syslog
This month's theme is interoperability, and several of the
articles in this issue provide solutions to cross-platform problems.
In the feature article, Ralf Engelschall (who has long been involved
in the development of open source software, such as Apache mod_ssl,
GNU Shtool, OpenSSL, and OSSP) and his co-authors describe a robust,
cross-platform software packaging tool called OpenPKG. Brian Gollsneider
has written a follow-up to his multi-booting article published last
year in Sys Admin. In this month's article, Gollsneider
provides new information about multi-booting Windows 2000, Windows
98, Solaris 8, and Red Hat 7.3. In other articles, Nathan Yocom
shows how the GPL'd pGina tool can provide PAM-like authentication
and facilitate adding Windows clients to your UNIX environment,
and Brent Bice explains how to use the net-snmp agent for monitoring
your UNIX systems.
A different type of cross-platform tool was released in the spring
of 2002 -- it's the Universal Command Guide: For Operating
Systems by Guy Lotgering and the Universal Command Guide Training
Team. This 1600-page book, published by John Wiley & Sons, is
a comprehensive command reference book. It contains more than 8,000
commands (and more than 57,000 options) from various operating systems,
such as UNIX, Linux, Windows, Mac 9.1 (but not OS X), and DOS. Not
all flavors of UNIX are covered -- HP-UX and Tru64 are notably
absent -- however, the book is well organized and well indexed,
and to my knowledge no other book has attempted to organize so many
commands in this way. The UCG team provides lots of usage examples
and cross-references each command. The book also comes with a CD-ROM
containing the UCG finder, which allows the user to type in a command
and request its equivalent for a different system. The UCG finder
tool can also be accessed (for free) on the team's Web site
at: http://www.allcommands.com. This book is a great reference
tool -- especially for beginning admins.
Sincerely yours,
Amber Ankerholz
Editor in Chief
|