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Re: Interview Q.

 
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Abdu_123
New Member

Interview Q.

Dear Brothers,

I'm new to hp-ux, trying for L1 support. Please tell me basic interview questions for L1 support.

Thanks,
3 REPLIES 3
Amit Parui
Valued Contributor
Solution

Re: Interview Q.

How about some of these (though some are geared at senior admins - but it's nice to see how they react anyways - and how they would resolve them).

Unix Administrator Interview Questions

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Some quizzing about the various flavors of UN*X worked with. Command line vs GUI (SAM). Experience with backup/recoveries - what applications. Any disk array work? Scripting experience and preference.

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I generally divide the questions into different areas. If the candidate is new this field (sat 2-3 yrs experience), my questions would relativley easy and would aim at getting the basic understanding of a candidate. For experienced sys admin, I would ask wuestions in details.

User, Group Management

1. How would you add a user?? For experienced admin, I would ask alternate ways to do it.
2. How many groups a user can belong to???

Disk/SAN/NAS management.
1. What are the steps involved in creating a volume?? About mirroring the root disk. How SAN is different from NAS. About stripped LVs.
2. What is JFS, what advantages it offers over HFS?? About VxVM.

Secuity Access and Control.
1. What precautions/methos will you follow to secure the system??
For experienced admin, I would access him a little further. User level security, at file level, user of third party products, use of ssh/tcp wrappers etc.

Kernel tuning, Performance monitoring and tuning.

1. Is a queue of four is Ok on a system with 6 cpus and questions like that???
How shmmax can be set for oracle. about dynamic buffer cache.
2. How would you check disk bottleneck?? How would you acertain the swap space use, dynamic buffer cache etc.
3. Steps in kernel re-config, boot into single user mode etc.

Print, Application, Patch Management
1. What is a patch database (IPD etc.)??
2. How would you roll back the patch??

Backups and Recovery
1. What products??
2. About Ignite??
3. Systems tools and their usage.

Network Administration
1. About having two ips on same subnet?
2. Calculation of subnet.
3. About ipfilter, adding routes, deleting it. USer of net stat. About ndd.

In order to access the psyche of the candidate.

Which is more powerful? The pen, the sword, or the prompt?

I depend more on how candidate re-acts. I prefer tolet him do the talking. Sometimes it happens that hey may not know correct optins, syntaxes, but it is important to know that he knos how to do this and that.


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I completely forgot about adding few things.

About NIS, NIS+, DNS and NFS.
1. What advantages nfs 3 offers?? How??
2. The different records in DNS.


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I also like to have them talk about themselves...what they are good at - things they have trouble with, how they work under pressure - and can they provide an example.

IE - is someone puts on their Resume they are an expert with EMC - yet can't tell you anything about SRDF - well...they might be strecthing their skills :)


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I almost always start out with something like "How do I replace all instances of 'turnips' with 'collards' in a file using vi. If they know this, at the very least, I know that they can spell vi -- an absolutely essential requirement for any UNIX guy. I then expand the question to include batch processes and their weapon(s) of choice - sed, awk, shell, Perl, C, etc.

I also have them tell me about the various man sections. For example, what's the difference between section 2 and section 3?
I'm never too concerned about answers to specific questions but rather about their approach to getting those answers.

I always ask increasingly difficult technical questions until I hear "I don't know" (the desired answer) or until I hear BS. An employee (or interviewee) should never
be afraid to answer "I don't know".

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Few questions can be like below:

1. tombstone vs core file generation.
2. using ioscan to attached device driver to the hardware path.
3. How do you know the patch level of the system
4. How to recover system using ignite.
5. steps replacing a failed drive on your system, using veritas or LVM.


Basic goal all employers will be to test your experience and offcourse your approach at various problems..


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What would be your approach if the system crashes badly (disk(s) all inaccessable), and there are apparently no backups made (ever).

This will probably show a great deal of how someone will take an inventory of what is/was/should be (re)installed on the system, including users, databases, software packages, patches, documentation, services, security and networking issues, interoperability with other systems, etc. etc.

A more serious question could be how to set up a complete new system from scratch, where he has to address most of these areas anyway, but he'd then be missing the pressure of phoning people asking "where is the database", and "when will I be able to see my files again".


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Here's a few from a different perspective:

- do you prefer to work as part of a group or individually? And what percentage of your time would you feel comfortable working in the not prefered mode?

- what do you consider more important: risk management, or getting the job done?

- in general, would you describe yourself as being more long-term or more short-term focused?

- what was the most difficult work-related thing you've ever done, and what did you learn from it?


Keep in mind that some of these questions are deliberatly open-ended so you can see what a candidate is, and is not, willing to voluntarily talk about or disclose.

There are always good technical questions to ask, and many of them depend on the environment you work in. For example, we never ask about NIS here, because we don't use it. You can probably cruise the forum here and come up with some great technical questions.

I like to ask some open ended questions for which there isn't a yes or no answer. Also, don't be afraid of silence. If you ask them a question and they are thinking or seem unsure, don't prompt them or say anything. You can actually get a bit of a feeling about how they think and act under a little stress, which is good to find out in the interview and not after you have hired them.

Here are a few of the open questions I like to ask:

1. What would your current/former boss say your strengths are, and why?

2. What would your current/former boss say your weaknesses are, and why?

3. Tell me about a time you were faced with a difficult technical problem and how you came up with a creative solution to the problem.

4. Have you ever been faced with a problem where you had to do something or come up with a solution that was outside company policy? (For example, looking for stories like, "I changed a production server without telling anybody" - which could be good or bad, depending on the situation).

5. Tell me about a time when you had to work with a fellow employee or supervisor who was difficult to get along with, and how you worked around that.

Most technical people with experience are smart. I'm more concerned with people that can learn things fast than with finding people that already know it all. Not that I have anything against the wizards, but the places I have worked generally couldn't afford them. :)


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I would ask them what their security outlook and tools of choice were.

For HP-UX./Linux do they use Bastille?

What is /var/adm/inet.sec ? What does it do?

IDS/9000?

Secure Shell?

How to set default password policies?

In the post 9-11 world its no longer enough to administer the box, you have to make it safe.


For Senior Unix Admins:

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Oracle DBA's have discovered a potential performance problem related to the number of file descriptors.

Which command to check and Which kernel parameters do you modify?

ulimit -a maxfiles and maxfiles_lim

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There are essentially 3 types of system crashes on HP. Name them - and what causes them:

High Priority Machine Check (HPMC) - normally the result of a piece of hardware causing a group 1 interrupt

Transfer Of Control (TOC) - Initiated from console using the TC command form the command menu (GSP) or by Servicguard cmcld daemon in the event of a cluster reformation

PANIC - occurs when the kernel detects a situation that makes no logical sense (like kernel data structures becoming corrupted)

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Do all nodes in a cluster have to have the same I/O tree for shared devices?

No - as long as the devices are referenced correctly in the cluster config

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The disk/volume groups that are going to be shared between nodes in a cluster neccessitate a different series of standard config files that normally deal with and manage disk/volumes/filesystems. Which standard config files are affected and why?

A. /etc/lvmrc - this startup script needs to be modified to NOT activate all volume groups at startup time

B. /etc/fstab - filesystems that will be shared between nodes must NOT be listed in the fstab file.

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The Primary lan card fails on one of the nodes in the cluster. HP replaces the card, and it has maintained its instance number and associated device files. The ip address remains the same. Will the node be able to rejoin the cluster with a simple cmrunnode command?


If not - Why? and what commands must you run or changes do you need to make before it can join the cluster?


A. Servicguard maintains the MAC address of all configured LAN cards in the cluster binary file.

B. You must re-run a cmapplyconf using the existing cluster ascii file.


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How do I print Yesterday?
# echo 'Yesterday'
Yesterday
# perl -le 'print scalar localtime time - 86400'



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AIX Questions

How you find disk size let say hdisk7?
( bootinfo -s hdisk7)


How you list hardware configuration?
( lscfg -pv )


How you find to which vg filestserm belongs?
( df; take lv, lslv will list vg name)


How you perform system backups?
( mksysb command)


How to mirror rootvg?
The following steps will guide you trough the mirroring of an AIX rootvg.
This info is valid for AIX 4.3.3, AIX 5.1, AIX 5.2 and AIX 5.3.
Make sure you have an empty disk, in this example its hdisk1
Add the disk to the vg via "extendvg rootvg hdisk1
Mirror the vg via: "mirrorvg rootvg"
Adapt the bootlist to add the current disk, the system will then fail to hdisk1 is hdisk0 fails during startup
do bootlist -o -m normal
this will list currently 1 disk, in this exmaple hdisk0
do bootlist -m normal hdisk0 hdisk1
Run a bosboot on both new disks, this will install all software needed for boot on the disk
bosboot -ad hdisk0
bosboot -ad hdisk1


How to tell the maintenance release?
instfix -i |grep ML

If Life gives u a ROCK, its upto u to build a BRIDGE or a WALL !!!
Steven E. Protter
Exalted Contributor

Re: Interview Q.

Shalom,

What tool is used for backing up hp-ux configuration for disaster recovery? Answer Ignite.

You install an 11.23 system to September 2004 release and then install the September 2006 bi-annual update.

A second system you isntall with the September 2006 Core OS.

Are the two systems on the same release of HP-UX? Answer, yes.

SEP
Steven E Protter
Owner of ISN Corporation
http://isnamerica.com
http://hpuxconsulting.com
Sponsor: http://hpux.ws
Twitter: http://twitter.com/hpuxlinux
Founder http://newdatacloud.com
whiteknight
Honored Contributor

Re: Interview Q.


Hi Abdu,

I managed to find some interview questions for system administrator.

I think as L1 support, you should have some fundalmental skills you need to take note

See my attachment
WK

Please assign points
Problem never ends, you must know how to fix it