I must agree with alan, with respect to edward on his point, if you think more sql specifics are needed in the lpi objectives, then contact torsten etc and make a case for it.
Personally, i would suggest that while your own job requires those items, a job-task-analysis would have to show the need for more sql-related items, but i don't see that need from my fairly wide prespective. If anything, that knowledge would likely be better suited to exams that are specific either to sql or the tools that use it. Ross Sent via BlackBerry by AT&T -----Original Message----- From: Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Wed, 07 Nov 2007 16:31:55 To:"This is the lpi-examdev mailing list." <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [lpi-examdev] LPIC1 obj. update - SQL On Wed, 2007-11-07 at 09:11 -0500, Edward L. Haletky wrote: > Hello, > > The testing should say 'This person is qualified to administer systems.' > To me that includes understanding SQL as while the applications > mentioned are not to be tested, the underlying commands necessary to > install the applications requires issuing SQL statements. This statement is just ridiculous. The ONLY thing we ever test is the ability to install and configure something correctly. So what you have said is that we don't test installing e.g. nagios but we will test this one thing about installing nagios - a related SQL statement. So, what is being tested? Nagios, or SQL? It's one or the other, it cannot be both, as that violates testing methodology > Of course the > administrator can just parrot the commands, but I would rather they know > what they are doing just in case there are issues. As for what to test, > use the SQL99 Standard and only on CREATE, SELECT, ALTER, DROP, and > DELETE commands. Definitely limit it to the biggees that will be used. I > can not tell you how many times as an administrator I am asked to tie in > administrative tools into a database so someone can write a pretty > report for someone else or an application install requires me to issue > these commands. As an example, the local highschool system administrator > is now in need of learning SQL. But how important is it for the *general* user, the mythical minimally-qualified person? I cannot tell you how many times I have to resolve dependency blockers to get something to install at all and I have to use emerge for this - it's vital to my job. But, it's not in the LPIC-1 exam as it does not represent the vital stuff that an LPIC-1 qualified person *must* know. alan > > Best regards, > Edward Haletky > > Alan McKinnon wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I do agree with your observation, but not with your conclusion. > > > > Yes, SQL knowledge is very handy. However, an LPI cert tests the > > essential knowledge at a specific level and certifies that the person > > holding the certificate at least has a clue. > > > > By no stretch of the imagination can we consider SQL knowledge to be an > > essential skill for a Linux admin, especially as not one of the examples > > you mention are relevant or tested at LPIC-1 level. It seems very silly > > to me to not test Nagios on the exam but somehow require a person to > > know how Nagios talks to a database. > > > > For that matter, which SQL dialect would the candidate be tested on? > > > > alan > > > > > > On Wed, 2007-11-07 at 07:47 -0500, Edward L. Haletky wrote: > > > >> Hello, > >> > >> I would expect an Administrator to have basic SQL knowledge at the very > >> least. Almost all tools these days plugin to an SQL server for some > >> reason. Look at an Intrusion Detection System (Snort/Barnyard/BASE > >> (Acid)), System Monitoring Package (Nagios), Hardware Monitoring via > >> Vendor code, etc. The list is pretty long so SQL queries are becoming > >> more useful in daily Administrative jobs. Granted, they do not need to > >> be DB admins but knowledge of the syntax or where to get the syntax is > >> very important. > >> > >> Best regards, > >> Edward Haletky > >> AstroArch Consulting, Inc. > >> > >> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >> > >>> Hi! > >>> > >>> So, I was thinking a lot about what I heard at the TAC meeting about the > >>> update of the LPIC-1 objectives. And I am really not sure if 106.3 SQL > >>> Data Management is really fitting. I forgot the exact job title, but I > >>> wouldn't expect a "Professional" Linux User / power user / junior level > >>> administrator to have SQL knowledge. I don't see for which tasks in that > >>> level it would be needed. My opinion. > >>> > >>> This is my first email here, so sorry if I didn't keep any specific > >>> format that I was suppose to use, I couldn't find any information about > >>> that. > >>> > >>> Amy > >>> _______________________________________________ > >>> lpi-examdev mailing list > >>> [email protected] > >>> http://list.lpi.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev > >>> > >>> > >>> > >> > > > > _______________________________________________ > > lpi-examdev mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://list.lpi.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev > > > > > > _______________________________________________ lpi-examdev mailing list [email protected] http://list.lpi.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev
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