Martin Seeger on Nostr: nprofile1q…2f40h The job of the sysadmin is being industrialized. That is what is ...
nprofile1qy2hwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnddaehgu3wwp6kyqpqmh888n5tn05wwhjls6wd897jx0m9j6fdy0ynfx8s724su5420kxsj2f40h (nprofile…f40h) The job of the sysadmin is being industrialized. That is what is causing the discomfort.
The single operator having machines named after characters from Tolkien lore is disappearing or more precisely: becoming an edge case.
The „normal“ system is setup automagically via toolchain. The typical system never sees an operator logging in via ssh or console during its complete lifecycle. In modern ops, needing to do a thing by hand is worth a bug report by itself.
I am mot talking hyperscalers here, but the ops of small shops with a few thousand cores.
Yes, I have my own set of a dozen handcrafted machines (mostly VMs), but I am aware thar Linux is no longer primarily developed for my use case.
My (and probably your) use case make up only a small part of the Linux world and may not be the target for the development any more.
The single operator having machines named after characters from Tolkien lore is disappearing or more precisely: becoming an edge case.
The „normal“ system is setup automagically via toolchain. The typical system never sees an operator logging in via ssh or console during its complete lifecycle. In modern ops, needing to do a thing by hand is worth a bug report by itself.
I am mot talking hyperscalers here, but the ops of small shops with a few thousand cores.
Yes, I have my own set of a dozen handcrafted machines (mostly VMs), but I am aware thar Linux is no longer primarily developed for my use case.
My (and probably your) use case make up only a small part of the Linux world and may not be the target for the development any more.