Good day fellow Server enthusiasts!
I am hereby announcing my second candidacy for the Server Working Group.
For those that didn't receive (or don't recall) the first self-intro I did last April, here's a little background. I am a Systems Engineer which, translated, means I make heterogeneous - and sometimes "incompatible" - systems work together. I have been in IT since I was a child, and my service in the United States Navy gave me the training and experience I needed to make a pretty good career out of it. I've returned to University to finally get a degree - I don't currently have one and have reached the highest position I can without it.
I have been maintaining servers of one form or fashion since 1993. My first systems were HPUX and Sun Solaris 2.0. I set up my first Red Hat server in 1998 to serve as the DNS, web, ftp and file server for the Commander, US Navy Central Command. While at that station, I was appointed the Information Systems Security Officer, and was eventually recognized as having the most secure network in Central Command in 2000.
I have maintained RHEL, CentOS, Fedora, Ubuntu, Debian, Solaris, BSD and Windows servers in one flavor or another since 2003, and have been slowly transitioning my current systems to a virtualized infrastructure built on CentOS 7 and Openstack Juno. As part of that transition, I have moved our file server from Windows to a Fedora 21 server with Samba, pulling the data from a storage server via iSCSI. I've also deployed a F21 server to fill the role as a local repository (with most of the aforementioned operating systems hosted), and another server as our first central identification and authorization using FreeIPA. I have other instances in production serving double duty as the DNS server (integrated with the FreeIPA server) and eJabberd for a local network IM service.
On a separate network, I am running a mixed CentOS, Fedora and Windows Active Directory environment for a development team. Within this closed network, I run DNS, Apache, Redmine (formerly trac), eJabberd (formerly Openfire), git (formerly svn), and multiple CentOS machines doing nothing but virtual hosting for test instances built on KVM/QEMU. The Windows portion of the network serves the sole duty of authentication and identification, but I am using the Windows Services for Uniz to provide some interoperability for that function.I am advocating moving away from Windows based development environments to Fedora, so I can eventually call my network a pure Linux network.
In regards to the Fedora community as a whole, I am a member of the QA team, and dedicate most of my testing time to the Server and KDE products (yes, I know KDE isn't a product....yet). I talk up Fedora and it's abilities at any given opportunity, and have convinced more than a few folks to switch to Fedora from Ubuntu. I like what the Server product has become, and want to see it supplant Ubuntu as the "reference" server for multiple projects (namely Openstack, among many). I do what I can in my limited role to make this happen.
In short, I am a maintainer of servers, and use them in my daily duties at my day job; I am an end-user of the product. My weakness in the Fedora community, however, is that I am not a developer. It's not what I do, I don't want to do it. I make the systems available for the developers to do their job. To that end, I am very good at what I do.
I feel that I would bring insight and ideas to the WG as an end user of the product - a voice that needs to be heard by any development project. It wouldn't do very good to build a product that isn't wanted, or worse, even needed.
Regards, Dan
On Wed, 2014-11-26 at 20:13 -0600, Dan Mossor wrote:
Good day fellow Server enthusiasts!
I am hereby announcing my second candidacy for the Server Working Group.
For those that didn't receive (or don't recall) the first self-intro I did last April, here's a little background. I am a Systems Engineer which, translated, means I make heterogeneous - and sometimes "incompatible" - systems work together. I have been in IT since I was a child, and my service in the United States Navy gave me the training and experience I needed to make a pretty good career out of it. I've returned to University to finally get a degree - I don't currently have one and have reached the highest position I can without it.
I have been maintaining servers of one form or fashion since 1993. My first systems were HPUX and Sun Solaris 2.0. I set up my first Red Hat server in 1998 to serve as the DNS, web, ftp and file server for the Commander, US Navy Central Command. While at that station, I was appointed the Information Systems Security Officer, and was eventually recognized as having the most secure network in Central Command in 2000.
I have maintained RHEL, CentOS, Fedora, Ubuntu, Debian, Solaris, BSD and Windows servers in one flavor or another since 2003, and have been slowly transitioning my current systems to a virtualized infrastructure built on CentOS 7 and Openstack Juno. As part of that transition, I have moved our file server from Windows to a Fedora 21 server with Samba, pulling the data from a storage server via iSCSI. I've also deployed a F21 server to fill the role as a local repository (with most of the aforementioned operating systems hosted), and another server as our first central identification and authorization using FreeIPA. I have other instances in production serving double duty as the DNS server (integrated with the FreeIPA server) and eJabberd for a local network IM service.
On a separate network, I am running a mixed CentOS, Fedora and Windows Active Directory environment for a development team. Within this closed network, I run DNS, Apache, Redmine (formerly trac), eJabberd (formerly Openfire), git (formerly svn), and multiple CentOS machines doing nothing but virtual hosting for test instances built on KVM/QEMU. The Windows portion of the network serves the sole duty of authentication and identification, but I am using the Windows Services for Uniz to provide some interoperability for that function.I am advocating moving away from Windows based development environments to Fedora, so I can eventually call my network a pure Linux network.
In regards to the Fedora community as a whole, I am a member of the QA team, and dedicate most of my testing time to the Server and KDE products (yes, I know KDE isn't a product....yet). I talk up Fedora and it's abilities at any given opportunity, and have convinced more than a few folks to switch to Fedora from Ubuntu. I like what the Server product has become, and want to see it supplant Ubuntu as the "reference" server for multiple projects (namely Openstack, among many). I do what I can in my limited role to make this happen.
In short, I am a maintainer of servers, and use them in my daily duties at my day job; I am an end-user of the product. My weakness in the Fedora community, however, is that I am not a developer. It's not what I do, I don't want to do it. I make the systems available for the developers to do their job. To that end, I am very good at what I do.
I feel that I would bring insight and ideas to the WG as an end user of the product - a voice that needs to be heard by any development project. It wouldn't do very good to build a product that isn't wanted, or worse, even needed.
Thank you for the reintroduction, Dan. You've been a valued member of the Fedora Server SIG for several months now and your efforts have been much appreciated. I want to say thank you for all you have done to help us get Fedora 21 Server in shape and I hope that you will continue in the future.
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