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Full Discussion: Prize of being an Admin
The Lounge War Stories Prize of being an Admin Post 302605597 by hedkandi on Thursday 8th of March 2012 01:16:25 AM
Old 03-08-2012
Well, they did track back and tried pointing it back at him..but you know something really weird? The exact SAME time he was editing the crontab someone else was also editing it!! So this guy saved and exit and AFTER that the other guy quit and exit without saving! SO whatever changes he did the first time was overwritten and the fault was GENUINE. But to do that TWICE in two weeks!!!?? He wasn't fired but he left after 6 months of working, he didn't like the working culture there. They don't fire people for that, it was filed under "human-error"

---------- Post updated at 10:05 PM ---------- Previous update was at 10:00 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by spynappels
Was he fired? If I was his manager and had any suspicion that he was responsible and was able to prove it, not only would he be fired, he'd also be prosecuted for criminal damage!
He wasn't fired, was filed under "human error" because two people were editing it at a same time but the customer was duly compensated. This is just the kind of thing that happens on daily basis over there. He err'ed the first time I admit but I was suspicious when he err'ed again the following week.

---------- Post updated at 10:16 PM ---------- Previous update was at 10:05 PM ----------

..dont get me started on the 1st level support guy whom renamed a system to a single numeric value of "2" His excuse was that he wasn't aware what uname -S does in UNIX..last I checked he's still there
 

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nice(2) 							   System Calls 							   nice(2)

NAME
nice - change priority of a process SYNOPSIS
#include <unistd.h> int nice(int incr); DESCRIPTION
The nice() function allows a process to change its priority. The invoking process must be in a scheduling class that supports the nice(). The nice() function adds the value of incr to the nice value of the calling process. A process's nice value is a non-negative number for which a greater positive value results in lower CPU priority. A maximum nice value of (2 * NZERO) -1 and a minimum nice value of 0 are imposed by the system. NZERO is defined in <limits.h> with a default value of 20. Requests for values above or below these limits result in the nice value being set to the corresponding limit. A nice value of 40 is treated as 39. Calling the nice() function has no effect on the priority of processes or threads with policy SCHED_FIFO or SCHED_RR. Only a process with the {PRIV_PROC_PRIOCNTL} privilege can lower the nice value. RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion, nice() returns the new nice value minus NZERO. Otherwise, -1 is returned, the process's nice value is not changed, and errno is set to indicate the error. ERRORS
The nice() function will fail if: EINVAL The nice() function is called by a process in a scheduling class other than time-sharing or fixed-priority. EPERM The incr argument is negative or greater than 40 and the {PRIV_PROC_PRIOCNTL} privilege is not asserted in the effective set of the calling process. USAGE
The priocntl(2) function is a more general interface to scheduler functions. Since -1 is a permissible return value in a successful situation, an application wishing to check for error situations should set errno to 0, then call nice(), and if it returns -1, check to see if errno is non-zero. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Standard | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |Async-Signal-Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
nice(1), exec(2), priocntl(2), getpriority(3C), attributes(5), privileges(5), standards(5) SunOS 5.11 1 Apr 2004 nice(2)
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