What Is Networking?
Networking is a beginner-level DevOps tool used to manage specific parts of software delivery and operations. It helps teams standardize workflows and reduce manual effort.
Foundations
Networking documentation, practical usage, and learning path.
Level: BeginnerNetworking is a beginner-level DevOps tool used to manage specific parts of software delivery and operations. It helps teams standardize workflows and reduce manual effort.
Teams use Networking to improve speed, reliability, and consistency. It reduces repetitive manual work, lowers failure risk, and makes collaboration easier across development and operations.
It sits at the base of every DevOps workflow. Without this layer, CI/CD, cloud, and reliability work become slow and error-prone.
Start with core Networking concepts and basic setup so you can use it safely in day-to-day work.
- Understand Networking fundamentals
- Set up local/dev environment
- Run first working example
Integrate Networking into real team practices with repeatable conventions and collaboration patterns.
- Adopt standards and naming conventions
- Integrate with repositories and CI/CD
- Create reusable templates
Use Networking in production with observability, security, and rollback plans.
- Monitor behavior and failures
- Secure access and secrets
- Define incident and rollback flow
Continuously improve reliability, performance, and cost while standardizing usage across services.
- Improve performance and cost
- Automate compliance checks
- Document best practices for the team
- Understand TCP/IP basics
- Troubleshoot connectivity
- Read DNS and routing flow
- Network fundamentals
- Hands-on command labs
- Real troubleshooting scenarios
- Local and remote server operations
- Code collaboration workflows
- Task automation in build and deploy scripts
- Read the Networking basics and terminology
- Run at least one hands-on mini project
- Break and fix a small setup to build confidence
- Document your first repeatable workflow
- Integrate Networking with your full delivery pipeline
- Add security and policy checks
- Add observability and incident playbooks
- Define reusable standards for multiple services
- Using defaults in production without security hardening
- Skipping monitoring and post-deployment validation
- No rollback strategy for failed changes
- Over-complex setup before mastering fundamentals
- Access control and least privilege applied
- Secrets managed securely
- Monitoring and alerting enabled
- Rollback and recovery process tested
- Documentation updated for team onboarding
Install Networking on host with practical commands and verification steps.
Install networking tools
sudo apt update && sudo apt install -y iputils-ping traceroute dnsutils net-tools nmapInstall packet capture tools
sudo apt install -y tcpdump wiresharkWireshark may prompt for non-root capture permission.
Verify key tools
ping -V
dig -v
traceroute --versionStart with official docs and first hands-on exercise.
Simple command list with short descriptions.
Official documentation:
Documentation linkA full, structured guide for this tool (with commands, diagrams, best practices, and learning path).
A complete DevOpsLabX guide for Networking: what it is, why we use it, key concepts, commands, best practices, and how to learn it.
Networking is a beginner-level DevOps tool used to manage specific parts of software delivery and operations. It helps teams standardize workflows and reduce manual effort.
A real, visual mental model of how Networking fits into a typical workflow.
Networking Workflow
This diagram is a practical mental model, not vendor-specific.
A production-oriented view: guardrails, checks, and the parts that matter when it breaks.
Production Reference Flow
This diagram is a practical mental model, not vendor-specific.
Understand TCP/IP basics is a core idea you’ll use repeatedly while working with Networking.
Why it matters: Understanding Understand TCP/IP basics helps you design safer workflows and troubleshoot issues faster.
Practice:
Troubleshoot connectivity is a core idea you’ll use repeatedly while working with Networking.
Why it matters: Understanding Troubleshoot connectivity helps you design safer workflows and troubleshoot issues faster.
Practice:
Read DNS and routing flow is a core idea you’ll use repeatedly while working with Networking.
Why it matters: Understanding Read DNS and routing flow helps you design safer workflows and troubleshoot issues faster.
Practice:
Start with core Networking concepts and basic setup so you can use it safely in day-to-day work.
Goals:
Integrate Networking into real team practices with repeatable conventions and collaboration patterns.
Goals:
Use Networking in production with observability, security, and rollback plans.
Goals:
Continuously improve reliability, performance, and cost while standardizing usage across services.
Goals:
A tutorial-style sequence (like a handbook). Do these in order to build skill from beginner to production.
Goal: Get a working environment and confirm basic commands run.
Steps:
mkdir -p ~/devopslabx-labs && cd ~/devopslabx-labs
pwd && ls -la && whoami && id
Checkpoints:
Exercises:
Goal: Become fast at finding and understanding information on a system.
Steps:
printf "alpha\nbeta\ngamma\n" > sample.txt
grep -n "beta" sample.txt
ps aux | head
Checkpoints:
Exercises:
Goal: Understand the most common production errors: permissions and processes.
Steps:
ls -l
printf '#!/usr/bin/env bash\necho ok\n' > run.sh && chmod +x run.sh && ./run.sh
sleep 9999 & echo $!
Checkpoints:
Exercises:
What to learn:
Hands-on labs:
Milestones:
What to learn:
Hands-on labs:
Milestones:
What to learn:
Hands-on labs:
Milestones:
Use these templates to make your docs feel like real production documentation.
You don’t know where to start
Likely cause: Trying advanced setups before fundamentals
Fix steps:
Networking is used to standardize and automate parts of delivery and operations so teams can ship faster and more reliably.
You can get productive in days with fundamentals, but production mastery comes from building workflows, debugging failures, and operating it over time.
Learn basic Linux + Git first, then follow the prerequisites section. Fundamentals make every advanced topic easier.
Add guardrails: least privilege, validation before apply/deploy, monitoring, and a tested rollback plan.
Extra long-form notes for Networking. This loads on demand so the page stays fast.