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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Information about Unix System Administration Post 302304951 by zxmaus on Tuesday 7th of April 2009 04:03:04 PM
Old 04-07-2009
Quote:
Originally Posted by reborg
There is also one other type of job that has not been mentioned, and probably the last place that you can still get a job that allows you to truely jump in feet first as Neo describes. System integration and/or professional services. Some companies provide ground-up solutions for various systems - OS, 3rd part apps and in-house apps or customised and managed custom solutions and all of the admin and system programming that goes along with that. If you can find a company doing that kind of work you can get lots experience very, very quickly.
I agree - this is probably more or less how most of us SAs started - and what I meant with some solid IT background that makes our jobs so much easier.

I started my IT career with Cadmus (doesn anyone remember 'Munix' ?) and Mainframes and VMS, moved through Dec Alpha, Irix and OS/2, Windows and finally ended up with AIX - most of these jobs had been on contract base delivering a CAD or ERP environment from scratch - including Hardware, network, databases, OS and customer training - but you cannot contract forever, so at some point the logical next step had been to become a sysadmin in a perm position Smilie

Kind regards
zxmaus
 

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queuedefs(4)							   File Formats 						      queuedefs(4)

NAME
queuedefs - queue description file for at, batch, and cron SYNOPSIS
/etc/cron.d/queuedefs DESCRIPTION
The queuedefs file describes the characteristics of the queues managed by cron(1M). Each non-comment line in this file describes one queue. The format of the lines are as follows: q.[njobj][nicen][nwaitw] The fields in this line are: q The name of the queue. a is the default queue for jobs started by at(1); b is the default queue for jobs started by batch (see at(1)); c is the default queue for jobs run from a crontab(1) file. njob The maximum number of jobs that can be run simultaneously in that queue; if more than njob jobs are ready to run, only the first njob jobs will be run, and the others will be run as jobs that are currently running terminate. The default value is 100. nice The nice(1) value to give to all jobs in that queue that are not run with a user ID of super-user. The default value is 2. nwait The number of seconds to wait before rescheduling a job that was deferred because more than njob jobs were running in that job's queue, or because the system-wide limit of jobs executing has been reached. The default value is 60. Lines beginning with # are comments, and are ignored. EXAMPLES
Example 1: A sample file. # # a.4j1n b.2j2n90w This file specifies that the a queue, for at jobs, can have up to 4 jobs running simultaneously; those jobs will be run with a nice value of 1. As no nwait value was given, if a job cannot be run because too many other jobs are running cron will wait 60 seconds before trying again to run it. The b queue, for batch(1) jobs, can have up to 2 jobs running simultaneously; those jobs will be run with a nice(1) value of 2. If a job cannot be run because too many other jobs are running, cron(1M) will wait 90 seconds before trying again to run it. All other queues can have up to 100 jobs running simultaneously; they will be run with a nice value of 2, and if a job cannot be run because too many other jobs are running cron will wait 60 seconds before trying again to run it. FILES
/etc/cron.d/queuedefs queue description file for at, batch, and cron. SEE ALSO
at(1), crontab(1), nice(1), cron(1M) SunOS 5.10 1 Mar 1994 queuedefs(4)
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