04-02-2009
It isn't really a "night shift". It is that when stuff breaks you have to fix it whether it is at night or during the day. I've had jobs where I worked almost all normal daytime hours, others where you had night or weekend work several times per month, and others where it depended on the project you worked on. If you had to do a big project on production servers you may work every weekend and a few weeknights per week for a few months, then back to more normal hours for a while. It all depends on how the company has set up their environment (how much redundancy and high-availability they use) and also their change control rules and customer service agreements.
One other thing I didn't mention last post. I've never in over 10 years of Unix work had a job where I didn't have to be on-call at least part of the time. So if you can't stand the idea of having to carry a pager/cellphone/blackberry and drop everything to respond if it goes off that would be a big roadblock too. I've had to leave church, cut short dates, or come home early from sporting events due to pages before. That's part of the job unfortunately. Either that or just sit at home at all times when you are the on-call person.
Usually that responsibility rotates among the team of admins, so you may end up with a day a week or a week each month or something like that. If it is a tiny shop with only 1 or 2 admins you may be always on-call, but for small shops like that typically there aren't that many servers so pages are pretty rare. The other extreme is giant shops with dozens of admins where you don't have to be on-call because some people are always at work to handle things.
Last edited by DukeNuke2; 04-02-2009 at 01:34 PM..
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LEARN ABOUT PHP
intlcalendar.setfirstdayofweek
INTLCALENDAR.SETFIRSTDAYOFWEEK(3) 1 INTLCALENDAR.SETFIRSTDAYOFWEEK(3)
IntlCalendar::setFirstDayOfWeek - Set the day on which the week is deemed to start
Object oriented style
SYNOPSIS
public bool IntlCalendar::setFirstDayOfWeek (int $dayOfWeek)
DESCRIPTION
Procedural style
bool intlcal_set_first_day_of_week (IntlCalendar $cal, int $dayOfWeek)
Defines the day of week deemed to start the week. This affects the behavior of fields that depend on the concept of week start and end
such as IntlCalendar::FIELD_WEEK_OF_YEAR and IntlCalendar::FIELD_YEAR_WOY.
PARAMETERS
o $cal
- The IntlCalendar resource.
o $dayOfWeek
- One of the constants IntlCalendar::DOW_SUNDAY, IntlCalendar::DOW_MONDAY, , IntlCalendar::DOW_SATURDAY.
RETURN VALUES
Returns TRUE on success. Failure can only happen due to invalid parameters.
EXAMPLES
Example #1
IntlCalendar.setFirstDayOfWeek(3)
<?php
ini_set('date.timezone', 'Europe/Lisbon');
ini_set('intl.default_locale', 'es_ES');
$cal = IntlCalendar::createInstance();
$cal->set(2013, 5 /* June */, 30); // A Sunday
var_dump($cal->getFirstDayOfWeek()); // 2 (Monday)
echo IntlDateFormatter::formatObject($cal, <<<EOD
week of month : 'W'
week of year : 'ww
EOD
), "
";
$cal->setFirstDayOfWeek(IntlCalendar::DOW_SUNDAY);
echo IntlDateFormatter::formatObject($cal, <<<EOD
week of month : 'W'
week of year : 'ww
EOD
), "
";
The above example will output:
int(2)
local day of week: 7
week of month : 4
week of year : 26
local day of week: 1
week of month : 5
week of year : 27
PHP Documentation Group INTLCALENDAR.SETFIRSTDAYOFWEEK(3)