SysAdmin to SysAdmin: What you shouldn't put into production | |
From: | Joe Klemmer |
Date: | Wed, 14 Jul 2004 19:24:32 -0400 |
SysAdmin to SysAdmin: What you shouldn't put into production Wed July 14, 4:01 by StoneLion To promote security, most organizations should maintain separate production and testing environments. Production software begins its life in a testing or research environment. These environments sometimes consist of actual labs on a private network, isolated from the rest of the environment in almost every way (partly as a security measure). Inside the lab are machines that act as representative parts of the production network environment. For example, there may be a machine running Apache, MySQL, DNS, and NTP; another machine on the other side of a router running sendmail and an "internal" DNS server. There will be client machines, of course, and printers, wireless access points, and NIS/NIS+/LDAP servers, which may be acting upon live data. [Test lab? What is that? - jjk] http://www.linux.com/print.pl?sid=04/07/08/1625240 -- Joe KlemmerUnix System/Network Administrator & Ad Hoc Programmer