YOU DIDN’T SIGN UP TO BE A UNIX PERSON. THE SHELL HAD OTHER PLANS.
Most engineers, analysts, and technical professionals who work with Unix-like systems learned what they know under pressure—copying commands from Stack Overflow, running scripts they half-understood, carrying a growing collection of incantations that worked but whose logic remained opaque. This book is the structured foundation they never had time to build.
The Unix Workbench Primer is a practical guide for the working engineer who needs to move from functional to fluent. It covers the command line not as an academic exercise but as a daily tool—one you will use to navigate filesystems with confidence, write scripts that handle errors gracefully, process real data from files and APIs, manage processes and system resources, automate repetitive work, and collaborate through version control.
The book is organized into eight parts. Part I builds your mental model of Unix and introduces the essential commands. Part II covers the shell as a daily environment: configuration, history, variables, quoting, and control flow. Part III addresses real data—grep, sed, awk, jq, and the formats you actually encounter: JSON, YAML, CSV, log files. Part IV covers the everyday power tools: permissions, process monitoring, networking from the command line, and package management across Linux and macOS. Part V covers automation that actually helps: well-structured scripts, cron, systemd timers, and dotfile management that makes your environment portable. Part VI covers Git from mental model through team collaboration. Part VII builds a complete data pipeline and personal workflow automation, and walks through a debugging framework. Part VIII maps what comes next, when the shell is no longer enough, and how to go deeper effectively.
Every chapter is organized around things you will actually do. Three appendices provide a command cheat sheet, copy-paste recipes for common tasks, and a reference guide to common errors and their fixes.
This is not a book for Unix enthusiasts who want to read about Unix. It is a book for professionals who want to work on Unix—confidently, efficiently, and with enough understanding to learn the rest on their own.
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Paperback. Condición: new. Paperback. YOU DIDN'T SIGN UP TO BE A UNIX PERSON. THE SHELL HAD OTHER PLANS. Most engineers, analysts, and technical professionals who work with Unix-like systems learned what they know under pressure-copying commands from Stack Overflow, running scripts they half-understood, carrying a growing collection of incantations that worked but whose logic remained opaque. This book is the structured foundation they never had time to build. The Unix Workbench Primer is a practical guide for the working engineer who needs to move from functional to fluent. It covers the command line not as an academic exercise but as a daily tool-one you will use to navigate filesystems with confidence, write scripts that handle errors gracefully, process real data from files and APIs, manage processes and system resources, automate repetitive work, and collaborate through version control. The book is organized into eight parts. Part I builds your mental model of Unix and introduces the essential commands. Part II covers the shell as a daily environment: configuration, history, variables, quoting, and control flow. Part III addresses real data-grep, sed, awk, jq, and the formats you actually encounter: JSON, YAML, CSV, log files. Part IV covers the everyday power tools: permissions, process monitoring, networking from the command line, and package management across Linux and macOS. Part V covers automation that actually helps: well-structured scripts, cron, systemd timers, and dotfile management that makes your environment portable. Part VI covers Git from mental model through team collaboration. Part VII builds a complete data pipeline and personal workflow automation, and walks through a debugging framework. Part VIII maps what comes next, when the shell is no longer enough, and how to go deeper effectively. Every chapter is organized around things you will actually do. Three appendices provide a command cheat sheet, copy-paste recipes for common tasks, and a reference guide to common errors and their fixes. This is not a book for Unix enthusiasts who want to read about Unix. It is a book for professionals who want to work on Unix-confidently, efficiently, and with enough understanding to learn the rest on their own. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Nº de ref. del artículo: 9798195340995
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