LPI: The Open-Source Industry Standard
LPI (Linux Professional Institute) is the global authority on vendor-neutral Linux and open-source certifications. With credentials recognized across enterprise, cloud, and DevOps environments, LPI certifications validate hands-on expertise that employers actively seek. Whether you're advancing from junior sysadmin to architect or pivoting into cloud-native roles, LPI's progressive certification ladder—from entry-level Linux Essentials through advanced LPIC levels—demonstrates real technical competence without vendor lock-in.
- Vendor-neutral credentials respected by enterprises, startups, and government agencies worldwide.
- LPIC certifications directly support career progression from junior technician to senior Linux architect.
- Performance-based exams test practical skills, not memorization—what employers actually need.
- Open-source focus aligns with current industry demand for cloud, containerization, and DevOps expertise.
- Affordable exam fees and globally available testing make certification accessible to career-changers.
- Official LPI study materials and community resources ensure comprehensive, up-to-date preparation.
What the 701-100 Exam Covers
The LPIC-OT DevOps Tools Engineer certification validates your ability to manage infrastructure automation, containerization, and deployment pipelines. You'll face questions on container technologies, orchestration platforms, and CI/CD workflows. Understanding these core domains is essential for passing the $69 registration exam.
Real Exam-Format Practice Questions
Our practice test mirrors the actual LPI exam structure with scenario-based questions and hands-on problem-solving scenarios. Based on exam objectives, we've included questions covering Docker, Kubernetes, Ansible, and Jenkins implementations. Practicing with authentic formats reduces test anxiety and identifies knowledge gaps early.
Key Topics You'll Master
Expect deep dives into container management, infrastructure-as-code principles, and deployment automation. You'll work through questions on monitoring tools, log aggregation, and system reliability concepts. In practice, candidates who master these tools see higher success rates on exam day.