Linux tutorials for command-line skills, servers, permissions, scripting, and practical system work.
Explore Linux basics, shell commands, system administration, user management, permissions, file handling, and the skills that support server, cloud, and infrastructure workflows.
Explore Linux TopicsWhat you can learn
Linux is a foundation for server administration, cloud environments, scripting, and technical support work. These topics cover the practical skills that matter most.
Command-line basics
Learn how to move through the filesystem, work with files, use common commands, and build confidence in the terminal.
Users, permissions, and security
Understand accounts, groups, access control, permissions, and the basics of safe system operation.
Servers and administration
Work with services, logs, processes, packages, and the daily tasks that keep Linux systems running well.
Scripting and automation
Use shell scripts and command-line workflows to simplify repetitive tasks and improve efficiency.
Related technical paths
Linux connects naturally to networking, cloud, security, and infrastructure-focused learning.
Networking Tutorials
Support Linux learners who also work with servers, ports, services, and infrastructure fundamentals.
Cybersecurity Tutorials
Build a stronger technical foundation for users moving from system basics into defensive security work.
Cloud Computing Tutorials
Connect Linux knowledge to virtual machines, cloud administration, and server-based workflows.
DevOps Tutorials
Pair Linux skills with deployment, automation, and infrastructure-focused development practices.
Python Tutorials
Combine scripting with Linux workflows for automation, tooling, and backend support tasks.
Career Change to IT
Follow a practical route into support, administration, and infrastructure-focused technical roles.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need Linux if I want to work in IT?
It is extremely useful. Linux is common in servers, cloud systems, development environments, and many infrastructure roles.
What should I learn first?
Start with navigation, files, permissions, package management, and the basic command-line tools you will use every day.
Is Linux only for advanced users?
No. It can feel unfamiliar at first, but beginners can learn it step by step with practical tasks and repeated hands-on use.