Book Reviews
Don't take our word for it! Read these reviews!
- IBM developerWorks review [mostly for developers] (also available as a PDF)
- review on SAGEwire
- review by Amy Rich for Slashdot
- review by Jon Lasser for Web Hosting Magazine
- Usenet post by Bill Bradford on alt.sysadmin.recovery
- review by Jon Lasser for Freshmeat.net
- review by Aleksandar Stancin for Help Net Security
- review by Jack J. Woehr for ERCB.COM
- Amazon has a number of reviews
- Barnes & Noble has a number of reviews
"We're in the midst of a major infrastructure redesign, and we've found The Practice of System and Network Administration to be an invaluable resource. This book just might save you a slashdotting."
--John A. Barbuto, Senior System Administrator, OSDN (OSDN sites include Slashdot.org, the award-winning news discussion site)
"The bottom line on The Practice of System and Network Administration is that nobody else is getting root on my boxes until they've read it."
--Jon Lasser
"Your organization needs this book!"
--Peter Salus, Chief Knowledge Officer, Matrix.Net, "The Bookworm"
"Despite sporting a title that sounds about as interesting as The Longest Checkers Games I Ever Saw, Thomas Limoncelli and Christine Hogan's The Practice of System and Network Administration is an exceptionally valuable book."
--Jack Woehr - ercb.com
About the Book
This book describes the best practices of system and network administration, independent of specific platforms or technologies. It features six key principles of site design and support practices: simplicity, clarity, generality, automation, communication, and basics first. It examines the major areas of responsibility for system administrators within the context of these principles. The book also discusses change management and revision control, server upgrades, maintenance windows, and service conversions. You will find experience-based advice on topics such as:
- The key elements your networks/systems need that will make all other services run better
- Building and running reliable, scalable services, including email, printing, and remote access
- Creating security policies and enforcing them
- Upgrading thousands of hosts without creating havoc
- Planning for and performing flawless scheduled maintenance windows
- Superior helpdesks, customer care, and avoiding the temporary fix trap
- Building data centers that prevent problems
- Designing networks for speed and reliability
- Email scaling and security issues
- Why building a backup system isn't about backups
- Monitoring what you have and predicting what you will need
- How to stay technical and how not to be pushed into management
And there's more! When was the last time you read a book that dealt with:
- Real-world technical management issues, including morale, organization building, coaching, maintaining positive visibility, and communicating with nontechnical management
- Personal skill techniques, including our secrets for getting more done each day, dealing with less technical people, ethical dilemmas, managing your boss, and loving your job
- System administration salary negotiation tips--the first book that includes this topic!
Chapters are divided into The Basics and The Icing. The Basics are those key elements that, when done right, make every other aspect of the job easier. Things like starting all new hosts with the same configuration and picking the right things to automate first. The Icing sections contain all those powerful things that can be done on top of the basics to wow customers and managers. Do the basics first. The icing is a vision for the future that usually only comes with decades of experience.

