What do you name your servers?
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@scottalanmiller said:
Vienna and Salzburg were Compaq Proliant 800s with Pentium III 500 MHz 100Mhz FSB. Each had 4x 9GB SCSI drives. Only one of the two had hardware RAID. Both were RAID 5. I believe that they each had 128MB of RAM. The ran NT 4 and both lasted months short of ten years without a failure.
Mmmmm quantum hard drives - I remember the sound those make like it was yesterday. Did they have a sub-brand on those, like the desktop Fireball line? Was it Atlas? Good memories
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@anonymous said:
@scottalanmiller Just using linux seems to vague, why not use distro instead?
How often do you need to really know that at a glance? What is more important is that the Linux teams know where to log in and which team needs to look at the box. It isn't like the Ubuntu team and the RHEL team and the Suse team have different people. But Linux and Windows do.
It's not a super amount of info, just enough for basic identification when needed quickly and to avoid errors.
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Pinging dny-lnx-jump.ntg.co [65.75.137.152] with 32 bytes of data:
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.Ping statistics for 65.75.137.152:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 0, Lost = 4 (100% loss),You have ping disabled?
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You could have something like nyc-ub1404-mysql55-1
But then do you change the name when you update? How much details goes into a hostname? How long does it get?
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@anonymous said:
Pinging dny-lnx-jump.ntg.co [65.75.137.152] with 32 bytes of data:
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.
Request timed out.Ping statistics for 65.75.137.152:
Packets: Sent = 4, Received = 0, Lost = 4 (100% loss),You have ping disabled?
We don't put our internal names into public DNS. That would be silly
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@scottalanmiller said:
You could have something like nyc-ub1404-mysql55-1
But then do you change the name when you update? How much details goes into a hostname? How long does it get?
I didn't say anything about version numbers..... nyc-cent-web-1
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@scottalanmiller said:
How often do you need to really know that at a glance?
You don't need to know at a glance, but why not? If you going to take up characters to define it as linux, why not give the distro instead?
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@anonymous said:
@scottalanmiller said:
How often do you need to really know that at a glance?
You don't need to know at a glance, but why not? If you going to take up characters to define it as linux, why not give the distro instead?
Well if you are going to script things super quickly, it's nice to say...
for i in $(grep lnx servers); do ssh $i uptime; done
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@anonymous said:
@scottalanmiller said:
How often do you need to really know that at a glance?
You don't need to know at a glance, but why not? If you going to take up characters to define it as linux, why not give the distro instead?
Well if you are going down that path, though, wouldn't version numbers be useful? Whats the benefit of knowing CentOS but not 5 vs 6? Knowing the OS is somewhat useful, but I'm not sure it is useful enough. What change in behaviour are you anticipating from identifying CentOS, Ubuntu, Suse, Fedora, Arch, etc.?
We DO code VyOS differently, even though it is Linux under the hood.
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@scottalanmiller said:
What change in behaviour are you anticipating from identifying CentOS, Ubuntu, Suse, Fedora, Arch, etc.?
Different commands, - yum, vs apt-get, etc.
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SwitchingToUbuntu/FromLinux/RedHatEnterpriseLinuxAndFedora
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@anonymous said:
@scottalanmiller said:
What change in behaviour are you anticipating from identifying CentOS, Ubuntu, Suse, Fedora, Arch, etc.?
Different commands, - yum, vs apt-get, etc.
https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SwitchingToUbuntu/FromLinux/RedHatEnterpriseLinuxAndFedora
But you need version numbers for that too. The distro name alone is not enough. Fedora 22 drops YUM, for example. Different versions have different service commands and packages.
When would you use only the distro name?
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@IRJ said:
Server1
Server2
Server3
Server4
Server5
Server6
Server7
......
......
......
Server88
Server89
Server90
......
......
Server152
Server153
Server154
.......
.......
and so onUm I hope not How do you know what they do?
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@scottalanmiller said:
We use a code like this....
[datacenter]-[os]-[application or function][number]
So a Toronto based Linux server for MySQL might be...
to-lnx-maria1
Pretty much what we use. Except Ours is
[Business Unit]-[Datacenter]-[OS]-[Function]-[Number if multiples in the same location]
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@anonymous said:
What do you name your servers?
We have a very small pool of servers ( less than 15 ) and use fun names based on their overall prowess or any unique characteristics.
Goliath
Ares
Achilles
Cheetara
Sanctuary -
I once named the devices of an entire network after the characters in the 5th element.
Currently, everything is named
[client][primary role][server number]
bundydc01
bundysd01
etc. -
@JaredBusch said:
I once named the devices of an entire network after the characters in the 5th element.
Currently, everything is named
[client][primary role][server number]
bundydc01
bundysd01
etc.Did you have a security server called Multi-Pass?
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@g.jacobse said:
Did you have a security server called Multi-Pass?
It was the ID card printing computer actually.
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Work stuff is kind of boring
Location-<abbreviation of function><number = orderofbuild>
Home stuff is always planets from the Star Wars Universe.- Main Home PC is Courescant (bright center of the universe )
- NAS is Hoth (it's white)
- eeepc is Corellia
- Xubuntu laptop is Byss