The goal of this cheat sheet is to provide ~100 concise ideas, concepts and rules for sys admins. Reading them takes a few minutes. Practicing them takes forever.Includes:* Know your tools* Anticipate* Expect problems* Design it* Scale* Backup* Communicate* DocumentGreat resource.
I am planning to choose my career as Unix/Linux Admin or a DBA. But I have come to know from forums and few admins like the job will be 24/7. I have few questions on that.
Can we get "DAY" shifts in any one of the admin Job ?
Can't we have shift timings in any company ?
Eventhough the... (7 Replies)
I'm currently a Windows admin and have wanted to jump ship to the *nix side for a while now. I've been studying both through an lpic level 1 manual as I have time (focusing on debian), and a solaris 10 cert book. The problem is I only have a handful of hours a week to study, and my current job... (3 Replies)
Hi all,
I encountered a problem where my script stops running the remaining checks after becoming an admin that is written within the script.
For example:
=========================================
#!/bin/sh
check 1 # Runs successfully
check 2 # Runs successfully
/com/bin/admin #... (1 Reply)
Hi all,
My thanks in advance for reading and any posts.
Just wondering if anyone knows of anywhere where I can get a driver from for a creative zen sleek photo for redhad Fedora? I ordered it stupidly without making sure that it would work on Fedora, seems that it only works on WinXP. ... (2 Replies)
queuedefs(4) Kernel Interfaces Manual queuedefs(4)NAME
queuedefs - queue description file for at, batch, and crontab
SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION
The file describes the characteristics of the queues managed by (see cron(1M)). Each non-comment line in this file describes one queue.
The format of the lines are as follows:
[njob[nice[nwait
The fields in this line are:
q The name of the queue, such that is the default queue for jobs started by (see at(1)), is the queue for jobs started by
(see at(1)), and is the queue for jobs run from a file (see crontab(1)). Queue names through designate user-defined
queues.
njob The maximum number of jobs that can be run simultaneously in that queue. Although any number can be specified here, (see
cron(1M)) by default limits the number of jobs that can be run on all the queues to 100. This limitation can be removed
by setting the variable to 1 in the file.
nice The value to give to all jobs in that queue that are not run with a user ID of super-user (see nice(1)). 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 more than 100 jobs were running in all the queues (see njob above).
EXAMPLES
Consider the following file:
The file is interpreted as follows:
The queue, for jobs (see at(1)), can have up to 4 jobs running simultaneously, and those jobs will be run with a value of
1.
Since no nwait value is given, if a job cannot be run because too many other jobs are running, will wait 60 seconds
before trying again to run it (see cron(1M)).
The queue, for jobs (see at(1)), can have up to 2 jobs running simultaneously. Those jobs will be run with a value of 2.
If a job cannot be run because too many other jobs are running, 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 value of 2, and if a job cannot be run because
too many other jobs are running, will wait 60 seconds before trying again to run it.
SEE ALSO at(1), nice(1), crontab(1), cron(1M), proto(4).
STANDARDS CONFORMANCE queuedefs(4)