Red Hat Training Courses
We offer a wide range of training courses from Red Hat including Enterprise Linux, Virtualization, High-Availability, Storage, etc.
This five-day Red Hat System Administration I course provides a foundation for students wishing to become full-time Linux system administrators by introducing key command line concepts and other enterprise-level tools. These concepts are further developed in the follow-on course, Red Hat System Administration II (RH134).
This five-day Red Hat System Administration II (RH134) course serves as the second part of the RHCSA training track for IT professionals who have taken Red Hat System Administration I (RH124). The course goes deeper into core Linux system administration skills in storage configuration and management, installation and deployment of Red Hat Enterprise Linux, management of security features such as SELinux, control of recurring system tasks, management of the boot process and troubleshooting, basic system tuning, and command-line automation and productivity.
Experienced Linux administrators looking for rapid preparation for the RHCSA certification should instead start with RHCSA Rapid Track (RH199).
In this four-day Red Hat High Availability Clustering (RH436) course, you will learn how to provide highly available network services to a mission-critical enterprise environment by deploying and managing shared storage and server clusters. It is created for senior Linux system administrators.
You will set up a cluster of systems running the Red Hat Enterprise Linux High-Availability Add-On Pacemaker component and deploy Linux-based services such as web servers and databases on that cluster. Cluster storage components from the Resilient Storage Add-On are also covered. Installations and applications that require multiple cluster nodes can access the same storage simultaneously. This includes Logical Volume Manager (LVM) Shared Volume Groups, Red Hat Global File System 2 (GFS2), and Device-Mapper Multipath.
This five-day Red Hat Virtualization (RH318) teaches experienced system administrators how to use the virtualization features of Red Hat Enterprise Linux managed through the Red Hat Virtualization suite.
Students acquire the skills and knowledge to effectively create, deploy, manage, and migrate Linux virtual machines hosted on either dedicated Red Hat Virtualization Hypervisor nodes or Red Hat Enterprise Linux servers using Red Hat Virtualization Manager.
This five-day Red Hat Enterprise Linux Automation with Ansible(RH294) course is designed for Linux system administrators and developers who need to automate provisioning, configuration, application deployment, and orchestration. You will learn how to install and configure Ansible on a management workstation; prepare managed hosts for automation; write Ansible Playbooks to automate tasks; and run playbooks to ensure servers are correctly deployed and configured.
This three-day course is for senior system administrators and storage administrators interested in deploying scalable, highly available storage on off-the-shelf hardware and in the cloud. You will learn how to install, configure, and maintain a cluster of Red Hat Storage servers. The course will also explore highly available CIFS and NFS using CTDB, unified file and object storage and geo-replication.
Red Hat Storage Server Administration is part of our new emerging technology series of courses. These courses focus on Red Hat’s newer, evolving technologies. Emerging technologies courses are feature and functionality focused and are conducted like guided labs, with little lecture.
In a four-day Linux in Physical, Virtual and Cloud (RH442) certification training course, you will learn system architecture with an emphasis on understanding its implications on system performance, performance adjustments, open source benchmarking utilities, networking performance, and tuning configurations for specific server use cases and workloads. Red Hat Performance Tuning: Linux in Physical, Virtual, and Cloud (RH422) course teaches senior Linux® system administrators the methodology of performance tuning.
This five-day course is ideal for security administrators and system administrators who need to manage the secure operation of servers running Red Hat Enterprise Linux, whether deployed on physical hardware, as virtual machines, or as cloud instances. Maintaining security of computing systems is a process of managing risk through the implementation of processes and standards backed by technologies and tools. In this course, you will discover and understand the resources that can be used to help you implement and comply with your security requirements.
This four-day Red Hat Security: Identity Management and Active Directory Integration (RH362) provides the skills to configure and manage IdM, the comprehensive Identity Management solution bundled with Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
This five-day Red Hat OpenStack Administration I: Core Operations for Cloud Operators (CL110) is designed for system administrators intending to implement a cloud computing environment using OpenStack. You will learn how to configure, use, and maintain Red Hat OpenStack Platform.
This five-day Red Hat OpenStack Administration II: Infrastructure Configuration for Cloud Administrators (CL210) teaches you how to implement a full-featured cloud computing environment using OpenStack. You will learn to configure, administer, and manage Red Hat OpenStack Platform infrastructure. The lessons and objectives taught in this course will prepare you for the Red Hat Certified Specialist in Cloud Infrastructure Exam (EX210).
This five-day Red Hat Enterprise Linux Diagnostics and Troubleshooting course (RH342) provide system administrators with the tools and techniques they need to successfully diagnose, and fix, a variety of potential issues. Students will work through hands-on problems in various subsystems to diagnose and fix common issues.
Students will learn how to apply the scientific method to a structured form of troubleshooting. This approach is then used troubleshooting various types of problems, including boot issues, hardware issues, storage issues, RPM issues, network issues, third-party application issues, security issues, and kernel issues. At the end of the course students can complete various comprehensive review labs to test their skills.