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Full Discussion: UNIX career path for Admin
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? UNIX career path for Admin Post 302881960 by bakunin on Friday 3rd of January 2014 08:13:54 AM
Old 01-03-2014
I am not sure what "TOGAF" means, so i can't comment on it.

"Systems Administration" is such a vast field that i doubt you really are at the end of it. Of course, programming experience could help, as Neo mentioned, but even in "pure sysadm" work there are things you might want to consider:

Systems need disks and these are increasingly virtual disks. How much do you know about SAN, storage administration, zoning, .... ?

Systems need networks. Do you know (at least in principle) how to set up a router, configure a firewall, manage networks, .... ?

Speaking of networks: how much do you know about networks other than IP? IPX/SPX? SNA? 3270? 5250? NetBIOS?

Systems tend to be aggregated in data centers and these need lots of automation: how good are you in understanding techniques like LDAP, kerberos and other cross-system services?

This list is not complete at all, not even near it. No admin perhaps knows all of the things/protocols/interfaces/... above. It just is to illustrate that you still can improve on your knowledge and at the same time stick to what you did the whole time - administrating systems.

I hope these pointers help.

bakunin
 

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HCOPY(1)						      General Commands Manual							  HCOPY(1)

NAME
hcopy - copy files from or to an HFS volume SYNOPSIS
hcopy [-m|-b|-t|-r|-a] source-path [...] target-path DESCRIPTION
hcopy transfers files from an HFS volume to UNIX or vice versa. The named source files are copied to the named destination target, which must be a directory if multiple files are to be copied. Copies are performed using a translation mode, which must be one of: -m MacBinary II: A popular format for binary file transfer. Both forks of the Macintosh file are preserved. This is the recommended mode for transferring arbitrary Macintosh files. -b BinHex: An alternative format for ASCII file transfer. Both forks of the Macintosh file are preserved. -t Text: Performs end-of-line translation. Only the data fork of the Macintosh file is copied. -r Raw Data: Performs no translation. Only the data fork of the Macintosh file is copied. -a Automatic: A mode will be chosen automatically for each file based on a set of predefined heuristics. If no mode is specified, -a is assumed. If a UNIX source pathname is specified as a single dash (-), hcopy will copy from standard input to the HFS destination. Likewise, a single dash used as a UNIX destination pathname will cause hcopy to copy the HFS source to standard output. NOTES
Copied files may have their filenames altered during translation. For example, an appropriate file extension may be added or removed, and certain other characters may also be transliterated. The destination target must not be ambiguous; that is, it must be obvious whether the target is on the UNIX filesystem or on an HFS volume. As a rule, HFS targets must contain at least one colon (:), usually as the beginning of a relative pathname or by itself to represent the current working directory. To make a UNIX target unambiguous, either use an absolute pathname or precede a relative pathname with a dot and slash (./). SEE ALSO
hfsutils(1), hls(1), hattrib(1) AUTHOR
Robert Leslie <rob@mars.org> HFSUTILS
13-Jan-1997 HCOPY(1)
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