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Related products:

RHCE Red Hat Certified Engineer Linux (Exam RH302) RHCE Red Hat Certified Engineer Linux (Exam RH302)

RHCE Red Hat Certified Engineer Study Guide Exam RH302 (With CD-ROM) RHCE Red Hat Certified Engineer Study Guide Exam RH302 (With CD-ROM)


RHCT Red Hat Certified Technician Linux Study Guide (Exam RH202) RHCT Red Hat Certified Technician Linux Study Guide (Exam RH202)

Certification

RHCE Linux Exam Cram, 2e (Exam: RH-302)

Certification
Format: Paperback
Author: Kara J. Pritchard
ReleaseDate: 13 November, 2000
Publisher: Coriolis Group Books
Rating:

Quite obsolete now
First of all I enjoy Kara's language. I took the exam last Friday and I just got a confirmation that I'm a RHCE now, so I hope my info is pretty recent. It's really friendly and it's a kind of loving mom teaching her children style. It's not so common for technical books and I really like it. I agree with other reviewers that the book has some mistakes but usually they are not very significant for your test results. Probably the right way to say is "they were not" because this book covers 6. x version of RedHat and the current exam is based on 7. 2. It makes a big difference. They really included many things specific to the latest software version. Some questions from the practice test in this book are still very similar to real ones, but that multiple choice test is just one task out of 3 and it's probably the easiest one. This book doesn't help you much to get prepared for troubleshouting or installation tasks. Installation, GRUB, X Windows, network security, service management - all those things have been changed significantly.

That's it about the book, but I'd like to tell a couple words about the test itself. The test is really not so hard. So it is definitly possible to pass it. I had a chance to take a look at the recent RedHat training materials (some people brought it to the test) and they're really good and cover everything you need to pass and most things you need in real life. So if you really need to get that certification and you don't worry much about price (which makes sense, because test and training cost a pretty comparable and if you got almost $800 for the test I'd probably find a couple grands for a class), the easiest way is to take a class. If you can't do it, you should just install RedHat on your computer and practice to configure FTP, HTTP, Sednmail, NFS, Samba, Named, Tcp_wrappers, etc using Linux documentation. I don't think there is any good tutorial now rather then RedHat training materials. It doesn't mean you have to take that class (I didn't take it myself) but any other way will definitly take you much longer. Be warned, that if you're a Solaris (HP-UX, AIX, . . . ) guy and hope to pass just because it's another flavor of Unix you might fail. This test is really focused on Linux specific issues and just a general Unix experience probably wouldn't be enough to get an 80% passing score.

Another good thing I've heard is that a passing rate on the first try is pretty low but on the second try it's very high. Probably all tasks in their pool are similar, but it's just a guess. And it's surprising that you can solve many problems, especially security, in a lots of different ways and RedHat is totally cool about that. You can use tcp wrappers everywhere of ipchains and either way is right and acceptable. It's not very common. It makes your life much easier.

Good luck!.


This book is full of errors.

But nearly half of the contents is introductional text on Red Hat Linux. This book is announced as a supplement to a study guide.

The text is full of errors of all sorts: many many typos, substantial errors, misspellings and incorrect wordings.

The book is simply not useful as reference material for linux administration or learning Red Hat Linux administration.

It provids some very useful links and book recommendations, but you could get links (which are usually outdated when the book is in print) and study material from the world wide web.

If you really believe that you need such an "Exam Cram", get the second edition, not the outdated first edition.

Just to give some proof for the errors:

"An IP address is made of up 32 bits. These bits are separated into four sections called octets. (Each octet contains 4 bytes of information and specifies either the network or the machine node. )"
(quote from page 63)

"DHCP (developed by Microsoft) is a descendant of the boot protocol"
(quote from page 71)

"Table 11. 3 NIS results. Result SUCCESS: The error occurred and the wanted entry is returned"

This is just to point out the most obvious errors. For every second question the answer section contains garbage, so that the test questions are not of great use. I think that a certification guide should not contain that much errors. The time spent reading this book is essentially wasted.


Reading the cover of a book is a good idea
"

As such it does a very sound job of providing the basics. The reader who wrote the "Utter waste" review failed to even read the cover of the book where it says "The perfect supplement to all certification study guides. The author makes it clear that the book is not a complete preparation for the exam and suggests other sources of study material.



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