A Linux AWS DevOps combo refers to the integration of Linux operating systems and Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud services within a DevOps (Development and Operations) environment. This combo is particularly popular in modern software development due to the compatibility of Linux and AWS, as well as the robust DevOps practices that enable teams to deliver software faster, more reliably, and with greater flexibility.
LINUX AWS DEVOPS COMBO Training in Pune/ Online
Linux RHCSA and RHCE + AWS +DEVOPS
Duration of Training : 6 months
Batch type : Weekdays/Weekends
Mode of Training : Classroom/Online/Corporate Training
Get started with Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Describe and define open source, Linux distributions, and Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
Access the command line
Log into a Linux system and run simple commands using the shell.
Manage files from the command line
Copy, move, create, delete, and organize files while working from the bash shell.
Get help in Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Resolve problems by using local help systems.
Create, view, and edit text files
Manage text files from command output or in a text editor.
Manage local users and groups
Create, manage, and delete local users and groups, as well as administer local password policies.
Control access to files
Set Linux file system permissions on files and interpret the security effects of different permission settings.
Monitor and manage Linux processes
Evaluate and control processes running on a Red Hat Enterprise Linux system.
Control services and daemons
Control and monitor network services and system daemons using systemd.
Configure and secure SSH
Configure secure command line service on remote systems, using OpenSSH.
Analyze and store logs
Locate and accurately interpret logs of system events for troubleshooting purposes.
Manage networking
Configure network interfaces and settings on Red Hat Enterprise Linux servers.
Archive and transfer files
Archive and copy files from one system to another.
Install and update software
Download, install, update, and manage software packages from Red Hat and yum package repositories.
Access Linux files systems
Access, inspect, and use existing file systems on storage attached to a Linux server.
Analyze servers and get support
Investigate and resolve issues in the web-based management interface, getting support from Red Hat to help solve problems.
Comprehensive review
Review the content covered in this course by completing hands-on exercises.
Impact on the organization :
This course is intended to develop the skills needed for basic administration and configuration of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. This course introduces key command line concepts and enterprise-level tools, laying the foundation for the rapid deployment of Red Hat Enterprise Linux. The curriculum also introduces the basic administration skills needed for resolving configuration issues and integrating Red Hat Enterprise Linux systems with other existing environments.
This offering lays the foundation for secure user and group administration, and develops skills that allow administrators to use available storage solutions more efficiently and securely. This course is the first of a two-part series that turns a computer professional who knows nothing about Linux into a fully capable Linux administrator.
Red Hat has created this course in a way intended to benefit our customers, but each company and infrastructure is unique, and actual results or benefits may vary.
Impact of this training :
As a result of attending this course, you should be able to perform essential Linux administration tasks, including installation, establishing network connectivity, managing physical storage, and basic security administration.
You should be able to demonstrate these skills:
Recommended next exam or course :
Basic technical user skills with computer applications on some operating systems are expected.
System Administration II (RH134) –
This module goes deeper into enterprise Linux administration including file systems and partitioning, logical volumes, SELinux, firewalling, and troubleshooting. Attending both Red Hat System Administration I and Red Hat System Administration II can help you in your preparation for the Red Hat Certified System Administrator exam (EX200).
Outline for this course :
Course description :
Focuses on the key tasks needed to become a full-time Linux administrator
Red Hat System Administration II (RH134) builds upon and lends context to the foundational knowledge established in Red Hat System Administration I (RH124). This follow-on course demonstrates more detailed use cases for Red Hat® Enterprise Linux®, preparing you for the Red Hat Certified System Administrator exam (EX200).
This course is based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.
Course content summary :
Audience for this course :
This course is geared toward Windows system administrators, network administrators, and other system administrators who are interested in supplementing current skills or backstopping other team members, in addition to Linux system administrators who are responsible for these tasks:
Prerequisite(s) for this course :
Red Hat System Administration III : Linux Automation with Ansible (RH294)
Course description :
Learn how to automate Linux system administration tasks with Ansible
Red Hat System Administration III: Linux Automation with Ansible (RH294) teaches the skills needed to manage large numbers of systems and applications efficiently and consistently. You will learn the techniques needed to use Ansible® to automate provisioning, configuration, application deployment, and orchestration.
This course is based on Red Hat® Enterprise Linux® 8 and Red Hat Ansible Engine 2.8.
Course Content Summary :
Outline for this course :
Impact on the organization
IT automation is key to managing large numbers of systems and applications efficiently and consistently at scale. This course develops the skills needed to efficiently operate and more easily scale the organization’s dynamic IT infrastructure, accelerate application time to value, and rapidly adapt and implement needed innovation through DevOps practices.
Red Hat has created this course in a way intended to benefit our customers, but each company and infrastructure is unique, and actual results or benefits may vary.
Impact on the individual
As a result of attending this course, you should be able to use Ansible for the purpose of automation, configuration, and management. You should be able to demonstrate these skills:
Recommended next exam or course
Our Specialty :
COURSE CONTENT |
Getting Started : |
Course Introduction |
About the Training Architect |
Working as a Solutions Architect |
Creating an AWS Account, AWS Free Tier, Usage Tracking, and Billing Widget |
Access Management |
Shared Responsibility/Security Model |
Service Models |
High Availability vs. Fault Tolerance |
RPO vs. RTO |
Scaling |
Tiered Application Design |
Encryption |
Architecture Odds and Ends |
AWS Architecture : |
AWS Accounts |
AWS Physical and Networking Layer |
Well-Architected Framework |
Elasticity |
AWS Architecture 101 |
AWS Product Fundamentals : |
Console Tour and Navigation |
Introduction to S3 |
Introduction to CloudFormation |
Hands-on Labs |
Getting Started with CloudFormation |
AWS Product Fundamentals |
IAM (Identity and Access Management) : |
IAM Essentials |
IAM Policies |
IAM Users |
IAM Groups |
IAM Access Keys |
Securing Your Account — Creating an IAM User and Setting Up the CLI |
IAM Roles |
IAM Essentials |
Multi-Account Management and Organizations : |
AWS Organizations |
Role Switching Between Accounts |
Multi-Account Management and Organizations |
Server-Based Compute (EC2) Fundamentals : |
EC2 Architecture: Part 1 |
EC2 Architecture: Part 2 |
Instance Types and Sizes |
EC2 Storage Architecture: Part 1 |
EC2 Storage Architecture: Part 2 |
EBS Snapshots |
Security Groups |
Instance Metadata |
Hands-on Labs |
Creating and Working with an EC2 Instance |
Server-Based Compute (EC2) Fundamentals |
Server-Based Compute (EC2) Intermediate : |
AMI |
Bootstrap |
Instance ENI, IP, and DNS: Part 1 |
Instance ENI, IP, and DNS: Part 2 |
Instance Roles |
Server-Based Compute (EC2) Intermediate |
Using EC2 Roles and Instance Profiles |
Using AWS Tags and Resource Groups |
Server-Based Compute (EC2) Advanced : |
EBS Volume and Snapshot Encryption |
EBS Optimization, Enhanced Networking, and Placement Groups |
EC2 Billing Models: Part 1 – Spot and Spot Fleet |
EC2 Billing Models: Part 2 – Reserved Instances |
Dedicated Hosts |
Server-Based Compute (EC2) Advanced |
Serverless Compute (Lambda) : |
What Are APIs and Microservices? |
Serverless and Event-Driven Architectures |
Lambda Essentials: Part 1 |
Lambda Essentials: Part 2 |
API Gateway Essentials: Part 1 |
API Gateway Essentials: Part 2 |
Step Functions |
Serverless Compute (Lambda) |
Container-Based Compute and Microservices : |
Docker Essentials |
ECS |
Container-Based Compute and Microservices |
Networking Fundamentals : |
Introduction |
Seven-Layer OSI Model: Part 1 |
Seven-Layer OSI Model: Part 2 |
IP Addressing Basics |
Subnetting |
IP Routing |
Firewalls |
Proxy Servers |
Networking Fundamentals |
Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) : |
Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) and Subnets: Part 1 |
Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) and Subnets: Part 2 |
Routing and Internet Gateway |
Bastion Host/JumpBox |
NAT, NAT Instance, and NAT Gateway: Part 1 |
NAT, NAT Instance, and NAT Gateway: Part 2 |
Network ACLs |
Hands-on Labs |
Designing and Building a Custom VPC from Scratch |
Virtual Private Cloud (VPC) |
Advanced VPC : |
VPC Peering: Part 1 |
VPC Peering: Part 2 |
VPC Endpoints: Part 1 |
VPC Endpoints: Part 2 |
IPv6 within AWS |
Egress-Only Gateway |
Hands-on Labs |
Implementing VPC Peering on AWS |
Advanced VPC |
Global DNS (Route 53) Fundamentals : |
DNS 101 |
Domain Registration |
Private vs. Public Hosted Zones |
Record Set Types |
Health Checks |
Global DNS (Route 53) Fundamentals |
Global DNS (Route 53) Advanced : |
Routing Policy: Simple |
Routing Policy: Failover |
Routing Policy: Weighted |
Routing Policy: Latency |
Routing Policy: Geolocation |
Global DNS (Route 53) Advanced |
S3 Architecture and Features : |
Permissions |
Transferring Data to S3 |
Encryption |
Static Websites and CORS |
Object Versioning |
Presigned URLs |
Hands-on Labs |
Creating a Static Website Using Amazon S3 |
S3 Performance and Resilience : |
Storage Tiers/Classes |
Lifecycle Policies and Intelligent-Tiering |
Cross-Region Replication (CRR) |
CloudFront : |
CloudFront Architecture: Part 1 |
CloudFront Architecture: Part 2 |
OAI |
Network File Systems : |
EFS Fundamentals: Part 1 |
EFS Fundamentals: Part 2 |
Storage and Content Delivery |
Database Fundamentals : |
Database Models |
SQL — RDS : |
RDS Essentials: Part 1 |
RDS Essentials: Part 2 |
RDS Backups and Restore |
RDS Resiliency: Multi-AZ |
RDS Read Replicas |
Database Fundamentals and SQL — RDS |
SQL — Aurora : |
Aurora Essentials: Part 1 |
Aurora Essentials: Part 2 |
Parallel Queries and Aurora Global |
Aurora Serverless Essentials: Part 1 |
Aurora Serverless Essentials: Part 2 |
SQL — Aurora |
NoSQL : |
DynamoDB Essentials: Part 1 — Tables and Items |
DynamoDB Essentials: Part 2 — Query and Scan |
DynamoDB Essentials: Part 3 |
DynamoDB Performance and Billing |
DynamoDB Streams and Triggers |
DynamoDB Indexes: Part 1 — LSI |
DynamoDB Indexes: Part 2 — GSI |
NoSQL |
In-Memory Caching : |
DAX |
ElastiCache |
In-Memory Caching |
Load Balancing and Auto Scaling : |
Load Balancing Fundamentals |
Classic Load Balancers and Health Checks: Part 1 |
Classic Load Balancers and Health Checks: Part 2 |
Classic Load Balancers and Health Checks: Part 3 |
Application Load Balancers: Part 1 |
Application Load Balancers: Part 2 |
Network Load Balancers |
Launch Templates and Configurations |
Auto Scaling Groups: Part 1 |
Auto Scaling Groups: Part 2 |
Hands-on Labs |
Implementing an Auto Scaling Group and Application Load Balancer in AWS |
VPN and Direct Connect : |
VPC VPN (IPsec) |
Direct Connect Architecture |
When to Pick Direct Connect vs. VPN |
Snow* : |
Snowball, Snowball Edge, and Snowmobile |
Data and DB Migration : |
Storage Gateway 101 |
Database Migration Service 101 |
Identity Federation and SSO : |
What Is Identity Federation? |
When to Use Identity Federation |
Hybrid and Scaling |
Application Integration : |
Simple Notification Service (SNS) |
Simple Queue Service (SQS): Part 1 |
Simple Queue Service (SQS): Part 2 |
Elastic Transcoder |
Application Integration |
Analytics : |
Athena |
Elastic MapReduce (EMR) |
Kinesis and Firehose |
Redshift |
Analytics |
Logging and Monitoring : |
CloudWatch |
CloudWatch Logs |
CloudTrail |
VPC Flow Logs |
Hands-on Labs |
Custom Logging Using CloudWatch and CloudWatch Logs |
Hands-on Labs |
Working with AWS VPC Flow Logs for Network Monitoring |
Logging and Monitoring |
Operations : |
CloudWatch Events |
KMS Essentials: Part 1 |
KMS Essentials: Part 2 |
Deployment : |
Elastic Beanstalk |
OpsWorks |
Operations and Deployment |
The Exam : |
How to Prepare for the Real Exam |
AWS Solutions Architect Associate (SAAC01) – Final Practice Exam |
Course Features : |
This course can help prepare you for a certification exam. |
Earn a Certificate of Completion |
When you complete this course, you’ll receive a certificate of completion as proof |
COURSE CONTENT :
DevOps Concepts :
How to choose the right DevOps tools :
DEVOPS COURSE CONTENT :
Basic Linux/Windows Operating system OS
Sub topics :
Understanding on various OS platforms(Win/Lin)
Compute
Filesystem
Storage
Network
Package Manger & Repository management
DNS
Password-less authentic between two VM’s/Servers
Creating a private DNS Servers
Installation & configuration of a Webserver on Linux/Windows OS
Networking :
Sub topics :
Basic networking
IP addressing
Subnetting
DNS
Gateway
Router
Switch
Virtualization
Data center Vs Cloud
IaaS
PaaS
SaaS
DaaS
FaaS
Cloud Platforms :
We have adopted AWS, GCP & Azure cloud infrastructure for our practice. We help candidates to create their free accounts & assist them to create & deploy their own applications on the cloud and physical infrastructure (Bare Metal).
AWS SYLLABUS
Introduction to AWS cloud computing platform
Dashboard
IAM
VPC
Networking
Compute Engine
AMI
AWS CLI
Storage
EFS
Route 53
Kubernetes
SNS
Cloud watch
Cloud shell
Billing dashboard
Service center
Support tickets
Enterprise account
AWS Organization
GCP SYLLABUS
IAM & Admin
Billing
Compute Engine
Cloud Storage
VPC Network
Subnetting
Firewall
Cloud DNS
Networking
Kubernetes Engine
Cloud Shell
Service center
Support tickets
Enterprise account
MICROSOFT AZURE SYLLABUS
Virtual Machines
Images
Storage Accounts
Virtual Networks
Networks
Containers
Kubernetes Service
Cloud Shell
DNS
Service center
Support tickets
Enterprise account
Git (Gitlab & Github) :
A Source code management tool used to manage the Continuous Integration or CI pipeline & to track every movement in your project.
Jenkins automation tool :
An automation tool used to automate CICD & integrate every tool required to automate the infrastructure. It works with bare metal & all cloud variants.
Maven build tool :
A build tool require to build the source code, compile, install dependencies, create a local copy, push to repository manager etc.
Repository manager (Nexus/JFrog) :
A repository manager which helps in creating proxy for any publicly available repository & storing artifacts, docker images, Helm Charts etc.
Static code analyzer tool (SonarQube) :
A tool which helps in scanning the source code during the build.
Artifact or dependency scanner tool (SonaType Nexus) :
A tool which helps in scanning artifacts & dependencies during the build.
Shell Scripting :
Linux shell/Bash shell used to update/modify fewer tasks during the build.
Docker containerization tool :
A tool to containerize any application. We assist in transforming legacy desktop application to cloud provisioning.
Docker image scanner :
A tool used to scan docker image during build process.
CICD pipeline :
We help in creating end-to-end CICD pipeline on various cloud platforms.
DSL Groovy language :
A programming language used to write CICD pipeline code.
YAML language :
A domain specific language used to automate infrastructure using Ansible & Kubernetes.
Dockerfile :
It helps in creating our own docker image.
Ansible automation tool :
Its a configuration management tool used for infrastructure automation.
Kubernetes orchestration tool :
Its an orchestration tool used to automate fleet of docker clusters.
Monitoring tool :
A tool used to monitor all our resources in the infrastructure.
TERRAFORM
A tool required to write infrastructure as a code.
Introduction :
1. What is Terraform
2. Installation (Linux/Windows)
3. First Steps
Terraform Basics :
1. Variables
2. Provisioning on Linux
3. Output
4. State
5. Data Sources
6. Template provider
7. Module
Terraform with Cloud :
1. Terraform with Jenkins CICD Pipeline on AWS/GCP/Azure cloud platform.
Duration :
2.5 Months
Schedule :
Every Weekend Sat & Sun 2 slots (12 pm & 2 pm)
TAKEAWAYS
Radical Cloud DevOps completion certificate
Radical 6 months internship letter (especially for freshers & candidates from other streams)
CV preparation (One dedicated session)
Interview Preparation (One dedicated session)
Mock interview (One dedicated session)
Placement (Radical placement team’s assistance)
One complete live DevOps project with multiple assignments.
Can show 6 months Radical internship letter as an experience which covers overall 2yrs of extensive real world work scenarios & live examples experience in the CV.
Can show overall 2yrs of extensive real world work scenarios & live examples experience in the CV
Upon completion, the candidate can undergo Aws Cloud Practitioner global certification exam on their own with their own expense (Radical can help schedule the exam)
Once joined the candidate can join/resume any new fresh batch in full till one year from the date of joining
WhatsApp group will be created for each batch for knowledge sharing & issue/query resolution during Weekdays