Re: Kudos! [was Looking for an experienced Linux system administrator]

2005-02-27 Thread Marc A. Volovic
VK wrote:
As a long-term [~ 9 years] IGLU maillist watcher I'd like to say Kudos to all participants!
This time we see a mature, in-depth and fruitful discussion.
 

Raather ;-).
But most people did come around in the end, did they not.
In any case, what DOES a System Admin cost these days?
I am getting really weird numbers, trying to look at the various sallary 
comparison sites. What would you (and no, I am NOT including the very 
old experienced hands like Geoff and myself ;-) would ask for a system 
admin position?

And no - this is NOT an idle question ;-).
Marc
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Re: Kudos! [was Looking for an experienced Linux system administrator]

2005-02-27 Thread Jonathan Ben Avraham
Hi Marc,
Full-time Sys admins cost from NIS 40 without car/telephone to NIS 80 with 
car/telephone per hour. There is precious little relation between the 
quality of the employee and what you pay. I'd say that the average Linux 
sys admin with three to four years of experience gets NIS 58 per hour plus 
keren hishtalmut, plus a telephone and car including expenses. By 
average I am taking into account public sector and private sector 
employees. The universities pay more than average rates IMHO, but often do 
not pay benefits or keren hishtalmut. Rates for temporary employees are 
also higher.

 - yba
On Sun, 27 Feb 2005, Marc A. Volovic wrote:
VK wrote:
As a long-term [~ 9 years] IGLU maillist watcher I'd like to say Kudos to 
all participants!
This time we see a mature, in-depth and fruitful discussion.

Raather ;-).
But most people did come around in the end, did they not.
In any case, what DOES a System Admin cost these days?
I am getting really weird numbers, trying to look at the various sallary 
comparison sites. What would you (and no, I am NOT including the very old 
experienced hands like Geoff and myself ;-) would ask for a system admin 
position?

And no - this is NOT an idle question ;-).
Marc
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Re: Kudos! [was Looking for an experienced Linux system administrator]

2005-02-27 Thread Marc A. Volovic
Thanks for the answer, Jonathan.
Truth be told, the figures you quote seem horridly low. NIS40? The poor 
samin
is getting (assuming something close to a full time position) sub 
NIS8k/month.
Is this not starvation level?

The average NIS58/hour + socials (which translates to NIS 81 total with 
socials factored in) is very low, also. Ouch. Poor samins.

:-) I beg you to reconsider... Well... I know, I know. I saw worse, 
actually, but not by far.

Marc
Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
Hi Marc,
Full-time Sys admins cost from NIS 40 without car/telephone to NIS 80 
with car/telephone per hour. There is precious little relation between 
the quality of the employee and what you pay. I'd say that the average 
Linux sys admin with three to four years of experience gets NIS 58 per 
hour plus keren hishtalmut, plus a telephone and car including 
expenses. By average I am taking into account public sector and 
private sector employees. The universities pay more than average rates 
IMHO, but often do not pay benefits or keren hishtalmut. Rates for 
temporary employees are also higher.

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Re: Kudos! [was Looking for an experienced Linux system administrator]

2005-02-27 Thread Jonathan Ben Avraham
Hi Marc,
See inlines below.
On Sun, 27 Feb 2005, Marc A. Volovic wrote:
Thanks for the answer, Jonathan.
Truth be told, the figures you quote seem horridly low. NIS40? The poor samin
is getting (assuming something close to a full time position) sub 
NIS8k/month.
Is this not starvation level?
That depends on the capabilities of the individual. If the individual does 
not have enough experience or adequate personality resouces for you to 
send him to customer sites without supervision, which is how most 
sys-admins are for the first 18 months, then they are not worth much, if 
anything. There are plenty of sys admins like this around. They gravitate 
towards public sector employment such as universities and schools where 
there is very little supervision of the their productivity.

The average NIS58/hour + socials (which translates to NIS 81 total with 
socials factored in) is very low, also. Ouch. Poor samins.

:-) I beg you to reconsider... Well... I know, I know. I saw worse, actually, 
but not by far.
Look at the Horaat Shaa of the Chaskal. The prices that they are 
paying for Linux and other non-MSCE sys-admins is between NIS 92 and NIS 
190. If that's what the contractor is getting, then the employee is 
getting a bruto of between NIS 46 and NIS 95 at most, including benefits 
but not car. That's how the majority of the market is working.

I admit that the majority of the readers of this list would probably 
command much higher pay, but they are not representative of the people out 
there actually doing sys admin.

  - yba

Marc
Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
Hi Marc,
Full-time Sys admins cost from NIS 40 without car/telephone to NIS 80 with 
car/telephone per hour. There is precious little relation between the 
quality of the employee and what you pay. I'd say that the average Linux 
sys admin with three to four years of experience gets NIS 58 per hour plus 
keren hishtalmut, plus a telephone and car including expenses. By average 
I am taking into account public sector and private sector employees. The 
universities pay more than average rates IMHO, but often do not pay 
benefits or keren hishtalmut. Rates for temporary employees are also 
higher.


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Re: Kudos! [was Looking for an experienced Linux system administrator]

2005-02-27 Thread Jonathan Ben Avraham
Hi Geoffrey,
For NIS per month multiply by 185 to get the full-time monthly bruto rate.
Full-time means about 45 hours per week. The rates I quoted do not include 
taxes. They assume that the employer is paying 7.5%/2.5% keren hishtalmut, 
16 days of vacation per year on top of normal holidays, minimum havraa, 
and 5%/8.33% pensia/pitsuim.
Regards,

  - yba
On Sun, 27 Feb 2005, Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
On Sun, Feb 27, 2005 at 11:30:06AM +0200, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
Hi Marc,
Full-time Sys admins cost from NIS 40 without car/telephone to NIS 80 with
car/telephone per hour. There is precious little relation between the
quality of the employee and what you pay. I'd say that the average Linux
sys admin with three to four years of experience gets NIS 58 per hour plus
keren hishtalmut, plus a telephone and car including expenses. By
Could you please restate that in NIS per month. Do not include taxes paid
by the employer, but do list benefits that you expect to get such as:
keren hishtalmut, telephone, car, vacation, yom kef, additional
health insurance, lunch, snacks, etc.
Also if you would be so kind, as to tell us how many hours a week you
expect to work, I would appreciate it greately. That seems to vary more
than anything else.
Geoff.


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kopete icq and hebrew

2005-02-27 Thread Kfir Lavi
Hi,
every person that write to me in hebrew, i see the writing in squers.
The properties of the person show that the code is automaticly determind.
Well this does not work.
Does someone here solve this problem?
Using MSN with kopete works fine in hebrew.

kfir


pgpEIZ6wch1yR.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: kopete icq and hebrew

2005-02-27 Thread Herouth Maoz
Quoting Kfir Lavi [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Hi,
 every person that write to me in hebrew, i see the writing in squers.
 The properties of the person show that the code is automaticly determind.
 Well this does not work.
 Does someone here solve this problem?
 Using MSN with kopete works fine in hebrew.

I haven't succeeded in making kopete handle ICQ in Hebrew in windows-1255, which
is what the windows users are using. In fact, it complains about an XML error in
the case I tried.

They have to work in utf-8 on their side, or you have to switch back to licq.
Yuck.

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[HAIFUX LECTURE]Writing a STAM disk-based file-system for the Linux-2.4 kernel, by guy keren

2005-02-27 Thread Orna Agmon
Next Monday (28/2/2005), 18:30, the Haifa Linux Club will once
again meet to hear guy keren talk about:

Writing a STAM disk-based file-system
for the Linux-2.4 kernel
Sequel to the successful thriller -
 The VFS of the Linux-2.4 kernel -a play in 5 acts

Abstract

Writing a file-system for Linux-2.4 involves implementing several layers
of functions, and lots of poking into exisiting file-system code. We shall
uncover a simplistic schema for STAMFS - a STAM (no good translation to
english) file-system that is overly under-optimized, but allows us to
concentrate on the interfaces with the kernel, rather then on how to
implement a super-duper file-system. Remember - when implementing a
file-system, the page-cache is your best (and possibly only) friend...

Note: gain some understanding of the VFS sub-system before going any
further - coming to the previous (VFS) lecture is one way to do that...

Lecture Slides were updated today, and are available from
http://haifux.org/lectures/120/
Abstract and slides of the previous lecture are available from
http://haifux.org/lectures/119/

We meet in the Technion, Taub 3. See http://www.haifux.org/where.html
for arrival details.

Attendance is free, and you are all invited!

Future lectures include:

120-SiL C without a spoon: Dynamic allocation and good programming
in general
Orna Agmon  7/03/2005

121 Intro to *BSD: A look at other open source operating systems.
Ido Barnea  14/3/2005

122 I.D.S and snort Orr Dunkelman   28/03/2005

123 Xen Muli ben-Yehuda 11/04/2005

Have a subject you want to talk about? Or a subject you'd like to hear
someone else talk about? email us.

Orna.
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ICQ: 348759096



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CPU idle / iowait

2005-02-27 Thread Michael Ben-Nes
Hi All
Im running a postgres server on IBM machine with 2 Xeon 3G Cpu, 3 GB Mem 
and Raid.

I decide to upgrade my server from dual AMD MP 2400, 2 GB mem and raid 
to this machine because lately my queries became slower.
To my surprise the current server is even slower.

After banging my head against the wall for a day or two i noticed that 
when the CPU is under heavy load the actual work is small ( divided by 
50% between idle and wait )

The OS is Centos Linux 2.4.21 SMP
Here is a small cut from dstat. it shows the idle and iowait ( sum of 99 
) and all the other are 1% :(

total-cpu-usage
usr sys idl wai hiq siq|
 1   1  93   5   0   0|
 1   0  49  50   0   0|
 1   0  50  49   0   0|
 0   0  50  50   0   0|
 1   0  50  49   0   0|
Any idea what could be the problem ?
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Re: CPU idle / iowait

2005-02-27 Thread Kfir Lavi
First, if you going to dump the AMD... I'm catching ;)

I'm going to raise some questions in order to trigger you for the fault.
Are you sure that its not a hard disk bound queries?
Mybe the raid is slower then the last. (faulty driver??)

Is the os the same or you swiched it?
If you swiched it, i guess you have a problem with the kernel, mybe a module 
or something. Try to google for xeon slowing and the kernel.

Did you swich filesystem?

kfir

On Sunday 27 February 2005 18:10, Michael Ben-Nes wrote:
 Hi All

 Im running a postgres server on IBM machine with 2 Xeon 3G Cpu, 3 GB Mem
 and Raid.

 I decide to upgrade my server from dual AMD MP 2400, 2 GB mem and raid
 to this machine because lately my queries became slower.
 To my surprise the current server is even slower.

 After banging my head against the wall for a day or two i noticed that
 when the CPU is under heavy load the actual work is small ( divided by
 50% between idle and wait )

 The OS is Centos Linux 2.4.21 SMP

 Here is a small cut from dstat. it shows the idle and iowait ( sum of 99
 ) and all the other are 1% :(

 total-cpu-usage
 usr sys idl wai hiq siq|
   1   1  93   5   0   0|
   1   0  49  50   0   0|
   1   0  50  49   0   0|
   0   0  50  50   0   0|
   1   0  50  49   0   0|

 Any idea what could be the problem ?


pgp8Y1yYDv9OK.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: kopete icq and Hebrew

2005-02-27 Thread Diego Iastrubni
Wait for kopete in KDE 3.4, all bugs regarding encodings are almost done.

The problem is the Oscar implementation in kopete 3.3. It's just a piece of 
crap. In KDE 3.4 it's been rewritten, and you can send/receive messages to 
ICQ's application, GAIM, but not to Trillian. I am not familiar with the 
internals of the problem, but this is what I managed to understand.

I can recommend using SIM. It works on my Debian quite good, even tough I 
heard bad things of it. 


 , 27  2005, 16:28,Herouth Maoz:
 Quoting Kfir Lavi [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
  Hi,
  every person that write to me in hebrew, i see the writing in squers.
  The properties of the person show that the code is automaticly determind.
  Well this does not work.
  Does someone here solve this problem?
  Using MSN with kopete works fine in hebrew.

 I haven't succeeded in making kopete handle ICQ in Hebrew in windows-1255,
 which is what the windows users are using. In fact, it complains about an
 XML error in the case I tried.

 They have to work in utf-8 on their side, or you have to switch back to
 licq. Yuck.

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See http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html

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See http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html

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Re: Kudos! [was Looking for an experienced Linux system administrator]

2005-02-27 Thread Adam Morrison
On Sun, Feb 27, 2005 at 12:05:21PM +0200, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
 The average NIS58/hour + socials (which translates to NIS 81 total with 
 socials factored in) is very low, also. Ouch. Poor samins.
 
 :-) I beg you to reconsider... Well... I know, I know. I saw worse, 
 actually, but not by far.
 
 Look at the Horaat Shaa of the Chaskal. The prices that they are 
 paying for Linux and other non-MSCE sys-admins is between NIS 92 and NIS 
 190. If that's what the contractor is getting, then the employee is 
 getting a bruto of between NIS 46 and NIS 95 at most, including benefits 
 but not car. That's how the majority of the market is working.

There's a different way to look at this; according to these numbers, the
system administration service is worth 17,020 to 35,520 NIS/month to the
employer (taking your 185 hour work month).  So when there is a direct
employee on the receiving end --- not a contractor --- they can expect
to receive anywhere between 13,500 and 28,000 NIS, gross, per month.
(This is an approximation done by taking 25% employer overhead, instead
of just the 20.33% of social benefits.)

 I admit that the majority of the readers of this list would probably 
 command much higher pay, but they are not representative of the people out 
 there actually doing sys admin.

But it would seem that anyone here who is doing system administration
work for a contractor and is out of their useless stage should do some
thinking and see if they can find an organization that is regularly in
need of 185 hours/month of system administration.



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Re: Kudos! [was Looking for an experienced Linux system administrator]

2005-02-27 Thread Jonathan Ben Avraham
Hi Adam,
See inlines below.
On Sun, 27 Feb 2005, Adam Morrison wrote:
On Sun, Feb 27, 2005 at 12:05:21PM +0200, Jonathan Ben Avraham wrote:
The average NIS58/hour + socials (which translates to NIS 81 total with
socials factored in) is very low, also. Ouch. Poor samins.
:-) I beg you to reconsider... Well... I know, I know. I saw worse,
actually, but not by far.
Look at the Horaat Shaa of the Chaskal. The prices that they are
paying for Linux and other non-MSCE sys-admins is between NIS 92 and NIS
190. If that's what the contractor is getting, then the employee is
getting a bruto of between NIS 46 and NIS 95 at most, including benefits
but not car. That's how the majority of the market is working.
There's a different way to look at this; according to these numbers, the
system administration service is worth 17,020 to 35,520 NIS/month to the
employer (taking your 185 hour work month).  So when there is a direct
employee on the receiving end --- not a contractor --- they can expect
to receive anywhere between 13,500 and 28,000 NIS, gross, per month.
(This is an approximation done by taking 25% employer overhead, instead
of just the 20.33% of social benefits.)
I believe that the above is not a a correct economic analysis for the 
following reasons:

1. The prices that contractors are willing to accept (as reflected in 
the michraz) are based on the prevailing cost of the employees, not the 
opposite.

2. The contractor provides an employment service to the business. That 
is, the contractor screens the employees and matches the employee's skills 
to the requirements of the project or business. This service is worth 
money.

3. Businesses are willing to pay a premium to a contractor over what they 
are willing to pay for an individual because the contractor provides them 
with alternative personnel and other flexibility if an employee cannot do 
the job for any reason.

4. Only a contracting company completely frees the business purchasing the 
services from the obligations of the employer-employee relationship as 
defined by Israeli law. Neither non-incorporated or even incorporated 
individuals have this advantage even though according to the dry leter of 
the law you might think they would.

The above points are often not understood by the engineers who work 
through contractors at places such as Motorola or IAI for example. This 
often results in the mistaken impression that the contractor is only a 
pimp ripping off the employee, which *sometimes* is the case but usually 
is not.


I admit that the majority of the readers of this list would probably
command much higher pay, but they are not representative of the people out
there actually doing sys admin.
But it would seem that anyone here who is doing system administration
work for a contractor and is out of their useless stage should do some
thinking and see if they can find an organization that is regularly in
need of 185 hours/month of system administration.
These organizations are rare. Another option for higher qualified 
sys-admins is to find an organization that has several low-level 
sys-admins and needs one guru level admin to back them up.

I think that the more experienced members of this list will vouch for me 
when I say that finding permanent, full-time, Linux sys-admin work at the 
NIS 16-20K (bruto) range is possible but not easy in the current market.
Regards,

 - yba

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Looking for Progress DBA

2005-02-27 Thread Ez-Aton




Hi all.
In the company I'm working at, we're looking for a short notice
freelancer / outsourcer Progress DBA, prefferably, experianced with
HP-UX.
If you are, or you know anyone who is an experianced Progress DBA,
with experiance (proven) working on HP-UX, troubleshooting Progress,
restoring DBs, building any complicated scenarios, please contact me
ASAP.
Thanks!
Etzion





Inline functions make use of debugger impossible

2005-02-27 Thread Shachar Shemesh
Hi all,
I'm trying to debug a C++ program I'm writing using ddd. Up until a few 
days ago everything was fine. I compiled with -g -Wall (and no -O), and 
everything worked. Today it stopped working.

It seems the compiler insists on expanding all inline functions into the 
function context. As a result, any function that uses auto_ptrs and 
std:string becomes impossible to debug. You spend most of your time 
jumping around inline functions, and don't get to see the code you wrote.

It's not even as if you can step out of the function. Since these are 
inline, as far as the debugger is concerned, you are inside your own 
function's stack frame. bt does not list the inlines.

I have tried -fno-inline and -fno-default-inline, and they do not 
affect this behavior. This is not so surprising, as inlining is supposed 
to be off when there is no -O, and so one shouldn't be surprised when 
they don't make a difference.

I'm on Debian unstable, and so I can't rule out the possibility that a 
compiler upgrade has taken place recently, but this should still not happen.

gcc version is 3.3.5. Debian revision is 3.3.5-8.
Shachar
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