Sysadmin Todo List

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General Info

This is an unordered set of tasks. Detailed information on any of the tasks typically goes in related topics' pages, although usually not until the task has been filed under Completed.

Important

  • Improve documentation of mail software
  • Nobody is currently reading the mail that is send to "root". Einstein had 3000+ unread messages. I deleted almost all. There are some useful messages that are send to root with diagnostics in them, we should find a solution for this. Temporarily, both Matt and Steve have email clients set up to access root's account. The largest chunk of the e-mails concern updating ClamAV. Maybe we should just do that? Doing this caused some major mail problems. It's a punishment for 1) Typing a command in the wrong terminal, 2) Not thoroughly understanding the configuration and importance of a component before updating it, and 3) Not restarting the program after updating it
  • Resize partitions on symanzik, bohr, tomato, roentgen, and other machines as necessary so that root has at least a gig of unused space.
  • Figure out exactly what our backups are doing, and see if we can implement some sort of NFS user access. NPG_backup_on_Lentil.
  • Learn how to use cacti on okra. Seems like a nice tool, mostly set up for us already. Find out why lentil and okra (and tomato?) aren't being read by cacti. Could be related to the warnings that repeat in okra:/var/www/cacti/log/cacti.log. Not related to the warnings; those are for other machines that are otherwise being monitored
  • Learn how to set up evolution fully so we can support users. Need LDAP address book. What schema does our LDAP setup suport? Evolution uses "evolutionPerson", apparently it doesn't work without using that schema for describing people. Schemas can be combined: [1]"
  • Need to get onto the "backups" shared folder, as well as be added as members to the lists. "backups" wasn't even a mailing list, according to the Mailman interface. Added Steve and Matt to the CC list for /etc/cron.daily/rsync_backup's mail command. If the message gets sent to us, then we'll know something's wrong with the list. If we don't get it, then the problem is probably in the script. E-mails were received, so there's something up with the mailing list.

Ongoing

  • Maintain the Documentation of all systems!
    • Main function
    • Hardware
    • OS
    • Network
  • Clean up 202
    • Figure out what's worth keeping
    • Figure out what doesn't belong here
  • Take a look at spamassassin - Improve Performance of this if possible.
  • Updated SpamAssassin and ran sa-update to get new rules. The SA documentation seems to indicate that having procmail send mail is the typical scenario. However, procmail isn't mentioned in the appropriate Postfix configuration file[2]. procmail and postfix are installed, though. Do we have a special mail setup? It seems like postfix is what does it
  • Test unknown equipment:
    • UPS
  • Printer in 323 is not hooked up to a dead network port. Actually managed to ping it. One person reportedly got it to print, nobody else has, and that user has been unable ever since. Is this printer dead? We need to find out.
  • Look into making a centralized interface to monitor/maintain all the machines at once. Along the same lines: Continue homogenizing the configurations of the machines.
  • Figure out why jalapeno doesn't have 3dm sofware running. If we find that there's no good reason, maybe we should install it?
  • Certain settings are the similar or identical for all machines. It would be beneficial to write a program to do remote configuration. This would also simplify the process of adding/upgrading machines.
  • Update Tomato to RHEL5 and check all services einstein currently provides. Then switch einstein <-> tomato, and then upgrade what was originally einstein. Look into making an einstein, tomato failsafe setup. A good preliminary step would be to find all of the custom scripts on einstein. If they don't have "npg" in their filenames already, it should be added if possible, so that they can all be easily located. Maybe something other than just "npg", because there seems to be a lot of cruft with that label.
  • Matt's learning a bit of Perl so we can figure out exactly how the backup works, as well as create more programs in the future, specifically thinking of monitoring. Look into the CPAN modules under Net::, etc. I just found out that it's actually very easy to use ssh to log onto a machine and execute a command rather than a login shell: ssh who@a.b.c cmd. For example, I made a bash function called "whoson" that tells me who's on the machine that I pass to it:whoson roentgen will prompt me for my password, then log on, run w, and display the output.

Waiting

  • Schedule a date for password change for karpiusp. Waiting on reply
  • Find out why Steve isn't getting paid what he's supposed to be getting paid. May be getting fixed - waiting on

paycheck

  • Printer queue for Copier: Konica Minolta Bizhub 750. IP=pita.unh.edu Seems like we need info from the Konica guy to get it set up on Red Hat and OS X. The installation documentation for the driver doesn't mention things like the passcode, because those are machine-specific. Katie says that if he doesn't come on Monday, she'll make an inquiry. Mac OS X now working, IT guy should be here week of June 26th Did he ever come?
  • Figure out what network devices on tomato are doing what Guess we're waiting for Aaron on this one. He needs to do something soon, because while I'm sure most of these extra devices aren't important to NPG, Xemed and the Paulis probably use them somehow, and we need to know what the deal is before installing RHEL5.
  • Eventually one day come up with a plan to deal with pauli2's kernel issue Waiting on heisenberg to let us know about the setup of these machines before reinstalling.


Completed

  • The snmpd deamon on einstein was very verbose, generating 600 messages per hour, all access from Okra. I changed the default options in /etc/sysconfig/snmpd.options from # OPTIONS="-Lsd -Lf /dev/null -p /var/un/snmpd.pid -a" to OPTIONS="-LS 0-4 d -Lf /dev/null -p /var/run/snmpd.pid -a". Now snmpd is QUIET! We could consider a slight more verbose? (This was discovered with splunk.)
  • SPLUNK is now set up on Jalapeno. It is combing the logs of einstein and roentgen and its own logs. See Splunk.
  • Checked if the backups are actually happening and working - they are.
  • Renewed XML books for Amrita. They're due at the end of the month.
  • Fixed the amandabackup.sh script for consolidating amanda-style backups.
  • Investigate the change in ennui's host key Almost certainly caused by one of the updates. Just remembered that I was using ennui for a few minutes and I saw the "updates ready!" icon in the corner and habitually clicked it. Darn ubuntu habits. Doesn't explain WHY it changed, only how. It probably wasn't an individual update, but almost certainly was the transition from Fedora 5 to 7. ennui isn't a very popular machine to SSH into, so the change probably just went unnoticed for the two-or-so weeks since the upgrade. I had early thought that it couldn't have been the OS change, since it had been awhile since the change, but upon further thought, it makes perfect sense.
  • Look into getting computers to pull scheduled updates from rhn when they check in. See updates through RHN
  • Look into monitoring RAID, disk usage, etc. SMARTD, etc.

Previous Months Completed

June 2007