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Linux Administration Best Practices

You're reading from   Linux Administration Best Practices Practical solutions to approaching the design and management of Linux systems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800568792
Length 404 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Scott Alan Miller Scott Alan Miller
Author Profile Icon Scott Alan Miller
Scott Alan Miller
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Understanding the Role of Linux System Administrator
2. Chapter 1: What Is the Role of a System Administrator? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Choosing Your Distribution and Release Model 4. Section 2: Best Practices for Linux Technologies
5. Chapter 3: System Storage Best Practices 6. Chapter 4: Designing System Deployment Architectures 7. Chapter 5: Patch Management Strategies 8. Chapter 6: Databases 9. Section 3: Approaches to Effective System Administration
10. Chapter 7: Documentation, Monitoring, and Logging Techniques 11. Chapter 8: Improving Administration Maturation with Automation through Scripting and DevOps 12. Chapter 9: Backup and Disaster Recovery Approaches 13. Chapter 10: User and Access Management Strategies 14. Chapter 11: Troubleshooting 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

The high cost of disaster avoidance

In this chapter we are going to talk extensively about what to do after there has been a disaster. Throughout this book we consider ways to avoid disaster. Something that is easy to overlook is that there is a cost to protecting our workloads against failures and that we have to weigh that against the cost of the failure itself combined with the likeliness that that disaster will even happen.

Too often we are told, or it is implied that disasters are to be avoided at all costs. This is crazy and should never be the case. Disaster avoidance has a cost, and that cost can be quite high. The disaster itself will have a cost and while that cost might be quite high, it is not always.

The risk that we take is that the cost of avoiding a disaster is sometimes greater than the cost of the disaster itself. There was a time when it was common for companies to spend tens of thousands of dollars on fault tolerant solutions to protect workloads whose common...

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