I've seen hundreds of job descriptions online that list desired or required sysadmin skills and they usually include knowledge or competency in shell scripting and at least one programming language. There's no industry-wide standard for a favored language requirement for sysadmins but the trend is toward automation and agility.
Shell scripting is a must-have skill for sysadmins. Scripting common tasks and scheduling them via cron is essential for the proper care and feeding of Linux server systems. This level of automation can help with system security, common directory cleanup, general housekeeping, locking of unused accounts, and much more.
Programming languages have so many applications and possibilities that they're too numerous to list, although automation and security are at the top of that list. You also have maintenance tasks for existing applications written in compiled and parsed languages as well. Sysadmins are frequently called upon to fix minor security or coding issues in applications and a working knowledge of C-based languages helps with those tasks.
I'm interested to find out which languages you use for automation, programming, and taking care of those administrative tasks.
关于作者
Ken has used Red Hat Linux since 1996 and has written ebooks, whitepapers, actual books, thousands of exam review questions, and hundreds of articles on open source and other topics. Ken also has 20+ years of experience as an enterprise sysadmin with Unix, Linux, Windows, and Virtualization.
Follow him on Twitter: @kenhess for a continuous feed of Sysadmin topics, film, and random rants.
In the evening after Ken replaces his red hat with his foil hat, he writes and makes films with varying degrees of success and acceptance. He is an award-winning filmmaker who constantly tries to convince everyone of his Renaissance Man status, also with varying degrees of success and acceptance.
产品
工具
试用购买与出售
沟通
关于红帽
我们是世界领先的企业开源解决方案供应商,提供包括 Linux、云、容器和 Kubernetes。我们致力于提供经过安全强化的解决方案,从核心数据中心到网络边缘,让企业能够更轻松地跨平台和环境运营。