Tales from the Interview: A Little of Everything_MySQL
" Chinese buffet2 ". Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 viaWikimedia Commons.
Assembler. C. C++. C#. PHP. Javascript. Bash. Perl. Ruby. Java. These were just some of the technologies featured on the resume of a candidate Christian recently interviewed for a senior Linux sysadmin position. The impressive list of programming languages (and related data-interchange acronyms like XSLT and JSON) made the candidate, let's call him Rob, seem more qualified for a developer position, but he went on to list common web server databases like MySQL and Postgres (plus a couple flavours of NoSQL), and, finally, the qualifications Christian was actually interested in: Tomcat, JBOSS, the Hotspot JVM, and every major Linux distro. While the resume reeked of keyword-baiting, Christian didn't want to risk missing out on an excellent sysadmin who just happened to spend a lot of time hacking, and brought Rob in.Christian kicked off the interview by describing their infrastructure. Working for a major enterprise, his division was responsible for fifteen hundred Java application servers, clustered into groups of three or four. He explained to Rob how they managed the large number of identical deployments using Puppet, with SVN to track changes to their enormous catalog of scripts. He got through most of their rollout and monitoring processes before Rob cut in with a question.
"You mentioned Subversion earlier. You developed this in-house?"
Christian stared at Rob for a while, trying to understand the question in the context of the seasoned developer's resume on the table in front of him. He realized Rob was getting a little uncomfortable, still waiting for his answer.
"We, um... No. No, Subversion is an open-source version control system. It's, well, quite popular. You... hadn't heard of it?"
"Not at all," Rob replied. "Version control, you said?"
"Yes. Sometimes also called configuration management software. Perhaps you have more experience with git, or mercurial?" Rob shook his head. Christian tried moving in the other direction. "CVS?" Another shake. "Er... Visual SourceSafe?"
"No, I'm afraid not. Version control sounds very interesting, though. I look forward to using one!"
The interview went careening downhill from there. Christian turned to some questions about Linux, and Rob's sysadmin training turned out to come mostly from Googling how-tos. Questions about processes and threads, memory management, and—most importantly—the JVM, flew over his head. Nearing his wit's end, and desperate to salvage the interview, Christian asked Rob to describe one of the web applications he claimed to have built, hoping to discover an unusual insight or something, anything, that would account for the gap between the resume and the human.
"I once took an order-management application and ported the whole thing from MySQL to PostgreSQL."
Interest piqued, Christian leaned forward. Could this be Rob's redeeming point? Maybe this was where he could offer value to his team.
"That's a pretty major change," Christian said. "What prompted you to make it, and how did you carry it out?"
"Well," Rob opened his hands, as though the answer were obvious. "MySQL didn't work anymore."
"You mean... what, it didn't scale?"
"No, I mean the service wouldn't start anymore."
"The... mysqld?"
"Yeah, somehow it broke and wouldn't start anymore. I tried init.d and rebooting, but it didn't help. So, after I uninstalled MySQL and installed Postgres instead, it worked."
Christian pressed for more details. "Okay... but changing the DBMS must have had a big impact on the application, right? MySQL and Postgres are very different, after all..."
"No," Rob said, "I mean, come on, they're both SQL. It wasn't that big of a change."
"Well... how did you plan the migration at least? This was an order-management system, right? So you'd have to do it in a way that preserved order history."
"Migration? We didn't do that," Rob said. Now it was his turn to fix Christian with an incredulous gaze. "I told you, MySQL wasn't working , so I uninstalled it. The data was gone, obviously. We entered it again from scratch."
This raised more questions than it answered—no backups? What about transferring the MySQL DB to another machine? Did he at least post the log file on StackOverflow with a terse "why doesn't this work?"—but by this point, Christian was desperate to get back to real life. He complimented Rob on his extensive experience and told him they'd let him know if he got the job. On the way back to his desk, Christian tore Rob's resume into pieces, one for each technology he'd pretended to understand.

热AI工具

Undresser.AI Undress
人工智能驱动的应用程序,用于创建逼真的裸体照片

AI Clothes Remover
用于从照片中去除衣服的在线人工智能工具。

Undress AI Tool
免费脱衣服图片

Clothoff.io
AI脱衣机

AI Hentai Generator
免费生成ai无尽的。

热门文章

热工具

记事本++7.3.1
好用且免费的代码编辑器

SublimeText3汉化版
中文版,非常好用

禅工作室 13.0.1
功能强大的PHP集成开发环境

Dreamweaver CS6
视觉化网页开发工具

SublimeText3 Mac版
神级代码编辑软件(SublimeText3)

本文探讨了Docker中的优化MySQL内存使用量。 它讨论了监视技术(Docker统计,性能架构,外部工具)和配置策略。 其中包括Docker内存限制,交换和cgroups

本文介绍了MySQL的“无法打开共享库”错误。 该问题源于MySQL无法找到必要的共享库(.SO/.DLL文件)。解决方案涉及通过系统软件包M验证库安装

本文讨论了使用MySQL的Alter Table语句修改表,包括添加/删除列,重命名表/列以及更改列数据类型。

本文比较使用/不使用PhpMyAdmin的Podman容器直接在Linux上安装MySQL。 它详细介绍了每种方法的安装步骤,强调了Podman在孤立,可移植性和可重复性方面的优势,还

本文提供了SQLite的全面概述,SQLite是一个独立的,无服务器的关系数据库。 它详细介绍了SQLite的优势(简单,可移植性,易用性)和缺点(并发限制,可伸缩性挑战)。 c

本指南展示了使用自制在MacOS上安装和管理多个MySQL版本。 它强调使用自制装置隔离安装,以防止冲突。 本文详细详细介绍了安装,起始/停止服务和最佳PRA

文章讨论了为MySQL配置SSL/TLS加密,包括证书生成和验证。主要问题是使用自签名证书的安全含义。[角色计数:159]

文章讨论了流行的MySQL GUI工具,例如MySQL Workbench和PhpMyAdmin,比较了它们对初学者和高级用户的功能和适合性。[159个字符]
