Trying to reschedule my exam and noticed that EX200V8K was not available when I scheduled only EX200V9K was available. Do you still offer the EX200V8K or do I need to take EX200V9K and if so what are the differences? I have been studying for EX200V8K.
EX200 is availabe in v9 now. You can switch to v9 - you wont find sweeping differences between both.
Refer there the v9 exam objective : https://www.redhat.com/en/services/training/ex200-red-hat-certified-system-administrator-rhcsa-exam?...
If you want to know the difference between both version courses , take a look at the below summary :
All narratives, exercises, and labs are updated to Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9 syntax.
The Red Hat Enterprise Linux introduction includes modern use cases and hybrid cloud computing.
The GNU info command is removed based on feedback that indicates limited use.
NetworkManager configuration file location changed starting in RHEL 8, and the network-scripts location is deprecated. The new configuration files use an INI format.
Remote file copying now uses Secure File Transfer Protocol (SFTP). Secure Copy Protocol (SCP) is removed due to a security flaw, and is no longer recommended for production use.
Package modules are temporarily deemphasized, because the earliest versions of RHEL 9 ship without software package modules while the module infrastructure continues to be built.
Red Hat support information and sites are updated to include newer tools and locations.
Installing software now uses Simple Content Access for subscription management, which eliminates subscription attachment tasks and simplifies preparing registered systems.
Kickstart is updated with new syntax and functionality.
Modules are deemphasized in this update, but not removed. Engineering continues to develop the module infrastructure for RHEL 9, which will be delivered in a later RHEL 9 minor release.
Starting in RHEL 9, training courseware uses dnf commands for RPM package management. Yum remains supported, and using dnf aligns RHEL with the upstream community.
Network teaming is deprecated, due to a lack of upstream development, in favor of network bonding. The teamd service and the libteam library are deprecated in RHEL 9 and will be removed in the next major release.
Firewall infrastructure based on iptables, and the ability to migrate iptables configurations to NFT is removed. NFT is now the default firewall configuration and method.
The Access Control List chapter is removed based on feedback that indicates limited use.
SSH root access is now disabled by default. RHEL 9 adds new options to the root password configuration screen to lock the root account and to allow root SSH login with password..
Support for disabling SELinux through /etc/selinux/config is removed. SELinux can only be disabled through use of a kernel boot parameter.
The exFAT filesystem is now supported for external USB storage and data exchange with other operating systems, especially Windows.
VDO management is removed as a major topic, and is minimally introduced in the LVM overview, based on feedback that indicates limited use.
The container content has been redesigned to discuss use cases, and to include the latest podman syntax.
@digital1991 I also removed the third party link in your post which was not required / unrelated to the post you created.
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