Logging Monitoring

How to Set Up a Bash Profile and Environment Variables on RHEL 9 — step-by-step RHEL 9 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Set Up a Bash Profile and Environment Variables on RHEL 9

Every time you open a terminal on RHEL 9, Bash reads one or more startup files before presenting you with a prompt. Which files are read depends on whether the shell is a login shell (started by SSH, a console login, or su -) or an interactive non-login shell (a new terminal window in a […]

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How to Use tmux for Terminal Multiplexing on RHEL 9 — step-by-step RHEL 9 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Use tmux for Terminal Multiplexing on RHEL 9

Terminal multiplexing solves one of the most common problems in server administration: when your SSH connection drops mid-task, any running process in that session is killed. With tmux, your terminal sessions run inside a server-side process that persists independently of your SSH connection. You can detach from a session, disconnect, reconnect hours later from a […]

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How to Configure Log Rotation with logrotate on RHEL 9 — step-by-step RHEL 9 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Configure Log Rotation with logrotate on RHEL 9

Log files are the primary diagnostic tool for server administrators — but without rotation they become a problem in their own right. An unrotated /var/log/nginx/access.log on a busy server can grow to tens of gigabytes within weeks, filling the filesystem, crashing the logging application, and making the log itself unusable because no tool can efficiently […]

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Initial Server Setup with RHEL 9 — step-by-step RHEL 9 tutorial on Progressive Robot

Initial Server Setup with RHEL 9

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 (RHEL 9, codenamed “Plow”) is the most significant release of RHEL in years, built on Linux kernel 5.14, OpenSSL 3.0, and shipped with a hardened-by-default security posture including SELinux enforcing mode, nftables as the default firewall backend, and full support for the latest POWER, ARM, and x86_64 architectures. Whether you […]

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How to Add and Delete Users on RHEL 9 — step-by-step RHEL 9 tutorial on Progressive Robot

How to Add and Delete Users on RHEL 9

User account management is one of the most fundamental administrative tasks on any Linux server. On Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9, every process, file, and network socket is owned by a user and group, making correct account hygiene essential for both security and auditability. Understanding the full lifecycle — creation, modification, and removal — and […]

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