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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? How Many Computers Do You Have Root Access At Work? Post 302198125 by sparcguy on Thursday 22nd of May 2008 08:41:39 AM
Old 05-22-2008
The main reasons are probably for security and redundancies, a lot of the stories you hear of hackers who manage to infiltrate some site are over rated because the critical data that once used to be central are now spread all over and each site has it's own security firewall so even if any hacker whether inside or outside manages break into 1 site and got hold of the data, it's just a meaningless bunch of numbers and they won't know what it means or what the value of the information really is.

redundancies for business continuity, after sept 11 2001, a lot of major corporations started to change their DR strategies. Hence you end up with many many boxes everywhere.

Btw managing 100+ servers is not easy job, is very good to wish but believe me it's tough to handle it all by yourself. Just imagine you have to install latest sun recommended patch clusters across the landscape, you start friday night you probably only be done monday morning. Or example DBA team wants to upgrade database and tells you to upgrade the OS, security team wants you to harden the boxes and apps team have some change request your work will never get done because every weekend you'll be burning midnight oil and you'll burnout under 1 year.

The optimum number of servers per engineer is usually between 25-40 100 is too much for any a single engineer to handle alone, a team of engineers maybe.

my 2 cts.
 

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SLIST(1)							       slist								  SLIST(1)

NAME
slist - Lists available NetWare Servers SYNOPSIS
slist [ pattern ] DESCRIPTION
slist lists all NetWare Servers available in your network. If slist does not print to a tty, the decorative header line is not printed, so that you can count the servers on your network by doing slist | wc -l OPTIONS
pattern pattern is used to list only servers whose names match the specified pattern. For a server to be listed, the pattern must match the full server name. You can use wildcards for the pattern, but you must protect these wildcards from any command line expansion by quoting. Case doesn't matter. EXAMPLE
slist "I*" or slist "i*" List all available Netware servers on your Network, that begin with an "I". SEE ALSO
ncpmount(8), ncpumount(8), pqlist(1), nprint(1) CREDITS
slist was written by Volker Lendecke (lendecke@math.uni-goettingen.de) BUGS
slist works only in IPX environment, as it uses SAP to find first server and then Bindery to get list of servers. slist 01/07/1996 SLIST(1)
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