My bookshelf - whilst wildy out of date now.... I can't bear to throw them away, including my AIX 4.3 certification study guide that I got when I went on the IBM course....
Original Message:
Sent: Thu February 29, 2024 06:26 AM
From: Andrey Klyachkin
Subject: AIX operating system
100%! It is what I did when I started with AIX. Run smitty, press F6 to see the commands behind, read the manual pages to learn more.
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Andrey Klyachkin
https://www.power-devops.com
Original Message:
Sent: Wed February 28, 2024 06:15 PM
From: nigel griffiths
Subject: AIX operating system
Isn't all the answer for Junior AIX System Administrator questions: Run smitty!
Just like Junior Linux System Administrators the answer is:
Look it up on Google and pray!
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Nigel Griffiths - IBM retired
London, UK
@mr_nmon
Original Message:
Sent: Wed February 28, 2024 04:57 PM
From: Andrey Klyachkin
Subject: AIX operating system
Charles,
did you try to book a training? I don't know in which country you are, but IBM still offers trainings. If you don't like IBM or there are problems with IBM trainings in your country, you can find AIX trainers all over the world for on-site or virtual trainings to educate your entry level admins. If you are in Europe you can contact me and we will find a way to train your admins.
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Andrey Klyachkin
https://www.power-devops.com
Original Message:
Sent: Wed February 28, 2024 04:17 PM
From: Charles Buckley
Subject: AIX operating system
As a more general point... the problem these days isn't the people who know how to do things like multipathing or esoteric tricks., but the lack of even entry-level AIX admins. We have to train people how to grow filesystems. We have to train people to add users. We have to train people on entry-level skills and right now - that AIX 5L redbook is the only decent training book out there. Think entry-level things. We don't ask Engineer 1's to design new systems. We don't ask them to performance tune. There are a dozen people with 20 years of experience for every Admin who has just 1-year of experience.
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Charles Buckley
Original Message:
Sent: Wed February 21, 2024 01:11 PM
From: nigel griffiths
Subject: AIX operating system
Hi Charles,
It has been suggested many times but it has got nowhere due to funding.
I do not understand it. I guess AIX and all the surrounding infrastructure is now a very big topic.
I mean a large scope: HMC, PowerVM (Hypervisor, virtual networks, virtual storage, virtual optical) , Virtual I/O Server, Network Installation Manager, PowerVC, modern IBM storage, PowerSC for security and more..
Then there are many topics sizing, design, performance, tuning, updating, upgrading, user control, security, networking, disk layout, time sync, DNS, DPO, Dynamic LPAR changes, Live Partition Mobility and on and on.
A lot of function has been added in 20 years and most of these topic have there own Redbooks.
I think that might take 2000 pages and a 2 years residency for 6 people.
In summary: it is too big a subject to resource and fund!! Every person learning AIX would want to start with different skill sets, with interest areas, different thing they want to learn.
There are AIX basic and advanced education classes available world wide from IBM and IBM partners but classroom education seems to have become unpopular and ends up expensive in cash and time.
Also gone is the time when a techie sits down with a Redbook and read cover to cover. That is something I actually did when I first encountered UNIX/AIX decades ago. These can you imaging a operations manager asking a techie to pick up AIX skills and being told that would take 3 months full-time study!
I think big chunky Redbooks have had their day. Today, it would be best tackled by web technology rather than a Redbook as that would allow updating as things change even further. That would allow a disperse team to work on it.
Mean while back in the real world: There is lots of information but much of it is hidden.
As part of the PowerVS YouTube videos, I built a repository as a starter pack for people new to AIX Systems Administration but it is rough and ready.
"PowerVS YouTube Play list" is here:
IBM Cloud: PowerVS + AIX
Part 5 "Learning AIX System Admin" is here:
PowerVS: AIX for £2/day - 5 Learning AIX SysAdmin 2023
With dozens of link to IBM Manual pages, IBM User Guides, dozens of videos from me al lots of topics and lists of the most important commands and function.
The info and links can be found here:
Learning AIX System Administration on PowerVS
I hope this helps, Cheers, Nigel
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Nigel Griffiths - IBM retired
London, UK
@mrnmon
Original Message:
Sent: Wed February 21, 2024 11:26 AM
From: Charles Buckley
Subject: AIX operating system
The AIX 5L Certification Study Guide is the best documentation I have seen for learning the basics of AIX. Has IBM considered updating it? I haven't seen anything for entry-level admins like it since that Redbook was published over 20 years ago. Maybe I have just missed later editions?
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Charles Buckley
Original Message:
Sent: Fri February 16, 2024 04:52 AM
From: nigel griffiths
Subject: AIX operating system
You are not alone wanting access to AIX for learning.
Rather than emulate POWER hardware to run AIX - with some features missing (some things can't be emulated) and a bit slowly, you could run the real thing for learning. Check out my YouTube Videos on using IBM PowerVS = real Power servers and latest AIX 7.3 on the Cloud for just £2 / $3 / €3 a day.
- You may pay more than that for your early morning coffee on the high street.
I have a YouTube playlist of 7 videos covering everything at a detail hands-on level:
- https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLKQlFnmiWVyeK1chlV8hFtHj7Y3plhW9d
In total the first 6 add up to ~90 minutes with a final video Review and Update on the newer advanced features.
I have had retrying QEMU on my to do list for a year. I had it running a few years ago.
Apart from the boot media costs money issue, I can't find examples of getting AIX 7.3 working.
So for now try AIX 7.2. It might take me a few days to find a working combination and get through the initial boot issues. Then the basics should work. Of course, I would like a C compiler for nmon/njmon - available for free using the AIX toolbox but that might take even more time.
On PowerVS this should take about an hour, very latest AIX 7.3 and installing the latest GCC compile about 20 seconds!
Same for the 800 other open source tools on AIX.
On top of that PowerVS is fun :-) and you could use it for future projects at work i.e. good professional experience.
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nigel griffiths
Original Message:
Sent: Sat February 10, 2024 12:38 PM
From: Khumoyun Ochilov
Subject: AIX operating system
Hi Nigel,
Thank you very much for answering my question.
Yes, QEMU is a machine emulator, and I want to install AIX inside QEMU on my laptop (Intel Core I5 H processor, RAM 16 GB, video card 4 GB, SSD 512 GB). I haven't paid yet. Can I download without payment? Because I just use it for learning.
sincerely Khumoyun
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Khumoyun Ochilov
Original Message:
Sent: Tue January 30, 2024 04:52 AM
From: nigel griffiths
Subject: AIX operating system
Please explain more about Qume virtual Machine.
Do you mean QEMU the machine emulator?
I guess you may be trying to run QEMU on a laptop to emulate a Power processor and then install AIX.
To download AIX 7.1 or AIX 7.2 installation media, you need to purchase the licence. Have you paid for AIX?
If you have then the IBM ESS website allows the download of AIX.
Cheers, Nigel
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nigel griffiths
Original Message:
Sent: Sun January 28, 2024 01:54 PM
From: Khumoyun Ochilov
Subject: AIX operating system
Hi
How to download Aix 7.1 or 7.2 in order to install the Qume virtual machine.
Thank you
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Khumoyun Ochilov
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