/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2012/12/18/#ubuntu-learning.txt

joergerI was wondering what ways people here have increased their knowledge of linux.  I already run a mostly linux environment with the exception of gaming(but isnt frequent since my classes take a lot of time out of day) and one software package that I could not get to run natively.05:32
pleia2got a job running linux servers ;)05:32
joergerdid you have any previous knowledge of linux before that?05:33
pleia2mostly I pick projects and then figure out how to do them05:33
pleia2"I wonder how to run a webserver" etc etc05:33
joergerso go through installation guides?05:34
pleia2so I'd been a hobbiest for about 4 years before I became a junior sysadmin05:34
pleia2yep05:34
joergerI am about to hit my first year of (almost) all linux booting by the end of this month but that is impressive.  Did doing that help you with on the job experience of setting those systems up?05:35
pleia2oh yes, plus I loved it and was always eager to learn, which are pretty key requirements for being a sysadmin :)05:36
joergeri love linux...honestly i feel as though I have less headaches to worry about then my peers when it comes to getting our files to "just work"...today even i loaded up a kid I was teaching some C++ to and the files werent working for him under windows popped them onto my machine and boom compiled and worked under the same compiler05:37
joergerI do like to learn but I dont have enough pcs to play around with (isnt that always the case)05:38
pleia2virtualbox is your friend05:39
pleia2you don't need lots of PCs to learn stuff these days, just fire up some virtual machines to play with05:39
pleia2I recently even had a small cluster running virtualizaton on top of virtualization for some testing05:40
joergeryour opinions of VMware vs VB...I get a free copy of VMware from my school and hmmm never thought of treating them in that way...05:40
joergerdid i understand you correctly...a cluster of vms within a cluster of vms?05:40
pleia2virtualbox is open source and that's where my interests are, I don't often pay for software so VMWare is out05:41
pleia2I actually use KVM mostly though05:41
pleia2a cluster of VMs running on my desktop, with VMs load balanced between them05:41
joergerim really into the FOSS mentality...but i couldnt get the linux generic headers to work under 12.04 and then found i got VMware for free...so I closed my mouth and "ponied" up05:42
pleia2I'm still using 12.04 on my desktop and haven't had a problem, maybe figuring out how to get it working is a learning experience? :)05:42
joergerso from reading the description quickly about KVM...it seems like its a software way to tell the kernel that the system can VM?05:43
pleia2it's another virtualization technology like VMWare or VB, it just doesn't have a pretty graphical interface05:44
joergertrue thats a good idea...weekend project for sure...05:44
joergerso all command line?05:44
joergeri like the sound of that05:44
pleia2you use something like virtual machime manager and libvirt tools to control it (virtual machine manager and libvirt tools give you the same tools for a bunch of virtualization technologies so you can use the same commands to control KVM, VB, VMWare...)05:44
joergerthats pretty interesting...(VM cluster)05:44
pleia2yeah, so by default KVM is all command line05:45
pleia2virtual machine manager is a gui, but it's quite limited :)05:45
joergernot scared of the command line so personally rather tackle it head on and i dont like being limited05:46
pleia2great attitude to have05:46
pleia2http://blog.remoteresponder.net/2012/05/17/an-infrastructure-for-server-clusters-for-high-availability/ talks a bit about the cluster infrastructure I deploy at work (that's my work blog)05:47
pleia2(for another 2 weeks anyway!)05:47
joergerthank you...and moving somewhere else?05:47
pleia2yeah, got a job where I actually get to work on infrastructure for an open source project directly, hooray :)05:48
joergerright now im a Medical Informatics major picking up IT for a dual major (should have come in as straight IT) and trying to decide what/where I want to do my Masters in CS or Networking Sys. Admin(a la your job)05:48
joergerand that sounds awesome :) I would love to work for open source project and get paid to do it05:48
pleia2my fiance is a network engineer, he seems to enjoy it05:49
pleia2and yeah, it's pretty much a dream come true :)05:49
joergerI think FOSS and GNU stuff is great and luck you :)05:49
joergerwhat does he do? more blue prints or networking of devices?05:49
joergerlucky*05:49
pleia2he's a senior engineer, so it's more like broad policy decisions for big networks, integrations and also attends conferences to represent the company he works for at major international network policy meetings05:50
joergerhmmm interesting...sounds like a lot of meetings lol05:52
pleia2haha, yeah05:52
joergerIm browsing through your blog and it appears like you do more of the implementation from those meetings...05:54
pleia2yeah, I'm definitely more of a traditional systems person05:56
joergerI like getting my hands dirty more than meetings (Blah :p)05:57
pleia2hehe05:58
joergerit seems like a pretty standard question but what distros/WM do you run?06:00
pleia2mostly Xubuntu for desktop stuff and Debian on servers06:01
joergerdebian over a headless ubuntu install? looking for the stability i would assume06:02
pleia2pretty much06:02
pleia2at work they've used debian for over a decade, no compelling reason to switch06:03
pleia2actually pretty much the same thing personally for me, debian is super stable and it works fine, I don't need the latest things on a basic webserver06:04
joergerohhh that would do it and true that makes sense...rather have it working then having to try and fix things06:04
pleia2yeah, breaking things is only fun when they aren't in production06:05
joergernow being in the work force what technologies do you see really starting to sprout and take off?06:06
joergerand when its not finals week and you have a large project due06:06
joergera la windows corrupting my boot record06:06
pleia2ouch, right06:07
pleia2virtualization is huge, everyone is moving from bare metal to lots of machines on one host06:07
pleia2(or balanced in some kind of cluster of multiple physical hosts)06:07
pleia2beyond that, much of the same as always, webservers, databases, same old stuff on top of a different base06:09
joergerso the cool/new stuff is still under the skin and not on top of the skin?06:10
pleia2yep06:12
pleia2I actually just learned about this last week: http://www.opsschool.org/en/latest/06:12
pleia2looks to be good for learning, and is in active development06:12
joergerthank you for all this great information! Time for me to go. also as a side note.  Im from PA as well NE corner06:13
joergernice thank you :) will totally look into this :)06:13
pleia2sure, have a good night :)06:13
joergerthank you! you as well06:14
joerger!!06:14
pleia2thanks06:14

Generated by irclog2html.py 2.7 by Marius Gedminas - find it at mg.pov.lt!