The Practice of System and Network Administration: Volume 1: DevOps and other Best Practices for Enterprise IT

The Practice of System and Network Administration: Volume 1: DevOps and other Best Practices for Enterprise IT

  • Downloads:3724
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-03-13 03:16:56
  • Update Date:2025-09-07
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Thomas A. Limoncelli
  • ISBN:B01MFCSNQZ
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

With 28 new chapters, the third edition of The Practice of System and Network Administration innovates yet again! Revised with thousands of updates and clarifications based on reader feedback, this new edition also incorporates DevOps strategies even for non-DevOps environments。 Whether you use Linux, Unix, or Windows, this new edition describes the essential practices previously handed down only from mentor to protEgE。 This wonderfully lucid, often funny cornucopia of information introduces beginners to advanced frameworks valuable for their entire career, yet is structured to help even experts through difficult projects。 Other books tell you what commands to type。 This book teaches you the cross-platform strategies that are timeless!

DevOps techniques: Apply DevOps principles to enterprise IT infrastructure, even in environments without developers Game-changing strategies: New ways to deliver results faster with less stress Fleet management: A comprehensive guide to managing your fleet of desktops, laptops, servers and mobile devices Service management: How to design, launch, upgrade and migrate services Measurable improvement: Assess your operational effectiveness; a forty-page, pain-free assessment system you can start using today to raise the quality of all services Design guides: Best practices for networks, data centers, email, storage, monitoring, backups and more Management skills: Organization design, communication, negotiation, ethics, hiring and firing, and more
Have you ever had any of these problems?
Have you been surprised to discover your backup tapes are blank? Ever spent a year launching a new service only to be told the users hate it? Do you have more incoming support requests than you can handle? Do you spend more time fixing problems than building the next awesome thing? Have you suffered from a botched migration of thousands of users to a new service? Does your company rely on a computer that, if it died, can't be rebuilt? Is your network a fragile mess that breaks any time you try to improve it? Is there a periodic "hell month" that happens twice a year? Twelve times a year? Do you find out about problems when your users call you to complain? Does your corporate "Change Review Board" terrify you? Does each division of your company have their own broken way of doing things? Do you fear that automation will replace you, or break more than it fixes? Are you underpaid and overworked?
No vague "management speak" or empty platitudes。 This comprehensive guide provides real solutions that prevent these problems and more! Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE

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Reviews

Alex French

Lots of good。 A wide range of topics, concepts over details, and it clearly has been extensively updated to stay relevant (I read the 2017 update)。 I plan to read Volume 2。The meh:- For having "DevOps" in the current sub-title and referencing it frequently, they barely define what they mean by the term- For all that it has been updated, it seems woefully unaware of (or silent on) how Xaas pieces might fit into the ecosystems of companies large or small- and I don't have the impression that Vol 2 Lots of good。 A wide range of topics, concepts over details, and it clearly has been extensively updated to stay relevant (I read the 2017 update)。 I plan to read Volume 2。The meh:- For having "DevOps" in the current sub-title and referencing it frequently, they barely define what they mean by the term- For all that it has been updated, it seems woefully unaware of (or silent on) how Xaas pieces might fit into the ecosystems of companies large or small- and I don't have the impression that Vol 2 is likely to address a lot of the cases for this- While focusing on "System Administrators" and occasionally mentioning "developers", the book seems unaware that there could even exist the many in-betweens that make up the majority of the organization that I work for (or maybe we're all SAs to these authors) and the world of customization of packaged software。 。。。more