System Administration is the blanket title for a myriad of job responsibilities involving the management of information systems and/or services. We choose to refer to it as a "blanket title" because the responsibilities are broad and can differ from organization to organization. In some organizations, it even differs from group to group!
System Administration is often referred to as "operations" or "ops" too - you might have guessed that though, having decided to enroll in Ops School.
Like almost everything in this world, system administration does not exist in a vacuum. There are two other groups of people that exist to make an information system or service come together: developers and customers. Customers are often referred to as end-users or people or humans - basically, they're the folks you're implementing a system or service for.
A system administrator experiences life in all three of these roles: sometimes you will be tasked with maintaining a system or service, and sometimes you may be developing parts of a system. Many times, you'll be someone else's customer.
This section will get into what system administration (ops) professionals do, what developers do, where they compare and contrast, what role that ops plays in the larger business context, a mindset and approach to systems administration, demonstrate the importance of problem solving and ethics in the every day life of a system administrator.
Like we mentioned above, the role of the System Administrator is diverse.
To illustrate some of the latitude present in the role, consider how the following descriptions compare and contrast:
- Matt works for an elementary school. He's referred to by other employees at the school as the system administrator. To the other employees, Matt ensures that the computers "just work." Realistically, Matt spends time making sure that the systems that everyone uses are patched - to avoid security issues. Other employees talk to him about software they may need installed -- on their computer, or maybe all of them! Matt also has the responsibility of making sure that the school's website is available for parents to get information on, and that the classroom management software is up and running and accepting requests. Matt also needs to be able to look into the future and figure out how much space the employees may need on the server, and be able to justify that to his boss. When report card time runs around, Matt has to make sure that the teachers are able to give their report cards out on time.
- Sarah works for a large website that many people use on a day to day basis. Downtime is a big deal for this website: after all, when the site is down, people aren't spending money. When these problems occur, Sarah gets paged to determine the root cause of the issue and respond. Fortunately for Sarah she's not always being paged. During the normal day-to-day operations of the site, Sarah writes various scripts and programs that help her other administrators manage the site on a day to day basis, and strives to reduce the amount of "manual" tasks that the team she's on has to deal with.
- Will works for a small town. The town has 35 employees who use computers every day, and they need access to email and other collaboration tools. With so many services and options for e-mail, which one makes the most amount of sense for the town? Will collects input from the employees about what capabilities are important, input from legal council about what laws a town must follow regarding electronic communication, and evaluates a few services or products with his user's needs in mind along with the town's. If he ends up using a third-party service, he'll have to figure out how to roll it out to the users. If Will chooses to host himself, he'll have to coordinate getting the appropriate infrastructure set up to make sure that it can meet the capacity of the users. He'll also need to set it all up.
- Karen works for a large business. The business has many groups, but she works with one set of users - hardware engineers. She maintains a network that they use to run their hardware simulations before the hardware goes out to be built. She regularly writes scripts to reduce the number of manual steps something takes - like adding new users to the system. She also has to coordinate how the network will be patched regularly, what investments will be required for the network to continue operating at peak performance, and work with the other administrators to create something that works for the engineers at the business.
- Darren works for a large financial company. The company has many teams that do different things, but there's collaboration between the different system administrators - the operations team (staffed with administrators) implements things that the research team (also administrators) recommends based on the needs of the business. They work with developers too - since the financial company has a lot of custom software that is written by the developers. The developers have different goals when they write their software - so they meet with Darren and his team to make sure they understand the context surrounding where and how their application will run, and to make sure that Darren's team knows what they need as well. Darren's team may have ideas about what statistics are important to monitor.
- Chris works for a consultancy. The company has many clients for which it provides software development and operations support. Every client has their own infrastructure, their own requirements - some of them very similar to the previous examples, some very different. Therefore, Chris needs to be familiar with a wide range of technologies, in addition to being able to learn new things quickly. There's a lot of variety in the day-to-day job. While it's not his primary responsibility to write code, sometimes the job calls for it - where context has already determined the implementation language. Chris works closely not only with the clients but also with his developer coworkers and the rest of the operations team to meet client goals. In addition, Chris also works with the rest of the operations team to support the consultancy's own infrastructure.
Did you notice any themes throughout the stories? How do they contrast?
Highlighted themes include:
- System Administrators rarely work on their own. Some of the stories feature System Administrators who are the only "Information Technology" staff in their organization - but it's a requirement for them to work with everyone - the folks who "sign the paycheck at the end of the day," and the people who use their technology.
- System Administration can be difficult if you don't automate! Imagine if Matt had to install a software package on 200 machines by walking to each machine and installing it? How could he get any of his other requests done?
- At times, the system administrator may need to write code. Maybe that means a script that can take a list of users and add them to a system, maybe that means a script that can check to make sure a service is responding appropriately for a monitoring system.
- System Administration has a wide variety of meanings to different people. The other non-IT employees are looking for something that "just works" - the ops person is concerned with proper implementation of a service so it continues to be scalable and reliable for the future.
As mentioned in the section introduction, system administration doesn't exist in a vacuum. Computers don't just compute for the sake of it - not yet, anyways.
Developers write applications in a variety of programming languages to make a computer do something. Developers created the backend that allows you to order a book on a site like Amazon.com, post a status on Facebook, or research a topic in a literary journal database.
These backends can be big, and have many considerations behind their design.
- Rachel works for an ecommerce company. The company has a large team of developers, all working in different applications, usually in ruby or javascript, and the applications talk to each other via APIs to support the main site that customers interact with. Her obligations to the business are to create new features for the website and maintain or fix the old ones. Her obligations to her other developers are to keep the code clean and readable, with tests so others can confidently refactor her code. She works closely with the Operations team to make the app-level changes that help the ops team maintain a robust infrastructure, like making pages fully cachable or eliminating unnecessary HTML, CSS, javascript or images being sent to the browser.
- Tyler is a systems developer at a small technology company. He takes complex processes, like developing a search engine or collecting statistics, and creates several pieces of software to accomplish those tasks. He works primarily in C, Perl and Python and has to have a deep understanding of the operating system his code will run on. He works closely with his Operations engineers to make sure his code is performant and on capacity planning.
.. todo:: "What is Development" Section needs more developer perspective.
At the end of the day, both groups have an important shared goal: to ensure that a system or service remains as available (think: accessible, usable, works how people expect it to) as a customer expects it to be. You'll see references to the idea of how "available" a system or service is later when Service Level Agreements (SLAs) are discussed.
That being said, Development and Operations have different day-to-day thoughts.
Operations thoughts include:
- How are we going to install (or, deploy) the servers that run this application?
- How will we monitor the system/service to make sure it's working as we expect?
- Can we deploy this system or service in a way that is easy to maintain?
- What are the pros/cons of implementing this application in this way?
Development thoughts include:
- How will I implement message passing between two parts of this application?
- What's the best algorithm to use for searching through this amount of data?
- Should I be thinking of a key-value store for this data vs. using a relational database?
- What language will I implement this in?
Again, this is by no means an exhaustive list - entire books could be written about the subject. It's just to give a feel for the different considerations.
Historically, Developers made a product or application and Operations implemented it. Some companies still use this model today. Unfortunately, the effects of this style of work can be dangerous:
- Developers and Operations personnel may have different goals. Something important to the operations folk may not be important to the Development folk.
- Siloing these two organizations means that the most important goal of service availability is compromised. The person who is using your program or service doesn't care who made a mistake, the service is down.
- Speaking of mistakes: when companies don't encourage their development and operations teams to work together, it's possible that groups get too invested in assigning blame, instead of working together to fix an issue
Fortunately, in recent years, many organizations have made more effort to ensure that both teams are familiar with the concepts of the other - this is often referred to as DevOps - the combination of Development and Operations. Recall :ref:`Darren's story <whats-sysadmin-darren>` - he's an operations person who worked with the developers to ensure that the developers understand the environment that their application will run on. The street went both ways, though: the developers need to share how they plan to implement various product features so that the operations team can figure out how to best support the developers needs.
If you're working in an environment without developers, that's OK. There are other people who you share a common, larger goal with. Businesses may have analysts that interpret needs and look to you for assistance. In :ref:`Karen's story <whats-sysadmin-karen>`, she supports hardware engineers who have requirements to deliver a particular sensor. Their ability to work hinges on Karen's ability to deliver a service for simulation that is available for them to work, which requires an understanding of their requirements and needs as well.
System Administration, like many things in life, can suffer from a cultural perception issue. Primarily, some outside of the operations field that believe that the role of IT is not to innovate; rather that IT exists to enforce rules decided on by others.
We challenge that mindset. System administration is not about saying "no" to requests but about finding ways to intelligently fulfill the needs of a business in a way that increases maintainability, usability, and security for a group of people and enhances their ability to useful work.
Another perception issue is that of the BOFH. While there's something of a grain of truth to the meme, most system administrators who adopt such an attitude quickly find themselves out of work. Beyond the social implications, this sort of obstructionist, adversarial behavior is the least effective way of addressing problems. The best path to success and satisfaction is collaboration, not obstinacy. This requires cooperation from all involved, whether their role is technical or not. An administrator's job is to create order from chaos, to control the technology--not the people. As with all social interactions, everyone has their own needs and goals, and it can be complex to navigate safely, but it is critical to the success of the organization.
- LOPSA ethics statement/SAGE(now LISA) ethics statement?