Compare commits
1 Commits
master
...
read-file-
Author | SHA1 | Date |
---|---|---|
Mike Holloway | 828a0193aa | 4 years ago |
4 changed files with 1 additions and 159 deletions
@ -1,55 +0,0 @@ |
||||
## Level 1 Questions |
||||
1. How would you prove the code is correct? |
||||
|
||||
To prove the code is correct I suppose I could set up a test environment |
||||
where I could account for all connections and run tests like |
||||
ssh connections, dhclient or dig (dns) connections, nmap port |
||||
scans, and then ensure the connections I expect from the tests |
||||
appear in the program's output. |
||||
|
||||
2. How would you make this solution better? |
||||
|
||||
I'd improve the solution by making the functions more focused on |
||||
specific tasks, improving how I present the interface of each |
||||
function to each other to more specifically eliminate type |
||||
or value errors. I'd also allot more time to complete the task |
||||
since I wasn't able to find enough before the deadline. |
||||
3. Is it possible for this program to miss a connection? |
||||
|
||||
Yes, if the connection is brief enough so as not to last more than 10 |
||||
seconds and thereby be missed by the most recent read of the |
||||
/proc/net/tcp file |
||||
4. If you weren't following these requirements, how would you solve the problem of logging every new connection? |
||||
|
||||
I would likely find a solution that leverages inotify to detect any change to the file and then read it, |
||||
rather than polling it every 10 seconds. |
||||
|
||||
## Level 2 Questions |
||||
1. Why did you choose 'x' to write the build automation? |
||||
|
||||
I would simply choose bash, as it's what I'm most familiar with and it |
||||
can reliably use the go build tools as well as invoke testing |
||||
systems like kvm/qemu, docker/podman and the like. |
||||
2. Is there anything else you would test if you had more time? |
||||
|
||||
If I had more time I'd spend it fleshing out my testing as outlined above |
||||
and doing a more thorough job of structuring my data in the way |
||||
that I've modeled it in my head - the choice of go definitely |
||||
consigned me to reading more than writing with the little time |
||||
I had. Should have gone with bash I think. |
||||
3. What is the most important tool, script, or technique you have for solving |
||||
problems in production? Explain why this tool/script/technique is the most important. |
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Level 3 Questions |
||||
|
||||
1. If you had to deploy this program to hundreds of servers, what would be your |
||||
preferred method and why? |
||||
|
||||
I would use ansible and use git to clone, build, and install the script. |
||||
This method is my preferred one because it's simple to |
||||
troubleshoot in the event that I run into issues and |
||||
ansible doesn't require a central orchestrator node. It's |
||||
also the Infrastructure-as-code tool I'm most familiar with. |
||||
2. What is the hardest technical problem or outage you've had to solve in your |
||||
career? Explain what made it so difficult? |
@ -1,24 +0,0 @@ |
||||
# teleport_devops_challenge |
||||
|
||||
WARNING: This program is in an incomplete state and does not build successfully. |
||||
The latest commit that builds successfully can be found here: |
||||
https://git.libre.audio/seasharp/teleport_devops_challenge/commit/93fd6f916bc5a6b7504c5475f7cbcebabaae5277 |
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Dependencies |
||||
|
||||
- golang 'encoding' package |
||||
|
||||
## Building |
||||
|
||||
Ensure your $GOPATH is set correctly and run: |
||||
|
||||
1. Execute `go build main.go` in repository root |
||||
2. Execute `go install teleport_devops_challenge` |
||||
|
||||
## Executing |
||||
|
||||
Ensure GOPATH/bin (GOPATH = `go env GOPATH`) has been added to your shell $PATH |
||||
or execute the following: |
||||
|
||||
`PATH=/home/$(whoami)/go/bin:$PATH teleport_devops_challenge` |
@ -1,35 +0,0 @@ |
||||
package timer |
||||
|
||||
import ( |
||||
"fmt" |
||||
"time" |
||||
//"reflect"
|
||||
) |
||||
|
||||
func New(duration_int int, unit string) *time.Timer { |
||||
|
||||
start := time.NewTimer(0) |
||||
duration := time.Duration(duration_int) |
||||
// fmt.Println(reflect.TypeOf(duration))
|
||||
// timer_10s := time.NewTimer(10 * time.Second)
|
||||
// timer_1m := time.NewTimer(1 * time.Minute)
|
||||
fmt.Println("Duration: ", duration_int, "Unit: ", unit, ".") |
||||
if unit == "Second" { |
||||
start = time.NewTimer(duration * time.Second) |
||||
} else if unit == "Minute" { |
||||
start = time.NewTimer(duration * time.Minute) |
||||
} else { |
||||
fmt.Println("Unit not recognized.") |
||||
} |
||||
fmt.Println("Waiting ", duration_int, " ", unit, ".") |
||||
if start.Stop() { |
||||
<-start.C |
||||
fmt.Println("Done waiting ", duration_int, " ", unit, "!") |
||||
} |
||||
return start |
||||
// for elapsed < ten_seconds {
|
||||
//}
|
||||
// for
|
||||
} |
||||
|
||||
func Reset |
Loading…
Reference in new issue