the package manager, click Continue not to use any proxy settings

Again it might take times to install rest of the packages.

  • Select No automatic updates
  • Select only
    1. standard system utilities
    2. OpenSSH server

Wait until it finished the installation of software

  • Finally install/setup the GRUB boot loader by selecting Yes
  • Finish the installation of Ubuntu by selecting Continue

VM now should restart with the newly installed OS.

You may now login using your credentials

Create the Additional VMs

You will now easily create the second VM using VM cloning. This VM is for your Web Server which will be used for hands-on tomorrow.

  • First Power off/shutdown your VM
  • Right click on the VM to select Clone option
  • Assign new name as web."your domain".ws.ac.lk
  • Check "Reinitialize the MAC address for all network cards
  • And then click on Continue
  • Select Full clone

This might take sometime to create the new virtual disk image (vdi) file. Note that your new VM is same as your previous one. You have to change host name, ip addresses, etc accordingly.

  • When the cloning finished, start you new VM and do following to change the host name
  • edit /etc/hostname file and change host name to web. You may use vi or nano editor.
  • also edit /etc/hosts file to change 127.0.0.1 pc."your domain".ws.ac.lk pc to 127.0.0.1 web."your domain".ws.ac.lk

You can follow the same steps and create the third VM to use as the ldap Server. Note the following changes.

  • Assign new name as ldap."your domain".ws.ac.lk
  • edit /etc/hostname file and change host name to web. You may use vi or nano editor.
  • also edit /etc/hosts file to change 127.0.0.1 pc."your domain".ws.ac.lk pc to 127.0.0.1 ldap."your domain".ws.ac.lk

Note: For this Hands-on you only need your pc(pc."your domain.ws.ac.lk") VM. Please shut down the additional VM's

Playing with Linux

Working with directories

A brief overview of the most common commands to work with directories: pwd, cd, ls, mkdir and rmdir. These commands are available on any Linux (or Unix) system.

  • pwd : Print Working Directory (Will tell you the location you are currently working)
  • cd : You can change your current directory with the cd command
    • cd : shortcut to get back into your home directory. Just typing cd without a target directory, will put you in your home directory
    • cd .. : To go to the parent directory (the one just above your current directory in the directory tree)
    • cd - : To go to the previous directory
  • ls : You can list the contents of a directory with ls
    • ls -a : To show all files. Showing all files means including the hidden files. When a file name on a Linux file system starts with a dot, it is considered a hidden file and it doesn't show up in regular file listings.
    • ls -l : to display the contents of the directory in different formats or to display different parts of the directory.
    • ls -lh : shows the numbers (file sizes) in a more human readable format.
  • mkdir : Create new directories
  • mkdir -p: To create parent directories as needed
  • rmdir: To remove the directory. (Directory has to be empty)

Some exercise

  1. Login to your VM. and Display your current directory
  2. Change to /etc directory and display current directory
  3. Go to root directory and list the contents
  4. List a long listing of the root directory
  5. Go to your home directory
  6. Make directory named 'test'
  7. make a directory inside test directory named 'one' and make a hidden directory inside 'one' directory named '.hidden'. Make a directory inside test directory named 'one' and make a hidden directory inside 'one' directory named 'unhidden'.
  8. Go to 'one' directory and list the content.
  9. Then list all contents
  10. Remove directory 'unhidden'
  11. Go to your home and try to remove directory 'test'
dilum@DilumL:~$ pwd
/home/dilum
dilum@DilumL:~$ cd  /etc
dilum@DilumL:/etc$ pwd
/etc
dilum@DilumL:/etc$ cd ..
dilum@DilumL:/$ ls
bin   etc         lib    lost+found  opt   run   var
boot  home        lib32  media       proc  sbin  tmp       mnt 
dev   lib64       root   sys         usr
dilum@DilumL:/$ ls -l
total 88
drwxrwxr-x   2 root   root  4096 Mar  4  2016 bin
drwxr-xr-x   3 root   root  4096 Feb  9  2016 boot
drwxr-xr-x  20 root   root  3360 Nov 16 08:16 dev
drwxr-xr-x 155 root   root 12288 Aug 29 09:30 etc
drwxr-xr-x   4 root   root  4096 Aug 16 08:54 home
drwxr-xr-x  19 root   root  4096 Mar  4  2016 lib
drwxr-xr-x   2 root   root  4096 Mar  4  2016 lib32
drwxr-xr-x   2 root   root  4096 Mar  4  2016 lib64
drwx------   2 root   root 16384 Dec 15  2015 lost+found
drwxr-xr-x   4 root   root  4096 Dec 15  2015 media
drwxr-xr-x   2 root   root  4096 Dec 15  2015 mnt
drwxr-xr-x   3 root   root  4096 Jan 26  2016 opt
dr-xr-xr-x 189 root   root     0 Nov 16 08:16 proc
drwx------  12 root   root  4096 Sep  6 16:25 root
drwxr-xr-x  26 root   root   960 Nov 16 08:41 run
drwxr-xr-x   2 root   root  4096 Mar  4  2016 sbin
dr-xr-xr-x  13 root   root     0 Nov 16 08:16 sys
drwxrwxrwt  18 root   root  4096 Nov 16 12:50 tmp
drwxr-xr-x  12 root   root  4096 Nov  8 12:39 usr
drwxr-xr-x  13 root   root  4096 Dec 16  2015 var
dilum@DilumL:/$ cd
dilum@DilumL:~$ pwd
/home/dilum
dilum@DilumL:~$ mkdir test/one/.hidden
mkdir: cannot create directory ‘test/one/.hidden’: No such file or directory
dilum@DilumL:~$ mkdir -p test/one/.hidden
dilum@DilumL:~$ mkdir -p test/one/unhidden
dilum@DilumL:~$ cd test/one
dilum@DilumL:~/test/one$ ls
unhidden
dilum@DilumL:~/test/one$ ls -a
.  ..  .hidden  unhidden
dilum@DilumL:~/test/one$ rmdir unhidden/
dilum@DilumL:~/test/one$ ls -a
.  ..  .hidden
dilum@DilumL:~$ rmdir test
rmdir: failed to remove ‘test’: Directory not empty

File Editing

The vi editor is installed on almost every Unix. Linux will very often install vim (vi improved) which is similar. Every system administrator should know vi(m), because it is an easy tool to solve problems.

vi Commands and Tips

Open:  

vi filename             (fn=filename)
vi -r filename          Recover a file from a crashed session
vi + filename           Place the cursor on last line of file.
vi +n filename          Place the cursor on line "n" of file.
vi +/pat filename       Place cursor on line with first occurrence of "pat"tern

Close:

:w                      Write the file to disk. Don't exit.
:w!                     Write the file to disk even if read/only.
:wq                     Write the file to disk and exit.
:wq!                    Write the file to disk even if read/only and quit.
:q                      Quit the file (only if no changes).
:q!                     Quit the file even if changes.

Movement:

A                       Move to end of line, change to insert mode.
h                       Move 1 space backwards (back/left arrow).
j                       Move down 1 line (down arrow).
k                       Move up 1 line (up arrow).
l                       Move 1 space forwards (forward/right arrow)
w                       Move cursor to start of next word.
W                       Same as "w".
b                       Move cursor to start of previous word.
B                       Same as "b".
:n                      Go to line number "n" in the file.

Editing:

i                       Enter in to input mode.
o                       Add a line below cursor and enter in to input mode.
x                       Delete character (del key in some cases).
D                       Delete line from right of cursor to end of line.
dd                      Delete entire line.
u                       Undo last edit or restore current line.
yy                      Yank current line.
p                       Put yanked text before the cursor.

Searching:

/pattern               Search for "pattern" in the file going forwards.
?pattern               Search for "pattern" in the file going backwards.
n                      Find the next occurrence of pattern found forwards.
N                      Find next occurrence of pattern found backwards.

Copy/Cut and Paste
<NUM>yyp               Copy n lines to buffer, paste below cursor
<NUM>yyP               Copy n lines to buffer, paste above cursor
<NUM>ddp               Cut n lines and copy to buffer, paste below cursor
<NUM>ddP               Cut n lines and copy to buffer, paste above cursor

Practice Using vi

Remember The vi editor uses "modes"

The easiest thing to do if you get confused in vi is to press the ESCape key a couple of times and start over with what you were doing. Log in to your VM and...

$ cd
$ vi temp.txt

vi wil create the file “temp.txt” for you. Press the "i" key to switch to input mode.

    Type something like, "VI is great! I think I'll be using vi from now on instead of Word”
    Press <ENTER> to add lines.
    Type some more text

Save the file that you are in. To do this do:

Press the ESCape key for command mode Type “:wq” then hit Enter to save and quit the file (notice the “:” before the “wq”).

Copy a large file to your home directory so that you can play around with some more vi commands. We'll copy over your /etc/sysctl.conf file for this exercise. To do this do:

$ cd 
$ cp /etc/sysctl.conf sysctl.conf.bak

Edit the file, but let's start at the bottom of the file:

$ vi + sysctl.conf.bak 

Go to the first line of the file. Notice the colon (“:”) before the “1”.

:1 <ENTER>

Go to line 10, add a new line, and add in some text:

:10 <ENTER>
Press the “o” key

Add the following text:

## 
## A sample comment
##

Delete the three lines you just created:

Move to the first line of new text Press the ESCape key Press “dd” to delete a line, repeat until the text is gone

Save the file, but don’t exit.

    :w 
    press <ENTER>

Practice copying and pasting text.

Go to line 12, copy 3 lines of text, go to the bottom of the file, place the text there:

    ESC         (go to command mode)
    :12 <ENTER> (go to line 12 of the file)
    3yy         (“yank” 3 lines of text and place in copy buffer)
    G           (go to the end of the file)
    p           (place the contents of the copy buffer here)    

If want to undo this you would type (in command mode):

    u

Go to the top of the file, replace all occurrences of “ipv4” with “ipv6”, but prompt for each change:

    ESC
    :1 <ENTER>
    :%s/ipv4/ipv6/gc

Say “yes” or “no” to a few prompts then escape from this mode by pressing ctrl-c and .

Go to line 1, search for “kernel”, move to the end of the line, add some text:

    ESC
    :1 <ENTER>
    /kernel
    SHIFT-A
    “text here”
    ESC

Now let’s exit from the file and not save the few changes we’ve made.

    :q! <ENTER>

Working with Files

Files on Linux (or any Unix) are case sensitive. This means that FILE1 is different from file1, and /etc/hosts is different from /etc/Hosts (the latter one does not exist on a typical Linux computer). In Linux everything is considered as a file even a directory is a special kind of file. A small overview of some basic and important file handling commands

  • file: The file utility determines the file type. Linux does not use extensions to determine the file type. The command line does not care whether a file ends in .txt or .pdf. As a system administrator, you should use the file command to determine the file type.
  • cp: To copy a file, use cp with a source and a target argument.
    • cp -r: To copy complete directories, use cp -r (the -r option forces recursive copying of all files in all subdirectories).
    • cp -i: To prevent cp from overwriting existing files, use the -i (for interactive) option.
  • mv: Use to rename a file or to move the file to another directory.
  • rm: Use to remove files *rm -i:To prevent yourself from accidentally removing a file. *rm -rf:rm -r will not remove non-empty directories. However rm accepts several options that will allow you to remove any directory. The rm -rf will erase anything

Extremely dangerous Command

When you are logged on as root, be very careful with rm -rf (the f means force and the r means recursive) since being root implies 
that permissions don't apply to you. You can literally erase your entire file system by accident.
  • less:The less command is useful for displaying files that take up more than one screen
  • head/tail:You can use head to display the first ten lines of a file. and tail to display the last ten lines of a file. you can use both commands with -n and specify the number of lines
  • cat:The cat command is one of the most universal tools, yet all it does is copy standard input to standard output.

Exercise

  • Create numbers.txt (Containing ten lines of numbers one to ten)file with cat command.
    $ cat > numbers.txt 
    

Add the lines with enter key at the end. After inserting all the lines press Ctrl + D

one
two
. .
ten
  • View the file you created using less and cat

cat

$ cat numbers.txt 
one
two
three
four
five
six
seven
eight
nine
ten

less

$ less numbers.txt 

Press q to exit from less

  • View first four lines and last four lines using head and tail commands
    $ head -n 4 numbers.txt 
    one
    two
    three
    four
    $ tail -n 4 numbers.txt 
    seven
    eight
    nine
    ten
    
  • Create another file numbers2.txt(with lines contain eleven to fifteen)
    $ cat numbers2.txt 
    eleven
    twevelve
    thirteen
    fourteen
    fifteen
    
  • Combine numbers.txt and numbers2.txt and create numbers3.txt. and view the file.
    $ cat numbers.txt numbers2.txt > numbers3.txt
    $ cat numbers3.txt 
    one
    two
    three
    four
    five
    six
    seven
    eight
    nine
    ten
    eleven
    twevelve
    thirteen
    fourteen
    fifteen
    
  • Check the file format of the newly created file
    $ file numbers3.txt 
    numbers3.txt: ASCII text
    
  • Copy all the created files to the test directory. and verify
    $ cp numbers.txt numbers2.txt numbers3.txt test/
    $ cd test
    $ ls
    numbers2.txt  numbers3.txt  numbers.txt  one
    
  • Make a copy of test directory as newtest and rename it to numbers
    $ cp -r test/ newtest
    $ mv newtest/ numbers
    
  • Delete the test directory
    $ rm -rf test
    

File Permission

  • Commands preceded with "$" imply that you should execute the command as a general user - not as root.
  • Commands preceded with "#" imply that you should be working as root with "sudo"
  • Commands with more specific command lines (e.g. "RTR-GW>" or "mysql>") imply that you are executing commands on remote equipment, or within another program.

chmod: Change file read write permission chown: Change the owner of the file chgrp: Change the group of the file

Reference

If you look at files in a directory using "ls -al" you will see the permissions for each file and directories. Here is an example:

drwxrwxr-x    3 root   root       4096 Feb 25 09:49 directory
-rwxr--r--   12 root   root       4096 Feb 16 05:02 file

So, the directory has r (read), w (write), x (execute) access for the User and Group. For Other it has r (read) and x (execute) access. The file has read/write/execute access for User and read only access for everyone else (Group and Other).

To change permissions you use the chmod command. chmod uses a base eight (octal) system to configure permissions. Or, you can use an alternate form to specify permissions by column (User/Group/Other) at a time.

Permissions have values like this:

Letter  Permission   Value

R       read         4
W       write        2
X       execute      1
-       none         0

Thus you can give permissions to a file using the sum of the values for each permission you wish to give for each column. Here is an example:

Letter  Permission                   Value

---     none                         0
--x     execute                      1
-w-     write only (rarely used)     2
-wx     write and execute (rare)     3
r--     read only                    4
r-x     read and execute             5
rw-     read and write               6
rwx     read, write, and execute     7

This is just one column. Since we have three areas of permissions (User, Group, Other), it looks like this will all 3 sets:

Permissions  Numeric      Description
             equivalent  

-rw-------   600          User has read & write permission.
-rw-r--r--   644          User has read & write.
                          Group and Other have read permission.
-rw-rw-rw-   666          Everyone (User, Group, Other) have read & write
                          permission (dangerous?)
-rwx------   700          User has read, write, & execute permission.
-rwxr-xr-x   755          User has read, write, & execute permission.
                          Rest of the world (Other) has read & execute
                          permission (typical for web pages or 644).
-rwxrwxrwx   777          Everyone has full access (read, write, execute).
-rwx--x--x   711          User has read, write, execute permission.
                          Group and world have execute permission.
drwx------   700          User only has access to this directory.
                          Directories require execute permission to access.
drwxr-xr-x   755          User has full access to directory. Everyone else
                          can see the directory.
drwx--x--x   711          Everyone can list files in the directory, but Group
                          and Other need to know a filename to do this. 

Exercise

  • Go to the numbers directory and get a detailed list
    $ cd numbers
    $ ls -al
    total 24
    drwxr-xr-x  3 dilum dilum 4096 Nov 17 13:53 .
    drwxrwxrwx 50 dilum dilum 4096 Nov 17 13:10 ..
    -rw-r--r--  1 dilum dilum   42 Nov 17 13:08 numbers2.txt
    -rw-r--r--  1 dilum dilum   91 Nov 17 13:08 numbers3.txt
    -rw-r--r--  1 dilum dilum   49 Nov 17 13:08 numbers.txt
    drwxr-xr-x  3 dilum dilum 4096 Nov 17 13:08 one
    
    
  • Change file permission as follows
    $ chmod 044 numbers.txt 
    

Now you have remove read privilege try view the file using cat

$ chmod 444 numbers.txt

Now you have set privilege as read only. Open the file via vi editor and try to edit the file

  • Switch to root user
    $ sudo su
    
  • Change the ownership and group of the numbers2.txt to root and make it read only for all the other users.
  • Change the ownership and group of the numbers3.txt to root and remove all the privileges from all the other users.
  • Switch back to your user and try to view numbers3.txt and try to edit numbers2.txt
    # chown root numbers2.txt 
    # chgrp root numbers2.txt 
    # chown root numbers3.txt
    # chgrp root numbers2.txt  
    # chmod 700 numbers3.txt 
    # chmod 744 numbers2.txt 
    # su 'Your username'
    $ cat numbers3.txt 
    cat: numbers3.txt: Permission denied
    $ cat > numbers2.txt 
    bash: numbers2.txt: Permission denied
    

More Linux Commands

  • who: who command will give you information about who is logged on the system.
    $ who
    root   pts/0   2014-10-10 23:07 (10.104.33.101)
    paul   pts/1   2014-10-10 23:30 (10.104.33.101)
    laura  pts/2   2014-10-10 23:34 (10.104.33.96)
    
    • whoami command tells you your username
      $ whoami
      paul
      

  • df -dh: report file system disk space usage
    $ df -h
    Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
    /dev/sda1       451G  141G  287G  33% /
    udev             10M     0   10M   0% /dev
    tmpfs           774M   19M  755M   3% /run
    .. 
    ..
    
  • man: Will give you man pages (also called manual pages) on your Unix or Linux computer
    $man ls
    $man cp
    
  • date: Will give you the date and time of the system
    $ date
    Thu Nov 17 16:01:52 IST 2016
    
  • ln: Use to create links between files. Frequently use with -s to create symbolic links
    $ ln -s file2 symlink_to_file2
    
  • ps: report a snapshot of the current processes. frequently use with -aux.
    $ ps -aux
    USER       PID %CPU %MEM    VSZ   RSS TTY      STAT START   TIME COMMAND
    root         1  0.0  0.0 111476  3400 ?        Ss   07:39   0:01 /sbin/init
    root         2  0.0  0.0      0     0 ?        S    07:39   0:00 [kthreadd]
    root         3  0.3  0.0      0     0 ?        S    07:39   1:40 [ksoftirqd/0]
    

Final Step (Needed for the next Hands-on)

You will use This PC (pc."your domain".ws.ac.lk) in your next pfSense hands-on as a client machine. In the next step we are going to install an GUI for linux PC. It will make things easy for you to carry on your pfSense Hands-on.

sudo apt-get update

This command will update your repositories.

sudo apt-get install xubuntu-desktop

This will install Xfce Desktop Environment.

Note: See TracWiki for help on using the wiki.