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Full Discussion: Network Sys Admin
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Network Sys Admin Post 302100985 by sparcguy on Tuesday 26th of December 2006 03:47:06 PM
Old 12-26-2006
You should join a system integrator company, find out which are the unix integrators in your area and join first as a field replacement tech there you will either pick up or lot or you will drown.

On a side note, I feel that since you are at the starting point let me share my experience being a unix engineer/sys admin of many years.

As unix sys admin in a corporate environment:

1) Unless there are new rollouts you won't be doing very much system admin.
2) Because everything is production you cant touch the system much but all the same they still make you responsible for it if something goes wrong.
3) What you will mostly learn is to support instead is your corporate legacy system.
4) And because of this and depending on how good/bad the system is, it may bring you head to head very often with application folks who will often accuse "something wrong with the system"

5) In short to be a unix sys admin is to be a lone fire fighter.

Since you are at the starting point, you should take the path of a qualified network engineer.

1) Network engineers have great job, once the network is up they are very free.
2) I have rarely seen network engineers get involved in system rollouts other than supplying IP addresses
3) When there's a problem with the system normally the fighting is between system guy and application guy.
4) Sun solaris and Aix or HPux Novell, Win2k are all different OS, but TCPIP is the same everywhere.

what do you think?
 

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AppConfig::Sys(3)					User Contributed Perl Documentation					 AppConfig::Sys(3)

NAME
AppConfig::Sys - Perl5 module defining platform-specific information and methods for other AppConfig::* modules. SYNOPSIS
use AppConfig::Sys; my $sys = AppConfig::Sys->new(); @fields = $sys->getpwuid($userid); @fields = $sys->getpwnam($username); OVERVIEW
AppConfig::Sys is a Perl5 module provides platform-specific information and operations as required by other AppConfig::* modules. AppConfig::Sys is distributed as part of the AppConfig bundle. DESCRIPTION
USING THE AppConfig::Sys MODULE To import and use the AppConfig::Sys module the following line should appear in your Perl script: use AppConfig::Sys; AppConfig::Sys is implemented using object-oriented methods. A new AppConfig::Sys object is created and initialised using the AppConfig::Sys->new() method. This returns a reference to a new AppConfig::Sys object. my $sys = AppConfig::Sys->new(); This will attempt to detect your operating system and create a reference to a new AppConfig::Sys object that is applicable to your platform. You may explicitly specify an operating system name to override this automatic detection: $unix_sys = AppConfig::Sys->new("Unix"); Alternatively, the package variable $AppConfig::Sys::OS can be set to an operating system name. The valid operating system names are: Win32, VMS, Mac, OS2 and Unix. They are not case-specific. AppConfig::Sys METHODS AppConfig::Sys defines the following methods: getpwnam() Calls the system function getpwnam() if available and returns the result. Returns undef if not available. The can_getpwnam() method can be called to determine if this function is available. getpwuid() Calls the system function getpwuid() if available and returns the result. Returns undef if not available. The can_getpwuid() method can be called to determine if this function is available. AUTHOR
Andy Wardley, <abw@wardley.org> COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1997-2007 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved. Copyright (C) 1997,1998 Canon Research Centre Europe Ltd. This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the term of the Perl Artistic License. SEE ALSO
AppConfig, AppConfig::File perl v5.16.3 2014-06-10 AppConfig::Sys(3)
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