Folks,
Here is a Linux admin job opportunity.
This is my current employer, for whom I have worked since July 1996.
If you have any questions about Bradford & Galt, and what type of company they are to work for, contact me. If you have any questions about the position, contact April Garlington as specified below.
----- Begin forwarded message -----
Bradford & Galt is currently looking for a Linux Administrator in the St. Louis area
Contract 1 year could be a contract for hire 60K to negotiable
Must have at least 3 years experience working as a Linux Administrator
Specifically, the responsibility will include: * OS administration (Linux - We also need Windows and HP-UX). * Source code configuration management (Starteam) * Release management (Ant, InstallShield, InstallAnywhere and others) * Server management (Tomcat, Apache, Tomcat, etc.) * Services management (Windows services, Linux cron, etc.) * Database operations (Oracle client, and others) * Programming experience a plus (Java, Crystal Reports, etc)
Installation and configuration of servers Will be troubleshooting and maintaining the servers Will be doing report development Will be helping with deployment of new version of software and OS Windows experience required UNIX experience
Release Management * Building Linux RPMs for distribution * InstallShield for Windows * Gentoo Ebuilds * Writing custom application installers from scratch
Source Code Configuration Management * CVS * Subversion * Visual Sourcesafe a plus
Please contact April Garlington at [email protected] or 913-663-1264 x103 if you are interested in this opportunity.
April Garlington Sr. Staffing Specialist Bradford & Galt Consulting Services (913)663-1264 x103 [email protected] www.bradfordandgalt.com ........we're thinking ahead
----- End forwarded message -----
On Wednesday 23 March 2005 05:06 pm, Hal Duston wrote:
Source Code Configuration Management
- CVS
- Subversion
- Visual Sourcesafe a plus
I would think that would be the responsibility of the software project manager. Putting under the SysAdmin pretty much guarantees you get a programming orientation to the job, rather than a systems and support orientation.
A lot of people don't appreciate the fact that a good programmer is NOT the same thing as a good system administrator.
Quoting Jonathan Hutchins [email protected]:
On Wednesday 23 March 2005 05:06 pm, Hal Duston wrote:
Source Code Configuration Management
I would think that would be the responsibility of the software project manager.
There are system administrators who use version control for config files. It's not just for breakfast anymore.
-- Dave Hull http://insipid.com
On Wed, 2005-03-23 at 22:43 -0600, Dave Hull wrote:
There are system administrators who use version control for config files. It's not just for breakfast anymore.
But a /Linux/ system administrator needing to know /Microsoft/ Visual SourceSafe??
I'm think there was an error made somewhere along the chain...
Quoting Jason Clinton [email protected]:
On Wed, 2005-03-23 at 22:43 -0600, Dave Hull wrote:
There are system administrators who use version control for config files.
It's
not just for breakfast anymore.
But a /Linux/ system administrator needing to know /Microsoft/ Visual SourceSafe??
I'm think there was an error made somewhere along the chain...
You got me there. I think I missed the original message (hyper-deleting). I saw CVS and Subversion and assumed familiarity with versioning control software of one of those flavors would suffice.
But yeah, what next, IE?
-- Dave Hull http://insipid.com
it's a good starting point for a wish-list
On Wed, 23 Mar 2005 23:00:04 -0600, Gerald Combs [email protected] wrote:
Out of curiosity, are there any distros that version-control configuration files out of the box? ________________________________
On Wednesday 23 March 2005 10:43 pm, Dave Hull wrote:
There are system administrators who use version control for config files. It's not just for breakfast anymore.
I would put that in the realm of good system administration. Administering the codebase for project development should be done within the programming team though.