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Table of Contents
Start with the Basics: What’s Really Going On?
Before you dive into commands, take a breath and gather the facts.
Asking the right questions and getting a clear description of the issue saves you hours of wild goose chases
System Logs: Your First Detective Tool
Logs are your best friends when Linux acts up.
Resource Hogs: CPU, Memory, and Disk Issues
Is your system sluggish or unresponsive?
uptime shows load averages
top, htop, or ps aux --sort=-%cpu | head for CPU hogs
ps aux --sort=-%mem | head for memory guzzlers
df -h for usage, du -sh * to find big files, and
sudo apt clean or sudo dnf clean all to clear package caches.
Permission Headaches and Dependency Drama
Permission denied?
Missing libraries or dependencies?
apt-file search libsomething.so.2 (Debian/Ubuntu)
dnf provides */libsomething.so.2 (Fedora/RHEL)
Network Not Working? Step-by-Step Fixes
Boot Issues and Frozen Systems
Real-World Scenarios and Quick Solutions
Script works manually but fails in cron?
Wrapping Up
Linux troubleshooting is all about staying calm, asking the right questions, and using the right tools.
Start with the Basics: What’s Really Going On?
System Logs: Your First Detective Tool
Resource Hogs: CPU, Memory, and Disk Issues
Permission Headaches and Dependency Drama
Network Not Working? Step-by-Step Fixes
Boot Issues and Frozen Systems
Real-World Scenarios and Quick Solutions
Wrapping Up
Start with the Basics: What’s Really Going On?
Before you dive into commands, take a breath and gather the facts.
What’s broken? Is there an error message?
Did something change recently (updates, new installs)?
Can you reproduce the problem, or is it random?
Asking the right questions and getting a clear description of the issue saves you hours of wild goose chases
System Logs: Your First Detective Tool
Logs are your best friends when Linux acts up.
General system logs:
tail -n 50 /var/log/syslog or tail -n 50 /var/log/messages
Kernel messages:
sudo dmesg | tail -20
Authentication issues:
tail -n 50 /var/log/auth.log or /var/log/secure
Boot problems:
cat /var/log/boot.log or use head/tail for quick peeks**
Pro tip: Use grep "error" to search for red flags fast
Resource Hogs: CPU, Memory, and Disk Issues
Is your system sluggish or unresponsive?
- Check system load:
uptime shows load averages
- See what’s eating resources:
top, htop, or ps aux --sort=-%cpu | head for CPU hogs
ps aux --sort=-%mem | head for memory guzzlers
- Disk space:
df -h for usage, du -sh * to find big files, and
sudo apt clean or sudo dnf clean all to clear package caches.
- If a process is out of control, use kill -9 PID (replace PID with the process ID).
Permission Headaches and Dependency Drama
Permission denied?
Check with ls -la filename
Fix with chmod +x filename or change ownership with chown
user:group filename.
Missing libraries or dependencies?
- For errors like “libsomething.so.2: cannot open shared object file,” use:
apt-file search libsomething.so.2 (Debian/Ubuntu)
dnf provides */libsomething.so.2 (Fedora/RHEL)
- Install the required package with your package manager
Network Not Working? Step-by-Step Fixes
Check your network interface:
ip link
Verify your IP address:
ip addr
Can you reach your gateway?
ip route show and ping -c 4
Test DNS:
ping -c 4 google.com
Check open ports:
nc -zv google.com 443.
If SSH locks you out, try accessing the server locally or through the console, and check for high load or network failures
Boot Issues and Frozen Systems
Boot failures:
Check /var/log/boot.log for clues.
Use dmesg for kernel and hardware errors.
Frozen system?
Try switching TTYs with Ctrl+Alt+F2, or use the hypervisor console if it’s a VM.
Safe reboot:
If all else fails, use echo b > /proc/sysrq-trigger for a safe reboot
Real-World Scenarios and Quick Solutions
Script works manually but fails in cron?
Add logging to your script.
Compare environment variables between manual and cron runs.
Fix missing PATH or variables in your script.
Intermittent network drops?
Check logs for hardware errors.
Monitor with ping or dmesg -w for real-time clues
Wrapping Up
Linux troubleshooting is all about staying calm, asking the right questions, and using the right tools.
Always check logs first.
Monitor your resources.
Don’t ignore permissions or dependencies.
Automate what you can, but know how to dig in manually.
And remember, the Linux community is massive-don’t be afraid to
search forums and share your own solutions. Happy troubleshooting!