On 5/1/07, Edward L. Haletky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: [snip]
As for not covering web services, I think that is a mistake. The vast majority of Linux servers in use today are web servers. Mail and messaging does not even come in close to this for Linux usage. Granted this may open up a huge discussion and yes I run Linux on all but 2 or so less critical systems, but still most people in the enterprise are using Linux for Apache, compute clusters, and specific middle tier applications.
Correct but usually, as far as I know, web services are used only in their simplest forms, which is covered in LPI certifications. Some of the most advanced web applications I know are based only on simple Apache and PHP. A web specialization, as I have it in mind, should be advanced and low-level enough to worth the trouble. It should include several remote authentication methods,exotic configurations, common load balancing techniques and extreme finetuning on common linux powered web servers, not just Apache. But of course, that's just me... Regards - Giannis _______________________________________________ lpi-examdev mailing list lpi-examdev@lpi.org http://list.lpi.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev