AirVPN if you need port forwarding. Mullvad if you don’t.
Red Hat exams since RHEL 6 have been completely practical in nature. You are given access to a virtual environment and a series of tasks to accomplish within that environment. You are free to accomplish the tasks however you see fit, so long as the required end state is achieved. This testing methodology is specifically why Red Hat exams are held in high regard by IT professionals.
EX294 (RHCE) is heavily ansible-focused, as I’m sure you can surmise from looking at the test objectives. Know the structure of a playbook, yml syntax, basic scripting, and general RHEL network/OS administration concepts, as well as how to integrate all of these things to achieve a defined system state.
Looks super interesting; starred!
Will report back once I’ve run through the installation.
Citizens who are literally choosing not to work, in this case.
Why?