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Any potential database performance issues are due to 'the network' or your lazy storage admin not putting the entire database on SSDs.
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 21:03 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 14:56 |
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Thanks Ants posted:Any potential database performance issues are due to 'the network' or your lazy storage admin not putting the entire database on SSDs. As if we have any SSD's.
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 21:06 |
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Why worry about managing MS SQL when you should really be moving everything to a nice cloud-based NoSQL solution instead?
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 21:06 |
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captkirk posted:Make sure you don't know anything about disk, resource bottle necks, or the generally finite nature of physical memory. Those are all concerns for the systems team. I'm so triggered right now.
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 21:09 |
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anthonypants posted:Why worry about managing MS SQL when you should really be moving everything to a nice cloud-based NoSQL solution instead? Because it's easier to make really big lovely and slow queries in MSSQL. Be sure to nest views, avoid joins as much as possible, never partition DBs, and never truncate anything, ever. When everything is hosed, blame "the server guys."
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 21:37 |
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GnarlyCharlie4u posted:Because it's easier to make really big lovely and slow queries in MSSQL. Who will, in turn, blame "the network".
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 22:11 |
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ChubbyThePhat posted:Who will, in turn, blame "the network". And then the network guys blame the software vendor.
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 22:15 |
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ChubbyThePhat posted:Who will, in turn, blame "the network". I'm surprised this is still a thing in nearly TYOOL 2016, but the majority of Cisco's product line up still cannot manage line speed so
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 22:16 |
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99% of all network problems are sysadmins and DBAs trying to buy time to fix their gently caress ups. Throw in the developers if you're managing an F5.
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 22:50 |
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Judge Schnoopy posted:I don't know how anybody could go with meraki switches when they're easily 5x normal cisco gear. The pricing is out of their loving minds. You could buy a truck of ubiquiti switches for the same price. Just throw them away if they cause any issue. The rep must be blowing your boss or something.
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# ? Dec 31, 2015 23:15 |
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Was wondering if I truly need a bachelor's degree to advance in the IT field? I'm already working in IT for awhile now, but only have an associates. And does it matter what school I go to. I mean I've been researching schools and noticed Western Governor's University and Southern New Hampshire University had some really great tuition. I can go to a local university (Boston area) but they're quite expensive. Thoughts?
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 16:31 |
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Hey other Boston goon with an associates! I asked about WGU the other day and this might be relevant for youskipdogg posted:There are several of us here that have degrees from WGU. I finished my BS Oct 2014.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 16:34 |
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ZteleME posted:Was wondering if I truly need a bachelor's degree to advance in the IT field? I'm already working in IT for awhile now, but only have an associates. If you're past the junior level, the degree won't really matter for any more technical roles. You could probably be en enterprise architect with a high school diploma. If your ambitions are in management though, you will want a degree. It's more of a check box than anything (especially for an internal promotion), but the reputation of the school can make a difference if you're interviewing with people who don't know you.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 16:35 |
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psydude posted:99% of all network problems are sysadmins and DBAs trying to buy time to fix their gently caress ups. Throw in the developers if you're managing an F5. I thought this was hyperbole when I was still a junior, but at my first gig acting as the primary network engineer I spent upwards of 80% of my time proving that <issue> wasn't the network. Sometimes the issue really was the network though, and it's such a transparent thing to Systems/DBA that I didn't really mind time spent investigating issues that were incorrectly configured systems or systems people not understanding how subnetting works.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 16:42 |
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Reiz posted:I thought this was hyperbole when I was still a junior, but at my first gig acting as the primary network engineer I spent upwards of 80% of my time proving that <issue> wasn't the network. Sometimes the issue really was the network though, and it's such a transparent thing to Systems/DBA that I didn't really mind time spent investigating issues that were incorrectly configured systems or systems people not understanding how subnetting works. A lot of network admins just plain aren't good at that aspect of their jobs. It makes it hard to instill confidence in the network when the admins clearly have no idea what to even monitor to say the network looks healthy.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 16:53 |
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AreWeDrunkYet posted:If you're past the junior level, the degree won't really matter for any more technical roles. You could probably be en enterprise architect with a high school diploma. This. I just got blocked going into management by not having a bachelors degree but I'm a senior software engineer.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 16:57 |
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Farts posted:And then the network guys blame the software vendor.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 17:04 |
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Looks like more schooling for me. Thx for the help guys! WGU and SNHU are really attractive since I can use my 2 certs to knock off some classes.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 17:24 |
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We recently had a database issue which was the network. The vendor insisted we run their database on RHEL6 approved kernels only, and updated their "hardware support list" to not include the NICs which used to be on there, and which we happened to own. After a lot of gnashing of teeth we found out it really was the network. The newest mainline kernel fixed or improved a mountain of issues we were seeing, but no way no how that will void your contract. Upgraded the NICs and it solved the issue. One down, 98 bugs on the wall... (Seriously it remained a pile of poo poo.)
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 17:25 |
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Is there any way to get an alert when a new ticket comes in through zendesk? We haven't gotten any tickets since 3pm yesterday.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 17:33 |
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Vulture Culture posted:At one of my prior engineering roles, I spent a lot of time having to prove that yes, issue X was the network. The network engineer would shrug off reports of problems with comments like "well, I can ping it" like a long-running string of 64-byte packets once a second must surely reveal issues with misconfigured Ethernet flow control or interface MTUs. This, but instead the response was "no errors on the port, must not be the network."
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 18:15 |
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Vulture Culture posted:At one of my prior engineering roles, I spent a lot of time having to prove that yes, issue X was the network. The network engineer would shrug off reports of problems with comments like "well, I can ping it" like a long-running string of 64-byte packets once a second must surely reveal issues with misconfigured Ethernet flow control or interface MTUs. I can definitely attest to this. In said role my coworkers were surprised at how quickly I was able to pinpoint a problem in the network or able to come up with better confirmation that it isn't the network than "I can ping it". My predecessor(s) left me a shipping box full of 3 ring binders overflowing with various revisions of switch/router configurations in no particular order scrawled all over with pen -- this isn't the first time I've seen such a box either. I think "I can ping it" and "Let me check my encyclopedic collection of printed configs" are strongly correlated, and the first thing I did was get version control on the configs and, you know, "ack vlan 27" instead of flipping through binders for half an hour to find out if something changed. My coworkers had absolutely no confidence that anything could be said to not be the network, and suspected that the network was involved in some portion of all problems because the prior response had been "I dunno, I'll call the vendor and get back to you in two weeks", so yeah I had absolutely no problem not even considering saying "it's not the network" until I had packet captures of both endpoints and the transitions at any intermediary layer 3 devices. e: This role is also where it really hit home that "Any junior engineer can implement a feature, you hire senior engineers to tell you which features not to implement" is 100% correct. They managed to cajole one of the previous 7 network admins into implementing some really lovely form of asymmetric routing completely on static routes, but only through/out certain devices. It was also required of me to basically recreate internal/external dns zones except without using DNS because they didn't want to maintain the two zones: They needed a server farm to basically be able to make API requests against itself, through an external domain name, which needed to be accessed out of a specific static route on the boxes themselves, and then natted, policy-routed, and then finally leastconn load balanced back to the source. 12 rats tied together fucked around with this message at 18:23 on Jan 1, 2016 |
# ? Jan 1, 2016 18:18 |
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I have so many customers who use ICMP as a crutch even though it's almost meaningless in large, complex networks. It's hard to get them to realize that it's not an authoritative measurement of availability. F5s are far and away the most headache inducing piece of equipment, though. The funny thing is that it has nothing to do with the device and everything to do with the organization: in non-DevOps shops, the developers and infrastructure team constantly punt issues to one another every time something breaks because nobody wants to take responsibility for the box. DevOps organizations are the only ones that make them work without mountains of stupidity. psydude fucked around with this message at 19:18 on Jan 1, 2016 |
# ? Jan 1, 2016 19:10 |
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psydude posted:F5s are far and away the most headache inducing piece of equipment, though. The funny thing is that it has nothing to do with the device and everything to do with the organization: in non-DevOps shops, the developers and infrastructure team constantly punt issues to one another every time something breaks because nobody wants to take responsibility for the box. DevOps organizations are the only ones that make them work without mountains of stupidity. We had an F5 load balancer installed in place of our CISCO device that did round robin, and the F5 kept screwing up the load balancing on our Resin cluster, the F5 team insisted it was not due to their appliance, despite the fact that we could solve the issue in QA via a round-robin only load balance. Finally got them to try it, and ta-da, issue disappeared.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 19:23 |
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if i have to deal with a CenturyLink tech one more loving time that insists pings are fine therefore everything is fine! i'll probably end up on a no-fly list
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 20:35 |
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ZteleME posted:Was wondering if I truly need a bachelor's degree to advance in the IT field? I'm already working in IT for awhile now, but only have an associates. Degrees help with two things: 1) getting your foot in the door with certain companies. 2) being promoted to management. For the most part, beyond that, degrees are more useless in the IT fields than most other professional fields.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 20:42 |
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Vulture Culture posted:At one of my prior engineering roles, I spent a lot of time having to prove that yes, issue X was the network. The network engineer would shrug off reports of problems with comments like "well, I can ping it" like a long-running string of 64-byte packets once a second must surely reveal issues with misconfigured Ethernet flow control or interface MTUs. I spend a lot of time proving that issue X isn't the network. The server/application/database administrator would shrug off reports of problems with comments like "well, I can reach the service" or "I can see the database structure in Manager" like opening an application in a web browser once must surely reveal issues with misconfigured services or databases that fail under load. A lot of application/server administrators just plain aren't good at that aspect of their jobs. it makes it hard to instill confidence in the infrastructure when the admins clearly have no idea what to even monitor to say the services are healthy.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 20:45 |
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DigitalMocking posted:I spend a lot of time proving that issue X isn't the network. The server/application/database administrator would shrug off reports of problems with comments like "well, I can reach the service" or "I can see the database structure in Manager" like opening an application in a web browser once must surely reveal issues with misconfigured services or databases that fail under load. We can probably agree that a lot of people
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 21:08 |
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I'm on the unix team at work. We take care of the F5s for some reason that only management can decipher. Recently some firewalls were life-cycled in our secondary datacenter. This caused a strange problem where traffic to nodes in our primary datacenter from the secondary data center's f5s is being intermittently dropped. The other way around is fine... Network security refuses to investigate the issue as there's "no possible way it could be the firewalls." Networking won't touch it either (yes networking is separate from network security). Meanwhile I get to deal with app owners whose apps are experiencing bizarre intermittent issues. I have logs that clearly show the problem did not exist with the old firewalls and as soon as they put the new firewalls in place, blammo. Security still won't do anything but blame everyone else. It's maddening.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 21:29 |
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Goon Matchmaker posted:I'm on the unix team at work. We take care of the F5s for some reason that only management can decipher. Recently some firewalls were life-cycled in our secondary datacenter. This caused a strange problem where traffic to nodes in our primary datacenter from the secondary data center's f5s is being intermittently dropped. The other way around is fine... Network security refuses to investigate the issue as there's "no possible way it could be the firewalls." Networking won't touch it either (yes networking is separate from network security). Meanwhile I get to deal with app owners whose apps are experiencing bizarre intermittent issues. I have logs that clearly show the problem did not exist with the old firewalls and as soon as they put the new firewalls in place, blammo. Security still won't do anything but blame everyone else. It's maddening. There was an issue they were tracking where F5s would randomly accept traffic and then never forward said traffic to the endpoint.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 22:00 |
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CommieGIR posted:There was an issue they were tracking where F5s would randomly accept traffic and then never forward said traffic to the endpoint. F5? I don't think that's in play here. 2nd DC to 1st DC = dropped traffic. 1st DC to 2nd DC = Fine. It started immediately after they flipped everything over to the new firewalls. I think the F5's are triggering some kind of port scan protection on the new firewalls but I'm not sure.
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 22:13 |
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Goon Matchmaker posted:(yes networking is separate from network security). e: But it still adds one more level of rear end pain to any deployment. psydude fucked around with this message at 22:37 on Jan 1, 2016 |
# ? Jan 1, 2016 22:32 |
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Goon Matchmaker posted:F5? I don't think that's in play here. 2nd DC to 1st DC = dropped traffic. 1st DC to 2nd DC = Fine. It started immediately after they flipped everything over to the new firewalls. I think the F5's are triggering some kind of port scan protection on the new firewalls but I'm not sure. No, no, that is exactly what happens. DC on one side can communicate properly, but anything coming BACK through the F5, the traffic gets accepted but its fails to pass it onto the internal network. There may be a configuration that was tied to the MAC/IP tagging for the long gone firewalls, and you may have to rebuild the F5 configuration to resolve this issue. If you have vetted your Firewall rules, I'd look further at the F5 itself. https://support.f5.com/kb/en-us/solutions/public/12000/700/sol12703.html CommieGIR fucked around with this message at 22:49 on Jan 1, 2016 |
# ? Jan 1, 2016 22:41 |
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DigitalMocking posted:I spend a lot of time proving that issue X isn't the network. The server/application/database administrator would shrug off reports of problems with comments like "well, I can reach the service" or "I can see the database structure in Manager" like opening an application in a web browser once must surely reveal issues with misconfigured services or databases that fail under load. In my experience the network is always the first to be blamed because it guarantees at least one person will seriously investigate the problem. "the network has problems" is the sysadmin's way of saying "well everything else is probably broken as well so don't look at me"
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# ? Jan 1, 2016 23:07 |
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fart
Chickenwalker fucked around with this message at 05:28 on Sep 23, 2018 |
# ? Jan 2, 2016 00:16 |
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CommieGIR posted:No, no, that is exactly what happens. DC on one side can communicate properly, but anything coming BACK through the F5, the traffic gets accepted but its fails to pass it onto the internal network. Given we're on 11.5.3 I don't think that applies to us.
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# ? Jan 2, 2016 00:21 |
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abigserve posted:In my experience the network is always the first to be blamed because it guarantees at least one person will seriously investigate the problem. "the network has problems" is the sysadmin's way of saying "well everything else is probably broken as well so don't look at me" I don't disagree, just after 2 decades of hearing "it must be the network" I'm ready to stab a bitch some days.
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# ? Jan 2, 2016 00:28 |
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Goon Matchmaker posted:Given we're on 11.5.3 I don't think that applies to us. Don't be afraid to look into the F5 more anyways.
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# ? Jan 2, 2016 00:45 |
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Chickenwalker posted:Speaking of this, we just got a dedicated 1 Gbps circuit for downloading footage from the field and wouldn't you know we're not actually getting 1 gig in either direction, even hooked directly up to the lovely ONT they provided. I'm a pretty big fan of Juniper's MX platform.
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# ? Jan 2, 2016 00:57 |
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# ? May 25, 2024 14:56 |
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Chickenwalker posted:So, I've been running Ubiquiti's highest-end router offering for a while, and I find out that maybe despite all the marketing hoopla they do that it can't handle more than 450 Mbps without hardware offloading enabled, and hardware offloading is only incompatible with, hmm, let's see: load-balancing/failover WAN links, policy based routing, and oh yeah this little thing called VLANs, just to name a few. Super.
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# ? Jan 2, 2016 02:34 |