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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? How to start in System Administration? Post 302818757 by Scrutinizer on Sunday 9th of June 2013 03:04:39 AM
Old 06-09-2013
If you have the possibility to study and there is no direct financial need and age is not much of a factor, I would be inclined to take that opportunity. That will increase your agility to switch to something else should the employment opportunities in your particular field of expertise dry up, for example development or business analysis.

Perhaps you could study and get a part time help desk job on the side to gain experience, put you study into perspective and help keep your study debt low. You could perhaps get a certificate or two to move on to part time system administration, if there are jobs like that in your country. Just set a limit on how many hours you can work so these activities will not jeopardize your study. Just my 2c..


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Moved thread to the lounge..

Last edited by Scrutinizer; 06-09-2013 at 04:10 AM..
 

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POSIX_MADVISE(3)					     Linux Programmer's Manual						  POSIX_MADVISE(3)

NAME
posix_madvise - give advice about patterns of memory usage SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/mman.h> int posix_madvise(void *addr, size_t len, int advice); Feature Test Macro Requirements for glibc (see feature_test_macros(7)): posix_madvise(): _POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200112L DESCRIPTION
The posix_madvise() function allows an application to advise the system about its expected patterns of usage of memory in the address range starting at addr and continuing for len bytes. The system is free to use this advice in order to improve the performance of memory accesses (or to ignore the advice altogether), but calling posix_madvise() shall not affect the semantics of access to memory in the speci- fied range. The advice argument is one of the following: POSIX_MADV_NORMAL The application has no special advice regarding its memory usage patterns for the specified address range. This is the default behavior. POSIX_MADV_SEQUENTIAL The application expects to access the specified address range sequentially, running from lower addresses to higher addresses. Hence, pages in this region can be aggressively read ahead, and may be freed soon after they are accessed. POSIX_MADV_RANDOM The application expects to access the specified address range randomly. Thus, read ahead may be less useful than normally. POSIX_MADV_WILLNEED The application expects to access the specified address range in the near future. Thus, read ahead may be beneficial. POSIX_MADV_DONTNEED The application expects that it will not access the specified address range in the near future. RETURN VALUE
On success, posix_madvise() returns 0. On failure, it returns a positive error number. ERRORS
EINVAL addr is not a multiple of the system page size or len is negative. EINVAL advice is invalid. ENOMEM Addresses in the specified range are partially or completely outside the caller's address space. VERSIONS
Support for posix_madvise() first appeared in glibc version 2.2. CONFORMING TO
POSIX.1-2001. NOTES
POSIX.1 permits an implementation to generate an error if len is 0. On Linux, specifying len as 0 is permitted (as a successful no-op). In glibc, this function is implemented using madvise(2). However, since glibc 2.6, POSIX_MADV_DONTNEED is treated as a no-op, because the corresponding madvise(2) value, MADV_DONTNEED, has destructive semantics. SEE ALSO
madvise(2), posix_fadvise(2) COLOPHON
This page is part of release 4.15 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this page, can be found at https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/. Linux 2017-09-15 POSIX_MADVISE(3)
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