Red Hat® Enterprise Performance Tuning is designed to teach senior Linux® system administrators the methodology of performance tuning for Red Hat Enterprise Linux. This course discusses system architecture with an emphasis on understanding the implications of system architecture on system performance, methods for testing the effects of performance adjustments, open source benchmarking utilities, methods for analyzing system and networking performance, and tuning configurations for specific application loads.
This course includes and prepares a Red Hat Certified Engineer (RHCE®) for the Red Hat Enterprise Directory Services and Authentication Expertise Exam (EX423).
TARGET AUDIENCE:
Experienced Linux system administrators responsible for maximizing resource utilization through performance tuning
An RHCE interested in earning a Red Hat Certification of Expertise or a Red Hat Certified Architect (RHCA) credential
COURSE PREREQUISITES:
• RHCE certification or equivalent experience
COURSE CONTENT:
Introduction to performance tuning
• Understand the basic principles of performance tuning and analysis.
Collecting, graphing, and interpreting data
• Gain proficiency in using basic analysis tools and in evaluating data.
General tuning
• Learn basic tuning theory and mechanisms used to tune the system.
Hardware profiling
• Understand and analyze hardware.
Software profiling
• Analyze CPU and memory performance of applications.
Mail server tuning
• Learn about basic storage tuning using an email server as an example.
Large memory workload tuning
• Understand memory management and tuning.
HPC workload tuning
• Understand tuning for CPU-bound applications.
File server tuning
• Understand storage and network tuning in the context of a file server application.
Database server tuning
• Tune memory and network performance using a database application as an example.
Power usage tuning
• Tune systems with power consumption in mind.
Virtualization tuning
• Tune 'host' and 'guest' for efficient virtualization.
COURSE OBJECTIVE:
• Tuning for use-case scenarios (for example, HPC, large memory, database, file server, and so on)
• Tuning for power consumption
• Tuning virtual machines (host and guest)
• Tuning memory and caches
• Tuning CPU and memory utilization using cgroups
• Gathering performance metrics and other data for tuning purposes
FOLLOW ON COURSES:
RHS429, Red Hat Enterprise SELinux Policy Administration