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Old 01-12-2008
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Question UNIX starter role?

This may not be the right forum to put up a question like the one I'm about to ask. I am hoping that I would get very fruitful responses.

i) I have been learning UNIX for sometime now, but my question is realistically what do I need to be able to be able to apply for UNIX jobs.
What sort of tasks should I be able to learn in real depth?

ii) And, for someone starting what sort of company should I target for UNIX starter roles?

Thanks.
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Old 01-12-2008
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Ironically, I would go for a Windows job at a company I knew had UNIX/LINUX environments also - it might be difficult landing a decent UNIX role without any previous experience.

Preferably a small company where you can get your hands on everything, not a huge corporation where you'll only get your hands on very specific areas.
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Old 01-12-2008
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Go find a copy of Unix Hints & Hacks by Kirk Waingrow. Chapter 10 on, tells you everything you need to know about being a Unix Administrator and how to land a job. It goes into deep details on what you can expect from a career in Unix.

-akak
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Old 01-16-2008
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I agree with the comment about finding a position where you can do Unix plus other stuff. I started with a help desk position where I did Windows, Netware, OS/2, and Unix all. Since I liked Unix and knew it best of all the help desk guys I was able to work my way into a Unix admin position after a while.

Also, check out The Practice of System and Network Administration by Limoncelli and Hogan. It has tons of material about finding sysadmin jobs and beign successful once you have them.
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Old 01-16-2008
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I think it also helps if you do stuff on your own. Ie: run your own Unix server, build kernels, implement various services, and experiment with all aspects of administration. There are plenty of books out there to. An admin role is not a good starter role with no admin background. A first level help desk/support might be a good start.

take on any opportunity you can to do something with UNIX, even if it means working for free. This will pay off in the end.

Become self sufficient and learn shell scripting. Having the capability to write a script for anything proves very helpful as an admin.

here is another tip that will save you and your fellow co-workers much pain. Do it because you enjoy to do it; learn it, live it, breath it and you will be fine.

here are several commands I would become very familiar with. there are many more but this is a good start.

man
sed
awk
find
xargs
more
grep
less
tail
head
cat
cut
tar
sort
uniq
diff
cpio
crontab format
ssh/scp

Last edited by frank_rizzo : 01-16-2008 at 05:20 PM.
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