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1995-01-30
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From: danny@cs.su.oz.au (Danny Yee)
Date: Mon, 30 Jan 1995 18:07:33 +1000
Subject: Book Review - Managing Internet Information Services
title: Managing Internet Information Services
by: Cricket Liu + Jerry Peek + Russ Jones + Bryan Buus + Adrian Nye
publisher: O'Reilly & Associates 1994
subjects: computing
other: 630 pages, index, US$29.95
_Managing Internet Information Services_ is a solid guide to providing
information from an internet-connected Unix system. It contains:
two introductory chapters on the internet and internet services;
one chapter on finger, inetd, and telnet; three chapters on ftp; two
on WAIS; eight on gopher; five on the Web; and five on mailing lists
(and ftpmail). There are also chapters on how firewalls and use of
xinetd affect these services, and two chapters on legal issues.
The chapter on the Web describes how to install a Web server (where
to get the source from and how to compile it), how to configure it,
maintain it, how to author material for it, what packages there are
for producing usage statistics, how to use gateways to other services,
and so forth. The sections on gopher, ftp and WAIS are similarly
structured. In each case one particular implementation is described
in depth (eg. NCSA httpd, wuarchive ftpd), but most of the material
is general, and I think a good deal of it would be useful even with
non-Unix implementations. It is assumed throughout that the reader
has a solid knowledge of Unix and the basics of the internet.
The sections on the Web and ftp, the services I have had the most
experience with, are very well done. I knew nothing about WAIS before
reading _Managing Internet Information Services_, but it inspired me
to create a WAIS index to my book reviews and a Web gateway to go with
it; the book explained everything clearly and saved me lots of time.
I only read the introductory chapters on gopher, and I skipped the
mailing list stuff completely, but I have no reason to suspect they
are of lower quality.
While _Managing Internet Information Services_ covers almost
everything one could want, there are two things I would like to have
seen included. One is a discussion of information management at an
abstract level: to some extent general database and file-system issues
can usefully be separated from the details of particular services.
The other is some material on USENET. Not on running a news server
(which is covered in another O'Reilly book), but on using USENET to
provide information: how to work out what is appropriate for which
newsgroups, why spamming is a bad idea, and how to advertise without
upsetting lots of people. This could be coupled with advice on how
to moderate a newsgroup and how to maintain FAQs and other regular
information postings.
The "data librarians" in charge of services and the system
administrators of the machines providing them are the obvious audience
for _Managing Internet Information Services_. Ordinary users who
maintain extensive on-line resources will also find it a cornucopia of
useful information. Since it is these people who make the Internet
what it is, and because _Managing Internet Information Services_
should encourage others to join their ranks, I think it is one of
the most important books on the Internet to appear for a long time.
--
%T Managing Internet Information Services
%A Cricket Liu
%A Jerry Peek
%A Russ Jones
%A Bryan Buus
%A Adrian Nye
%I O'Reilly & Associates
%C Sebastapol, California
%D 1994
%O paperback, index
%G ISBN 1-56592-062-7
%P xxxvi,630pp
%K computing
Danny Yee (danny@cs.su.oz.au)
30 January 1995
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All book reviews by Danny Yee are available via anonymous FTP
ftp.anatomy.su.oz.au in /danny/book-reviews (index INDEX) or
URL http://www.anatomy.su.oz.au/danny/book-reviews/index.html
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Copyright (C) Danny Yee 1995 : Comments and criticism welcome
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