machinectl(1)


NAME

   machinectl - Control the systemd machine manager

SYNOPSIS

   machinectl [OPTIONS...] {COMMAND} [NAME...]

DESCRIPTION

   machinectl may be used to introspect and control the state of the
   systemd(1) virtual machine and container registration manager systemd-
   machined.service(8).

   machinectl may be used to execute operations on machines and images.
   Machines in this sense are considered running instances of:

   *   Virtual Machines (VMs) that virtualize hardware to run full
       operating system (OS) instances (including their kernels) in a
       virtualized environment on top of the host OS.

   *   Containers that share the hardware and OS kernel with the host OS,
       in order to run OS userspace instances on top the host OS.

   *   The host system itself

   Machines are identified by names that follow the same rules as UNIX and
   DNS host names, for details, see below. Machines are instantiated from
   disk or file system images that frequently --- but not necessarily ---
   carry the same name as machines running from them. Images in this sense
   are considered:

   *   Directory trees containing an OS, including its top-level
       directories /usr, /etc, and so on.

   *   btrfs subvolumes containing OS trees, similar to normal directory
       trees.

   *   Binary "raw" disk images containing MBR or GPT partition tables and
       Linux file system partitions.

   *   The file system tree of the host OS itself.

OPTIONS

   The following options are understood:

   -p, --property=
       When showing machine or image properties, limit the output to
       certain properties as specified by the argument. If not specified,
       all set properties are shown. The argument should be a property
       name, such as "Name". If specified more than once, all properties
       with the specified names are shown.

   -a, --all
       When showing machine or image properties, show all properties
       regardless of whether they are set or not.

       When listing VM or container images, do not suppress images
       beginning in a dot character (".").

       When cleaning VM or container images, remove all images, not just
       hidden ones.

   --value
       When printing properties with show, only print the value, and skip
       the property name and "=".

   -l, --full
       Do not ellipsize process tree entries.

   --no-ask-password
       Do not query the user for authentication for privileged operations.

   --kill-who=
       When used with kill, choose which processes to kill. Must be one of
       leader, or all to select whether to kill only the leader process of
       the machine or all processes of the machine. If omitted, defaults
       to all.

   -s, --signal=
       When used with kill, choose which signal to send to selected
       processes. Must be one of the well-known signal specifiers, such as
       SIGTERM, SIGINT or SIGSTOP. If omitted, defaults to SIGTERM.

   --uid=
       When used with the shell command, chooses the user ID to open the
       interactive shell session as. If the argument to the shell command
       also specifies a user name, this option is ignored. If the name is
       not specified in either way, "root" will be used by default. Note
       that this switch is not supported for the login command (see
       below).

   -E NAME=VALUE, --setenv=NAME=VALUE
       When used with the shell command, sets an environment variable to
       pass to the executed shell. Takes an environment variable name and
       value, separated by "=". This switch may be used multiple times to
       set multiple environment variables. Note that this switch is not
       supported for the login command (see below).

   --mkdir
       When used with bind, creates the destination directory before
       applying the bind mount.

   --read-only
       When used with bind, applies a read-only bind mount.

       When used with clone, import-raw or import-tar a read-only
       container or VM image is created.

   -n, --lines=
       When used with status, controls the number of journal lines to
       show, counting from the most recent ones. Takes a positive integer
       argument. Defaults to 10.

   -o, --output=
       When used with status, controls the formatting of the journal
       entries that are shown. For the available choices, see
       journalctl(1). Defaults to "short".

   --verify=
       When downloading a container or VM image, specify whether the image
       shall be verified before it is made available. Takes one of "no",
       "checksum" and "signature". If "no", no verification is done. If
       "checksum" is specified, the download is checked for integrity
       after the transfer is complete, but no signatures are verified. If
       "signature" is specified, the checksum is verified and the image's
       signature is checked against a local keyring of trustable vendors.
       It is strongly recommended to set this option to "signature" if the
       server and protocol support this. Defaults to "signature".

   --force
       When downloading a container or VM image, and a local copy by the
       specified local machine name already exists, delete it first and
       replace it by the newly downloaded image.

   --format=
       When used with the export-tar or export-raw commands, specifies the
       compression format to use for the resulting file. Takes one of
       "uncompressed", "xz", "gzip", "bzip2". By default, the format is
       determined automatically from the image file name passed.

   --max-addresses=
       When used with the list-machines command, limits the number of ip
       addresses output for every machine. Defaults to 1. All addresses
       can be requested with "all" as argument to --max-addresses . If the
       argument to --max-addresses is less than the actual number of
       addresses,"..."follows the last address. If multiple addresses are
       to be written for a given machine, every address except the first
       one is on a new line and is followed by "," if another address will
       be output afterwards.

   -H, --host=
       Execute the operation remotely. Specify a hostname, or a username
       and hostname separated by "@", to connect to. The hostname may
       optionally be suffixed by a container name, separated by ":", which
       connects directly to a specific container on the specified host.
       This will use SSH to talk to the remote machine manager instance.
       Container names may be enumerated with machinectl -H HOST.

   -M, --machine=
       Execute operation on a local container. Specify a container name to
       connect to.

   --no-pager
       Do not pipe output into a pager.

   --no-legend
       Do not print the legend, i.e. column headers and the footer with
       hints.

   -h, --help
       Print a short help text and exit.

   --version
       Print a short version string and exit.

COMMANDS

   The following commands are understood:

   Machine Commands
   list
       List currently running (online) virtual machines and containers. To
       enumerate machine images that can be started, use list-images (see
       below). Note that this command hides the special ".host" machine by
       default. Use the --all switch to show it.

   status NAME...
       Show runtime status information about one or more virtual machines
       and containers, followed by the most recent log data from the
       journal. This function is intended to generate human-readable
       output. If you are looking for computer-parsable output, use show
       instead. Note that the log data shown is reported by the virtual
       machine or container manager, and frequently contains console
       output of the machine, but not necessarily journal contents of the
       machine itself.

   show [NAME...]
       Show properties of one or more registered virtual machines or
       containers or the manager itself. If no argument is specified,
       properties of the manager will be shown. If a NAME is specified,
       properties of this virtual machine or container are shown. By
       default, empty properties are suppressed. Use --all to show those
       too. To select specific properties to show, use --property=. This
       command is intended to be used whenever computer-parsable output is
       required, and does not print the control group tree or journal
       entries. Use status if you are looking for formatted human-readable
       output.

   start NAME...
       Start a container as a system service, using systemd-nspawn(1).
       This starts systemd-nspawn@.service, instantiated for the specified
       machine name, similar to the effect of systemctl start on the
       service name.  systemd-nspawn looks for a container image by the
       specified name in /var/lib/machines/ (and other search paths, see
       below) and runs it. Use list-images (see below) for listing
       available container images to start.

       Note that systemd-machined.service(8) also interfaces with a
       variety of other container and VM managers, systemd-nspawn is just
       one implementation of it. Most of the commands available in
       machinectl may be used on containers or VMs controlled by other
       managers, not just systemd-nspawn. Starting VMs and container
       images on those managers requires manager-specific tools.

       To interactively start a container on the command line with full
       access to the container's console, please invoke systemd-nspawn
       directly. To stop a running container use machinectl poweroff.

   login [NAME]
       Open an interactive terminal login session in a container or on the
       local host. If an argument is supplied, it refers to the container
       machine to connect to. If none is specified, or the container name
       is specified as the empty string, or the special machine name
       ".host" (see below) is specified, the connection is made to the
       local host instead. This will create a TTY connection to a specific
       container or the local host and asks for the execution of a getty
       on it. Note that this is only supported for containers running
       systemd(1) as init system.

       This command will open a full login prompt on the container or the
       local host, which then asks for username and password. Use shell
       (see below) or systemd-run(1) with the --machine= switch to
       directly invoke a single command, either interactively or in the
       background.

   shell [[NAME@]NAME [PATH [ARGUMENTS...]]]
       Open an interactive shell session in a container or on the local
       host. The first argument refers to the container machine to connect
       to. If none is specified, or the machine name is specified as the
       empty string, or the special machine name ".host" (see below) is
       specified, the connection is made to the local host instead. This
       works similar to login but immediately invokes a user process. This
       command runs the specified executable with the specified arguments,
       or /bin/sh if none is specified. By default, opens a "root" shell,
       but by using --uid=, or by prefixing the machine name with a
       username and an "@" character, a different user may be selected.
       Use --setenv= to set environment variables for the executed
       process.

       When using the shell command without arguments, (thus invoking the
       executed shell or command on the local host), it is in many ways
       similar to a su(1) session, but, unlike su, completely isolates the
       new session from the originating session, so that it shares no
       process or session properties, and is in a clean and well-defined
       state. It will be tracked in a new utmp, login, audit, security and
       keyring session, and will not inherit any environment variables or
       resource limits, among other properties.

       Note that systemd-run(1) may be used in place of the shell command,
       and allows more detailed, low-level configuration of the invoked
       unit. However, it is frequently more privileged than the shell
       command.

   enable NAME..., disable NAME...
       Enable or disable a container as a system service to start at
       system boot, using systemd-nspawn(1). This enables or disables
       systemd-nspawn@.service, instantiated for the specified machine
       name, similar to the effect of systemctl enable or systemctl
       disable on the service name.

   poweroff NAME...
       Power off one or more containers. This will trigger a reboot by
       sending SIGRTMIN+4 to the container's init process, which causes
       systemd-compatible init systems to shut down cleanly. Use stop as
       alias for poweroff. This operation does not work on containers that
       do not run a systemd(1)-compatible init system, such as sysvinit.
       Use terminate (see below) to immediately terminate a container or
       VM, without cleanly shutting it down.

   reboot NAME...
       Reboot one or more containers. This will trigger a reboot by
       sending SIGINT to the container's init process, which is roughly
       equivalent to pressing Ctrl+Alt+Del on a non-containerized system,
       and is compatible with containers running any system manager.

   terminate NAME...
       Immediately terminates a virtual machine or container, without
       cleanly shutting it down. This kills all processes of the virtual
       machine or container and deallocates all resources attached to that
       instance. Use poweroff to issue a clean shutdown request.

   kill NAME...
       Send a signal to one or more processes of the virtual machine or
       container. This means processes as seen by the host, not the
       processes inside the virtual machine or container. Use --kill-who=
       to select which process to kill. Use --signal= to select the signal
       to send.

   bind NAME PATH [PATH]
       Bind mounts a directory from the host into the specified container.
       The first directory argument is the source directory on the host,
       the second directory argument is the destination directory in the
       container. When the latter is omitted, the destination path in the
       container is the same as the source path on the host. When combined
       with the --read-only switch, a ready-only bind mount is created.
       When combined with the --mkdir switch, the destination path is
       first created before the mount is applied. Note that this option is
       currently only supported for systemd-nspawn(1) containers.

   copy-to NAME PATH [PATH]
       Copies files or directories from the host system into a running
       container. Takes a container name, followed by the source path on
       the host and the destination path in the container. If the
       destination path is omitted, the same as the source path is used.

   copy-from NAME PATH [PATH]
       Copies files or directories from a container into the host system.
       Takes a container name, followed by the source path in the
       container the destination path on the host. If the destination path
       is omitted, the same as the source path is used.

   Image Commands
   list-images
       Show a list of locally installed container and VM images. This
       enumerates all raw disk images and container directories and
       subvolumes in /var/lib/machines/ (and other search paths, see
       below). Use start (see above) to run a container off one of the
       listed images. Note that, by default, containers whose name begins
       with a dot (".") are not shown. To show these too, specify --all.
       Note that a special image ".host" always implicitly exists and
       refers to the image the host itself is booted from.

   image-status [NAME...]
       Show terse status information about one or more container or VM
       images. This function is intended to generate human-readable
       output. Use show-image (see below) to generate computer-parsable
       output instead.

   show-image [NAME...]
       Show properties of one or more registered virtual machine or
       container images, or the manager itself. If no argument is
       specified, properties of the manager will be shown. If a NAME is
       specified, properties of this virtual machine or container image
       are shown. By default, empty properties are suppressed. Use --all
       to show those too. To select specific properties to show, use
       --property=. This command is intended to be used whenever
       computer-parsable output is required. Use image-status if you are
       looking for formatted human-readable output.

   clone NAME NAME
       Clones a container or VM image. The arguments specify the name of
       the image to clone and the name of the newly cloned image. Note
       that plain directory container images are cloned into btrfs
       subvolume images with this command, if the underlying file system
       supports this. Note that cloning a container or VM image is
       optimized for btrfs file systems, and might not be efficient on
       others, due to file system limitations.

       Note that this command leaves host name, machine ID and all other
       settings that could identify the instance unmodified. The original
       image and the cloned copy will hence share these credentials, and
       it might be necessary to manually change them in the copy.

       If combined with the --read-only switch a read-only cloned image is
       created.

   rename NAME NAME
       Renames a container or VM image. The arguments specify the name of
       the image to rename and the new name of the image.

   read-only NAME [BOOL]
       Marks or (unmarks) a container or VM image read-only. Takes a VM or
       container image name, followed by a boolean as arguments. If the
       boolean is omitted, positive is implied, i.e. the image is marked
       read-only.

   remove NAME...
       Removes one or more container or VM images. The special image
       ".host", which refers to the host's own directory tree, may not be
       removed.

   set-limit [NAME] BYTES
       Sets the maximum size in bytes that a specific container or VM
       image, or all images, may grow up to on disk (disk quota). Takes
       either one or two parameters. The first, optional parameter refers
       to a container or VM image name. If specified, the size limit of
       the specified image is changed. If omitted, the overall size limit
       of the sum of all images stored locally is changed. The final
       argument specifies the size limit in bytes, possibly suffixed by
       the usual K, M, G, T units. If the size limit shall be disabled,
       specify "-" as size.

       Note that per-container size limits are only supported on btrfs
       file systems. Also note that, if set-limit is invoked without an
       image parameter, and /var/lib/machines is empty, and the directory
       is not located on btrfs, a btrfs loopback file is implicitly
       created as /var/lib/machines.raw with the given size, and mounted
       to /var/lib/machines. The size of the loopback may later be
       readjusted with set-limit, as well. If such a loopback-mounted
       /var/lib/machines directory is used, set-limit without an image
       name alters both the quota setting within the file system as well
       as the loopback file and file system size itself.

   clean
       Remove hidden VM or container images (or all). This command removes
       all hidden machine images from /var/lib/machines, i.e. those whose
       name begins with a dot. Use machinectl list-images --all to see a
       list of all machine images, including the hidden ones.

       When combined with the --all switch removes all images, not just
       hidden ones. This command effectively empties /var/lib/machines.

       Note that commands such as machinectl pull-tar or machinectl
       pull-raw usually create hidden, read-only, unmodified machine
       images from the downloaded image first, before cloning a writable
       working copy of it, in order to avoid duplicate downloads in case
       of images that are reused multiple times. Use machinectl clean to
       remove old, hidden images created this way.

   Image Transfer Commands
   pull-tar URL [NAME]
       Downloads a .tar container image from the specified URL, and makes
       it available under the specified local machine name. The URL must
       be of type "http://" or "https://", and must refer to a .tar,
       .tar.gz, .tar.xz or .tar.bz2 archive file. If the local machine
       name is omitted, it is automatically derived from the last
       component of the URL, with its suffix removed.

       The image is verified before it is made available, unless
       --verify=no is specified. Verification is done via SHA256SUMS and
       SHA256SUMS.gpg files that need to be made available on the same web
       server, under the same URL as the .tar file, but with the last
       component (the filename) of the URL replaced. With
       --verify=checksum, only the SHA256 checksum for the file is
       verified, based on the SHA256SUMS file. With --verify=signature,
       the SHA256SUMS file is first verified with detached GPG signature
       file SHA256SUMS.gpg. The public key for this verification step
       needs to be available in /usr/lib/systemd/import-pubring.gpg or
       /etc/systemd/import-pubring.gpg.

       The container image will be downloaded and stored in a read-only
       subvolume in /var/lib/machines/ that is named after the specified
       URL and its HTTP etag. A writable snapshot is then taken from this
       subvolume, and named after the specified local name. This behavior
       ensures that creating multiple container instances of the same URL
       is efficient, as multiple downloads are not necessary. In order to
       create only the read-only image, and avoid creating its writable
       snapshot, specify "-" as local machine name.

       Note that the read-only subvolume is prefixed with .tar-, and is
       thus not shown by list-images, unless --all is passed.

       Note that pressing C-c during execution of this command will not
       abort the download. Use cancel-transfer, described below.

   pull-raw URL [NAME]
       Downloads a .raw container or VM disk image from the specified URL,
       and makes it available under the specified local machine name. The
       URL must be of type "http://" or "https://". The container image
       must either be a .qcow2 or raw disk image, optionally compressed as
       .gz, .xz, or .bz2. If the local machine name is omitted, it is
       automatically derived from the last component of the URL, with its
       suffix removed.

       Image verification is identical for raw and tar images (see above).

       If the downloaded image is in .qcow2 format it is converted into a
       raw image file before it is made available.

       Downloaded images of this type will be placed as read-only .raw
       file in /var/lib/machines/. A local, writable (reflinked) copy is
       then made under the specified local machine name. To omit creation
       of the local, writable copy pass "-" as local machine name.

       Similar to the behavior of pull-tar, the read-only image is
       prefixed with .raw-, and thus not shown by list-images, unless
       --all is passed.

       Note that pressing C-c during execution of this command will not
       abort the download. Use cancel-transfer, described below.

   import-tar FILE [NAME], import-raw FILE [NAME]
       Imports a TAR or RAW container or VM image, and places it under the
       specified name in /var/lib/machines/. When import-tar is used, the
       file specified as the first argument should be a tar archive,
       possibly compressed with xz, gzip or bzip2. It will then be
       unpacked into its own subvolume in /var/lib/machines. When
       import-raw is used, the file should be a qcow2 or raw disk image,
       possibly compressed with xz, gzip or bzip2. If the second argument
       (the resulting image name) is not specified, it is automatically
       derived from the file name. If the file name is passed as "-", the
       image is read from standard input, in which case the second
       argument is mandatory.

       Both pull-tar and pull-raw will resize /var/lib/machines.raw and
       the filesystem therein as necessary. Optionally, the --read-only
       switch may be used to create a read-only container or VM image. No
       cryptographic validation is done when importing the images.

       Much like image downloads, ongoing imports may be listed with
       list-transfers and aborted with cancel-transfer.

   export-tar NAME [FILE], export-raw NAME [FILE]
       Exports a TAR or RAW container or VM image and stores it in the
       specified file. The first parameter should be a VM or container
       image name. The second parameter should be a file path the TAR or
       RAW image is written to. If the path ends in ".gz", the file is
       compressed with gzip, if it ends in ".xz", with xz, and if it ends
       in ".bz2", with bzip2. If the path ends in neither, the file is
       left uncompressed. If the second argument is missing, the image is
       written to standard output. The compression may also be explicitly
       selected with the --format= switch. This is in particular useful if
       the second parameter is left unspecified.

       Much like image downloads and imports, ongoing exports may be
       listed with list-transfers and aborted with cancel-transfer.

       Note that, currently, only directory and subvolume images may be
       exported as TAR images, and only raw disk images as RAW images.

   list-transfers
       Shows a list of container or VM image downloads, imports and
       exports that are currently in progress.

   cancel-transfers ID...
       Aborts a download, import or export of the container or VM image
       with the specified ID. To list ongoing transfers and their IDs, use
       list-transfers.

MACHINE AND IMAGE NAMES

   The machinectl tool operates on machines and images whose names must be
   chosen following strict rules. Machine names must be suitable for use
   as host names following a conservative subset of DNS and UNIX/Linux
   semantics. Specifically, they must consist of one or more non-empty
   label strings, separated by dots. No leading or trailing dots are
   allowed. No sequences of multiple dots are allowed. The label strings
   may only consist of alphanumeric characters as well as the dash and
   underscore. The maximum length of a machine name is 64 characters.

   A special machine with the name ".host" refers to the running host
   system itself. This is useful for execution operations or inspecting
   the host system as well. Note that machinectl list will not show this
   special machine unless the --all switch is specified.

   Requirements on image names are less strict, however, they must be
   valid UTF-8, must be suitable as file names (hence not be the single or
   double dot, and not include a slash), and may not contain control
   characters. Since many operations search for an image by the name of a
   requested machine, it is recommended to name images in the same strict
   fashion as machines.

   A special image with the name ".host" refers to the image of the
   running host system. It hence conceptually maps to the special ".host"
   machine name described above. Note that machinectl list-images will not
   show this special image either, unless --all is specified.

FILES AND DIRECTORIES

   Machine images are preferably stored in /var/lib/machines/, but are
   also searched for in /usr/local/lib/machines/ and /usr/lib/machines/.
   For compatibility reasons, the directory /var/lib/container/ is
   searched, too. Note that images stored below /usr are always considered
   read-only. It is possible to symlink machines images from other
   directories into /var/lib/machines/ to make them available for control
   with machinectl.

   Note that many image operations are only supported, efficient or atomic
   on btrfs file systems. Due to this, if the pull-tar, pull-raw,
   import-tar, import-raw and set-limit commands notice that
   /var/lib/machines is empty and not located on btrfs, they will
   implicitly set up a loopback file /var/lib/machines.raw containing a
   btrfs file system that is mounted to /var/lib/machines. The size of
   this loopback file may be controlled dynamically with set-limit.

   Disk images are understood by systemd-nspawn(1) and machinectl in three
   formats:

   *   A simple directory tree, containing the files and directories of
       the container to boot.

   *   Subvolumes (on btrfs file systems), which are similar to the simple
       directories, described above. However, they have additional
       benefits, such as efficient cloning and quota reporting.

   *   "Raw" disk images, i.e. binary images of disks with a GPT or MBR
       partition table. Images of this type are regular files with the
       suffix ".raw".

   See systemd-nspawn(1) for more information on image formats, in
   particular its --directory= and --image= options.

EXAMPLES

   Example 1. Download an Ubuntu image and open a shell in it

       # machinectl pull-tar https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/trusty/current/trusty-server-cloudimg-amd64-root.tar.gz
       # systemd-nspawn -M trusty-server-cloudimg-amd64-root

   This downloads and verifies the specified .tar image, and then uses
   systemd-nspawn(1) to open a shell in it.

   Example 2. Download a Fedora image, set a root password in it, start it
   as service

       # machinectl pull-raw --verify=no https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/fedora/linux/releases/23/Cloud/x86_64/Images/Fedora-Cloud-Base-23-20151030.x86_64.raw.xz
       # systemd-nspawn -M Fedora-Cloud-Base-23-20151030
       # passwd
       # exit
       # machinectl start Fedora-Cloud-Base-23-20151030
       # machinectl login Fedora-Cloud-Base-23-20151030

   This downloads the specified .raw image with verification disabled.
   Then, a shell is opened in it and a root password is set. Afterwards
   the shell is left, and the machine started as system service. With the
   last command a login prompt into the container is requested.

   Example 3. Exports a container image as tar file

       # machinectl export-tar fedora myfedora.tar.xz

   Exports the container "fedora" as an xz-compressed tar file
   myfedora.tar.xz into the current directory.

   Example 4. Create a new shell session

       # machinectl shell --uid=lennart

   This creates a new shell session on the local host for the user ID
   "lennart", in a su(1)-like fashion.

EXIT STATUS

   On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure code otherwise.

ENVIRONMENT

   $SYSTEMD_PAGER
       Pager to use when --no-pager is not given; overrides $PAGER. If
       neither $SYSTEMD_PAGER nor $PAGER are set, a set of well-known
       pager implementations are tried in turn, including less(1) and
       more(1), until one is found. If no pager implementation is
       discovered no pager is invoked. Setting this environment variable
       to an empty string or the value "cat" is equivalent to passing
       --no-pager.

   $SYSTEMD_LESS
       Override the options passed to less (by default "FRSXMK").

   $SYSTEMD_LESSCHARSET
       Override the charset passed to less (by default "utf-8", if the
       invoking terminal is determined to be UTF-8 compatible).

SEE ALSO

   systemd-machined.service(8), systemd-nspawn(1), systemd.special(7),
   tar(1), xz(1), gzip(1), bzip2(1)





Opportunity


Personal Opportunity - Free software gives you access to billions of dollars of software at no cost. Use this software for your business, personal use or to develop a profitable skill. Access to source code provides access to a level of capabilities/information that companies protect though copyrights. Open source is a core component of the Internet and it is available to you. Leverage the billions of dollars in resources and capabilities to build a career, establish a business or change the world. The potential is endless for those who understand the opportunity.

Business Opportunity - Goldman Sachs, IBM and countless large corporations are leveraging open source to reduce costs, develop products and increase their bottom lines. Learn what these companies know about open source and how open source can give you the advantage.





Free Software


Free Software provides computer programs and capabilities at no cost but more importantly, it provides the freedom to run, edit, contribute to, and share the software. The importance of free software is a matter of access, not price. Software at no cost is a benefit but ownership rights to the software and source code is far more significant.


Free Office Software - The Libre Office suite provides top desktop productivity tools for free. This includes, a word processor, spreadsheet, presentation engine, drawing and flowcharting, database and math applications. Libre Office is available for Linux or Windows.





Free Books


The Free Books Library is a collection of thousands of the most popular public domain books in an online readable format. The collection includes great classical literature and more recent works where the U.S. copyright has expired. These books are yours to read and use without restrictions.


Source Code - Want to change a program or know how it works? Open Source provides the source code for its programs so that anyone can use, modify or learn how to write those programs themselves. Visit the GNU source code repositories to download the source.





Education


Study at Harvard, Stanford or MIT - Open edX provides free online courses from Harvard, MIT, Columbia, UC Berkeley and other top Universities. Hundreds of courses for almost all major subjects and course levels. Open edx also offers some paid courses and selected certifications.


Linux Manual Pages - A man or manual page is a form of software documentation found on Linux/Unix operating systems. Topics covered include computer programs (including library and system calls), formal standards and conventions, and even abstract concepts.