Network Administration System And: What Is A Sysadmin?
Network Administration System And: What Is A Sysadmin?
What Is a Sysadmin?
• In a “small company” the Sysadmin may be the entire
information technology staff.
– The Sysadmin may do everything from telephone,
to fax, to computer management.
– Sysadmin may have to order supplies, deal with
users, develop software and repair hardware
• In a large company the Sysadmin may be one member
of a large group.
– May be responsible for one aspect of the data
center operation.
• Programmers
• Database Administrators
• Network Administrators
• Operators
Common Sysadmin Traits
• A Sysadmin is a customer service agent!
• The Sysadmin must be able to communicate with
technical and non-technical users.
• The Sysadmin should be patient, and have a sense of
humor.
• The Sysadmin must be able to solve difficult technical
problems.
• The Sysadmin must be able to work in a group setting.
• The Sysadmin must document activities in order to
reproduce the results.
What Does a Sysadmin Do?
• Plan and manage the machine room environment
– design machine room; specify cooling, cabling, power
connections, and environmental controls (fire alarm,
security)
• Install and maintain operating system software,
application software, and patches.
• Determine hardware and software pre-requisites,
which patch to install, which services to provide, and
which services to disable.
• Schedule downtime to perform upgrades/patches, and
test devices and schedule downtime to manage
devices.
• Install and maintain user accounts; develop acceptable
use policy and login-name policy; determine password
change policies; install/configure/manage name
services; and manage licenses.
• Determine disk quota, police/manage disk space, and
monitor log files.
• Train users on software and security.
• Ensure that users have access to documentation.
• Help users and provide help-desk support and
problem tracking system to answer user questions.
• Configure network services:
• Printing, file sharing, name service.
• Determine file sharing needs and printing policies.
• Manage security for shared resources.
• Install/maintain system devices, hardware/drivers;
specify supported devices; determine spares practices.
• web agents
• calendar software
• Mail readers.
• monitor connectivity
• perform backups
• perform restores
• Troubleshoot and repair system problems; and
determine, locate, and repair/replace problem
components
Skills Required
• Ethics
• Desire to learn
• Hardware
• Software
• Problem Solving
Active Directory
Just as the combination of a database and a database
management system collects and organizes
information about an institution/company/… as well
as manages access to that information, Active
Directory collects, organizes and manages access to
information about network “objects” – such as
computers, servers, printers, users, groups, etc.
For instance, one component is a Directory Service
Often likened to a phone book which one to look
up numbers (from names) or services (yellow
pages)
Active Directory is often just called AD
For example AD-DS is active
Standards
Organizational Unit