I have a very urgent Direct Client requirement for *Linux
Administrator *in *Chicago,
IL. *Please Let Me Know If you have available candidate, please reply with
their word resume, location, rate and contact number.

*Please send me your resume at *



*s...@encore-c.com <satya....@ngtechinc.com>Job Title: Linux Administrator
Location: Chicago, ILDuration: 12 months*

*F2f Interview*

Description
HARD REQUIREMENTS
Solaris 10, 11
RHEL 5 – 7
OEL (Oracle Enterprise Linux) Release 6, 7
Veritas Infoscale (VxVM, VCS, VVR, GC).
HP c7000/Blade infrastructure
Infrastructure – Server Hardware (T-Series, Superclusters T-M series,
HP-c7000, BL460c)

SOFT REQUIREMENTS
UEK (Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel) Release 4
Oracle Solaris Cluster
Shell Scripting, Python, Perl
CI (Converged Infrastructure), HCI (Hyper-Converged Infrastructure)
Automation Tools (HPSA, Ansible)

Tasks to be Performed and Skillset Details
Solaris 10, 11
RHEL 5 – 7
OEL (Oracle Enterprise Linux) Release 6, 7
UEK (Unbreakable Enterprise Kernel) Release 4
Veritas Infoscale (VxVM, VCS, VVR, GC).
Oracle Solaris Cluster ? Shell Scripting, Python, Perl
CI (Converged Infrastructure), HCI (Hyper-Converged Infrastructure)
Automation Tools (HPSA, Ansible)
HP c7000/Blade infrastructure
Infrastructure – Server Hardware (T-Series, Superclusters T-M series,
HP-c7000, BL460c)
Details Account Management
Adding, Removing, User Access & Privileges, AD/LDAP, Owners, Groups,
Timestamps Server Management
Automated Installer (Kickstart, Jumpstart, AI), Tuning and Performance,
Backups, SAN Disk Configuration, Text Editors (VI), Patching, File systems,
process tables, configuration files Security Management
File Permissions, RBAC, Compensating controls, SUDO, Service Level Accounts
Basic UNIX requirements • how and when to use ^c, ^d, and ^z.
how to use pipes and redirects. If ?, ??, 2?, and 2&1 aren’t second nature
to you, you need to make them so.
how to use /dev/null both to make output disappear and to empty files.
how to use of $? (the return code or “exit code”) to determine if the
previous command (usually within a script) completed successfully.
how to use regular expressions with commands such as ls, grep and perl.
the effect of various quotes – how single and double quotes differ and how
` (backticks) can be used to add command output to a line.
how to add and remove accounts (with or without removing the associated
directories).
how to work with permissions, timestamps, owners, and groups -- and how to
determine if additional permissions have been assigned with the setfacl
command. You should also get to know how to work with the security context
of files when SELinux is in use.
how to use essential Unix utilities like grep, awk, sed, and wc.
how to use text editors. In fact, you really should know vi, though if it
takes some time to get used to.
Even if you love desktop editors like Gedit, you will someday find yourself
on a command line with no other option. Besides, vi (along with its
colorful variation, vim) can make a lot of the work that you do go a lot
faster once you know how to use it well. • scripting basics. You need to be
very good at basic scripting – using if, for, and while commands if not
also case statements and functions.
how to work with processes – understanding ps output, knowing the kind of
information you can get from /proc and how to use tools like lsof for
determining what files a process has open.
how to set up a new file system, look at disk space, track down large
files, use fsck, and find files using many different criteria (size,
ownership, permissions, type, etc.).
where to find key directories and configuration files – those in /etc
(e.g., /etc/hosts, the passwd and shadow files) and those in other
locations (e.g., /etc/mail/sendmail.cf, /etc/samba/smb.conf).
how to set up essential services (e.g., naming, printing).
how to install packages using yum and apt-get and also how to install
software from tar.gz files. • how to apply patches, Solaris + RHEL
how to monitor systems using commands such as df and du to look at disk
space, and commands like top and sar to monitor and evaluate performance.
how your systems boot – their dependence on “start scripts” and whether
they use systemd or upstart init services.
how to use basic commands like dump and tar to back up directories or
entire file systems.
how to interact with other systems – logging in using ssh, moving files
with scp and sftp, and using rsync for synchronizing individual files or
entire file systems.
how to view and manipulate timestamps on files, including using the touch
command.
how to configure a network interface; how to use the ifconfig and ip addr
commands; how to set up the /etc/sysconfig/network file; when to use
/etc/hosts and the hostna

Thanks

*Satya Raj*|Encore Consulting Services, Inc.
116 S Arlington Heights Road, Arlington Heights, IL - 60005
s...@encore-c.com <satya....@ngtechinc.com>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "SAP 
or Oracle Financials" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to sap-or-oracle-financials+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to sap-or-oracle-financials@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/sap-or-oracle-financials.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to