The LPIC Certification Track
LPI organizes its core administration path into three numbered tiers: LPIC-1, LPIC-2, and LPIC-3. The lower tiers require passing two separate exams to earn the credential, while the highest tier consists of single-exam specialties.
Before attempting the professional track, newcomers often start with the 010-160 (Linux Essentials Certificate Exam, version 1.6). This single exam validates basic command-line proficiency, file permissions, and an understanding of open-source licensing. It serves as a practical entry point for junior IT staff who need to navigate Linux file systems without breaking them.
To earn the LPIC-1 credential, candidates must pass both the 101-500 (LPIC-1 Exam 101) and the 102-500 (LPI Level 1). The 101 exam focuses on system architecture, package management using both dpkg and rpm, and fundamental GNU/Unix commands. You must know how to partition disks, manage swap space, and locate system files. The 102 exam shifts focus to shell scripting, user interfaces, and administrative tasks like managing SQL data and configuring basic networking. Each exam runs 90 minutes and contains 60 multiple-choice and fill-in-the-blank questions.
Moving up the ladder, the LPIC-2 tier proves your ability to administer small to medium-sized mixed networks. The first of its two exams demands a deeper understanding of capacity planning, custom kernel compilation, and advanced storage administration. Candidates must demonstrate they can monitor resource usage and compile a Linux kernel from source. The companion exam tests network services. It covers the configuration of Apache, Nginx, DNS, DHCP, and email servers, alongside security protocols like SSH and OpenVPN.
At the LPIC-3 level, the track splits into distinct technical domains. Candidates choose a specific specialty rather than taking a generalized administration test. The 305-300 (Linux Professional Institute LPIC-3 Virtualization and Containerization) targets engineers managing enterprise clustering, libvirt, and container runtimes. Other specialties at this level cover enterprise security and the integration of Linux services within a Windows Active Directory network.
Expanding Beyond Administration
LPI also maintains an Open Technology track for adjacent open-source skills. The 701-100 (LPIC-OT Exam 701: DevOps Tools Engineer) tests practical knowledge of modern infrastructure automation. Rather than focusing on a single continuous integration platform, it covers Git, Docker, Ansible, and Jenkins. This exam bridges the gap between traditional system administration and modern deployment pipelines.
A newer addition to this track is the BSD Specialist certification. While Linux dominates the enterprise server market, BSD variants power many core networking appliances and firewalls. This credential proves a candidate can manage FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD systems.
Market Position and Exam Format
When evaluating Linux certifications, hiring managers generally weigh LPI against CompTIA Linux+ and Red Hat's RHCSA.
Red Hat exams are performance-based, requiring candidates to configure live systems in a terminal. LPI exams rely entirely on multiple-choice and fill-in-the-blank formats. While some enterprise purists favor the live-fire nature of Red Hat testing, LPI exams force candidates to memorize specific command flags, configuration file paths, and syntax rules that sysadmins often look up on the job. The fill-in-the-blank questions punish candidates who rely on muscle memory without knowing exact textual commands.
For several years, CompTIA and LPI maintained a partnership where passing the Linux+ exams automatically granted you LPIC-1 status. That agreement ended when CompTIA redesigned Linux+ as a standalone, single-exam credential. Today, LPI stands on its own as the primary vendor-neutral alternative to Red Hat.
LPI credentials hold their value for five years. To maintain active status, professionals must either retake the exams or pass a higher-level certification before the expiration date. This recertification policy ensures that an LPIC-2 or LPIC-3 holder possesses current knowledge of the Linux kernel and contemporary package managers.