Modern sysadmins must maintain a diverse and ever-evolving set of technical skills. When you're looking to increase your sysadmin skills, you might set out looking for training on key technologies, such as Kubernetes, containers, and automation. In fact, you've probably already started building your aptitude in those areas. But these aren't the only things you need to work on if you want to stand out in your sysadmin career.

In this article, I won't tell you to go out and learn a specific command-line interface or API. Instead, I'll cover some general concepts that will differentiate high-performing sysadmins and IT professionals in the upcoming years. While technology is certainly at the core of these topics, they are generalizable to many different systems and applications.

Multicloud

Many companies run at least some of their services in a public cloud. As organizations develop their cloud maturity, the natural next step is to leverage other public cloud platforms.

Different cloud providers have different specialties, and it might make sense for a company to piece together services from specialized providers. Cost savings are also a crucial consideration when selecting a cloud platform. Additionally, over the past few years, many high-profile cloud outages have highlighted the dangers of becoming too reliant on a single cloud vendor.

Complex, distributed system architectures

The cloud promised to bring the end of IT operations teams, as it aimed to make everything, from single virtual machines to entire distributed systems, simple and accessible at the click of a button. This largely hasn't been the case. Take a look at any cloud-native architecture diagram, and you'll almost certainly be faced with a sea of complexity represented by a tangled web of interconnected services.

Admins who can effectively navigate, explain, and build these complex environments will stand out in the coming years. Being able to view a complex system from a high vantage point while simultaneously being able to dive deep into individual components will be a highly sought-after skill.

[ Get a free trial to Red Hat Learning Subscription and take advantage of unlimited access to our comprehensive curriculum. ]

Troubleshooting

As complexity has grown, so has the cognitive burden of troubleshooting the average environment. Trawling through syslog messages on a single server is no longer viable for distributed application environments with dozens of moving pieces. Knowing how to systematically identify a problem, analyze all available information, and drill down into individual components of an environment to identify a root cause is a rare (and highly desirable) skill.

I've always thought that those with a networking background are uniquely predisposed to be good troubleshooters. Networking is all about peeling back the layers of a protocol "onion" in a distributed environment, working from the physical layer all the way through the application layer. While the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) model does not directly map to a large, distributed software system, the idea that there are distinct layers that interface with each other in defined ways still applies.

Cost control

Finally, you can tie all of the previous tips together with the need for cost control. Cloud costs can easily balloon, especially when leveraging multicloud services and software as a service. Understanding how to build a system that is robust, scales, and minimizes cost is a rare skill.

This includes the ability to perform a "build vs. buy" analysis, as you need to determine if paying for a hosted solution is really cheaper than simply running the same service on your own cloud-based instances.

Maintain focus on core concepts

While the specific tools, processes, and applications sysadmins need to know are always evolving, most of the core concepts remain the same. I believe the four skills I outlined here will be important for sysadmins to stay competitive in the future IT landscape. Keep ahead by expanding your knowledge to advance your career.


執筆者紹介

Anthony Critelli is a Linux systems engineer with interests in automation, containerization, tracing, and performance. He started his professional career as a network engineer and eventually made the switch to the Linux systems side of IT. He holds a B.S. and an M.S. from the Rochester Institute of Technology.

UI_Icon-Red_Hat-Close-A-Black-RGB

チャンネル別に見る

automation icon

自動化

テクノロジー、チームおよび環境に関する IT 自動化の最新情報

AI icon

AI (人工知能)

お客様が AI ワークロードをどこでも自由に実行することを可能にするプラットフォームについてのアップデート

open hybrid cloud icon

オープン・ハイブリッドクラウド

ハイブリッドクラウドで柔軟に未来を築く方法をご確認ください。

security icon

セキュリティ

環境やテクノロジー全体に及ぶリスクを軽減する方法に関する最新情報

edge icon

エッジコンピューティング

エッジでの運用を単純化するプラットフォームのアップデート

Infrastructure icon

インフラストラクチャ

世界有数のエンタープライズ向け Linux プラットフォームの最新情報

application development icon

アプリケーション

アプリケーションの最も困難な課題に対する Red Hat ソリューションの詳細

Virtualization icon

仮想化

オンプレミスまたは複数クラウドでのワークロードに対応するエンタープライズ仮想化の将来についてご覧ください