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The Practice of System and Network Administration, Second Edition
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(Paperback - July 15, 2007)
by Thomas A. Limoncelli,
Sales Rank: 12958
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List Price: $59.99
$41.56
At Amazon

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Paperback: 1056 pages
Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional; 2 edition July 15, 2007
Language: English
ISBN-10: 9780321492661
ISBN-13: 978-0321492661
ASIN: 0321492668
Product Dimensions:
9.2 x 7 x 2 inches
Shipping Weight: 4 pounds
Product Description
The first edition of The Practice of System and Network Administration introduced a generation of system and network administrators to a modern IT methodology. Whether you use Linux, Unix, or Windows, this newly revised edition describes the essential practices previously handed down only from mentor to protégé. This wonderfully lucid, often funny cornucopia of information introduces beginners to advanced frameworks valuable for their entire career, yet is structured to help even the most advanced experts through difficult projects. The book's four major sections build your knowledge with the foundational elements of system administration. These sections guide you through better techniques for upgrades and change management, catalog best practices for IT services, and explore various management topics. Chapters are divided into The Basics and The Icing. When you get the Basics right it makes every other aspect of the job easier--such as automating the right things first. The Icing sections contain all the powerful things that can be done on top of the basics to wow customers and managers. Inside, you'll find advice on topics such as - The key elements your networks and systems need in order to make all other services run better
- Building and running reliable, scalable services, including web, storage, email, printing, and remote access
- Creating and enforcing security policies
- Upgrading multiple hosts at one time without creating havoc
- Planning for and performing flawless scheduled maintenance windows
- Managing superior helpdesks and customer care
- Avoiding the "temporary fix" trap
- Building data centers that improve server uptime
- Designing networks for speed and reliability
- Web scaling and security issues
- Why building a backup system isn't about backups
- Monitoring what you have and predicting what you will need
- How technically oriented workers can maintain their job's technical focus (and avoid an unwanted management role)
- Technical management issues, including morale, organization building, coaching, and maintaining positive visibility
- Personal skill techniques, including secrets for getting more done each day, ethical dilemmas, managing your boss, and loving your job
- System administration salary negotiation
It's no wonder the first edition received Usenix SAGE's 2005 Outstanding Achievement Award! This eagerly anticipated second edition updates this time-proven classic: - Chapters reordered for easier navigation
- Thousands of updates and clarifications based on reader feedback
- Plus three entirely new chapters: Web Services, Data Storage, and Documentation
Customer Reviews & Comments Good sysadmins know the technical details. They can resurrect a dead server, understand the intricacies of sendmail or the Windows registry, and recite all of the types of DNS records by heart. They own copies of the UNIX System Administration Handbook and refer to them regularly. They are good sysadmins, and will contribute solidly at an intermediate level. Great sysadmins know all of that and what is in this book. They are the ones who go on to become the senior sysadmins and consultants, have fabulous careers, and are respected by their bosses, co-workers, and customers. There is much more to a technical job than simply the technical skills. Don't buy this book to learn how to run a system or you will be disappointed. Do, however, buy it to learn how to be an effective professional systems administrator. It is also useful for a manager of sysadmins who is either non-technical, or has never been a sysadmin himself, as it is a good introduction to the issues and concerns that sysadmins need to face. Limoncelli and Hogan cover many topics, including: - Trouble ticket systems - Desktops and Servers (how they're the same, differ, etc.) - Administrative networks (why bother?) - Requirements (gathering, tracking, etc.) - Standards and centralization of services - How to do debugging (not "you see this problem, do this" but rather learning the process of doing good debugging) - Fix things once, not over and over again - Security policies (including management and organizational issues for a variety of organizational profiles) - Disaster Recovery (again, not how to backup data, but why you'd want to, legal issues, etc.) - Systems Administration Ethics - Change management and revision control - Maintenance windows: what they are and why they're good for both you and your users - Centralization versus Decentralization - Helpdesks: sizing, scope, processes, escalation, etc. - Data centers (many physical facility concerns that sysadmins don't often think of, including how to move a datacenter) - Managing non-OS software (commercial and free) They will help you answer questions like - Does server hardware really cost more? Do we go with a few expensive servers or many cheap ones? - What does "redundancy" actually mean? - Why would we spend money on backups? There's never been an outage... - What do I do when asked to do something illegal? - How do I communicate and schedule large system changes? - How do I do a safe server upgrade? - They want to decentralize the sysadmin group -- what do we do? - How do we move our datacenter? - What sort of policy issues are there with email? - How do I deal with my customers abusing printers? - What do we have to worry about if we're implementing remote access (e.g. dialup modem banks) for our users? Finally, they close with an entire section on Management: - How to deal with cost centers, management chains, hiring, customer support, and outsourcing. - How to manage your customers perceptions and your team's visibility - How to manage your own happiness (time management, communication, professional development, managing your manager, etc.) - How to be a technical manager, how to work with non-technical managers, manage your own career growth, etc. - How to hire good sysadmins, recruiting, interviewing, soft skills, technical skills, employee retention, etc. - The special concerns around how to fire sysadmins (often problematic, given their higher level of access) They even have a chapter for non-technical managers who are in charge of sysadmins (this entire book would be very useful to give to a non-technical manager who doesn't really 'get it'.) The book closes with three appendixes: A. The Many Role of a System Administrator B. What to Do When... C. Acronyms Appendix B is particularly useful, answering a wide variety of questions with solid, practical answers. The skills and concepts in this book are the make-or-break in many careers. They turn you from just another sysadmin into a star performer, sensitive to your customers and the business, able to interact with a wide spectrum of people.
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The Practice of System and Network Administration, Second Edition
List Price: $59.99
Available from Amazon
Price: $41.56

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