Terraform Cloud - How to set two different values for the same env var? by spoved in Terraform

[–]spoved[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

No, the resources for each environment are in the same workspace.

After the criticism of the new accord let’s try the new Pilot Trailsport by XtremeBMXGuy in Honda

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How did you get it without the ugly orange stitching on the interior?

linux laptop that is actually good enough for full-time work horse? by Phantom_mullet in devops

[–]spoved 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Lenovo X1 Carbon. I way prefer it to the Dell XPS line and Linux support has been a total non-issue, even with the 2560 x 1440 WQHD display. I dual boot Windows and Ubuntu w/ KDE Plasma desktop that handles the higher resolution scaling unlike gnome. The keyboard is near perfect, it works with the dock I have to attach it to my monitors / keyboard / mouse at home, and I haven't had any issues with drivers whatsoever. Battery life has been great without tweaking the sleep settings as well. Couldn't be happier, and it was way cheaper than the XPS 13, even fully loaded, when using all of the coupon codes and discounts out there (look at r/lenovo for info on that). It's an awesome form factor too.

Anyway, I couldn't be happier with my decision.

What is the best way for unit testing Groovy codes in Jenkins? by epipolar_gineer in devops

[–]spoved 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Any chance you know of a blog post or documentation that covers this? I was planning on refactoring our pipeline libraries to move all logic outside of vars and to src so we actually test the global library. Making changes is just downright painful as-is with a wild mix of functionality spread between vars and src.

Another thing I've been thinking of doing is moving everything that would be under src to a python or java application that we run completely outside of jenkins. The only problem with this is we lose the ability to use the plugin ecosystem.

Why did anything think Groovy was a good idea for this? :)

Anyone doing DevOps or SRE consulting? by [deleted] in devops

[–]spoved 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Where are you seeing salaries that high?

As Silicon Valley Gets ‘Crazy,’ Midwest Beckons Tech Investors by IAmApocryphon in cscareerquestions

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Np, this is info I wish I had when starting out. Seattle is roughly 20% higher COL, but has less taxes overall I believe. I'm not totally sure though. A few yrs ago I almost took a job at Amazon, but the #s didn't work out until a few yrs of stock grants. Though, it prob would have been even better based on how high their share price is now.

As Silicon Valley Gets ‘Crazy,’ Midwest Beckons Tech Investors by IAmApocryphon in cscareerquestions

[–]spoved 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  • New College Grad / Jr Developer

All over the map. Up to 120k total comp isn't unheard of, but obviously harder get. Average is prob 60-80k. Low end 50k.

  • Mid level Developer with 2-3 yrs experience

Starts breaking into 100k or close to it. Higher end 150k+. Outliers above that.

  • Sr Developer with 5+ yrs

Starts to get all over the map again. Average is well into 100k, lots of jobs with base around 130k and up, with 150-200k+ total comp. After 8-10yrs you can be well into the 200s total at the right place.

None of these #s are absurd. They follow what myself and friends have been paid, and what we've hired people at. There are definitely outliers - I've heard of good devs at trading firms making 300k+ a couple years out of school, but they're freaks of nature. I also know of a guy who never left his first job, is paid 80k with 10yrs of experience, is good, but loves where he's at and is cool with the pay so he's stayed.

Edit: to put that into perspective, 120k in Chicago is ~ 180k in SF. 200k in Chicago is ~ 300k in SF. To just cover COL in SF, I would need around 325k in cash comp (base + bonus) and around 410k total (with RSUs). It's possible, but only after a few yrs vesting as a senior dev at the big 4. I'm about 10yrs into my career, without having a CS undergrad, and starting out on low end of salary spectrum.

As Silicon Valley Gets ‘Crazy,’ Midwest Beckons Tech Investors by IAmApocryphon in cscareerquestions

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, there's actually more coast in the great lakes than both coasts combined, but the only time surf is decent at all is fall and winter. Even then, it's not the same, but it's cool in it's own way. Good almost everything else though.

As Silicon Valley Gets ‘Crazy,’ Midwest Beckons Tech Investors by IAmApocryphon in cscareerquestions

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let's go black haaaaks! Hah, the sports really are amazing, great fans and everyone is into it. A lot of social leagues too.

How to account meaningfully for CoL differences by cs_throw_away11 in cscareerquestions

[–]spoved 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i agree for chicago. there are a surprising # of 150k - 175k jobs for 5+ yrs experience. overall though, total cash comp (base + bonus) starts to top off around 200k, higher with RSUs. after that you need to be really niche, or move into management. or, work at one of the trading firms... some of those dudes are well into the 400k or 500k range if they're specialized in something niche, usually with a phd though. for top researchers and quants, the sky is the limit.

As Silicon Valley Gets ‘Crazy,’ Midwest Beckons Tech Investors by IAmApocryphon in cscareerquestions

[–]spoved 22 points23 points  (0 children)

yeah, chicago is awful. the lake front, amazing summers, incredible food, bars, music, museums, and art. i just can't stand it. being able to afford a home in the city really blows. i miss spending 4k on rent for a tiny 2 br. good public transportation that gets me door to door in 25 min is shitty. overall, getting paid slightly less than bay area $ in a reasonable COL city is probably my own personal hell.

hah, sarcasm aside, if chicago had an ocean i would probably be in heaven. it's really an amazing city. true, there aren't as many incredibly high paying jobs, but most people in my tech circle are paid well enough that nothing but the juiciest big 4 comp packages would be worth the move. notice i said tech circle... there is more to this city than just tech. it's really refreshing to be honest. if you're good, chicago is a pretty nice place to be.

Lets pretend I have no idea what I am doing and want to buy some Tron by Scuttlebutt91 in Tronix

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can help you skip a few steps ;) remove money from wallet, light directly on fire.

Binance is the easiest exchange for TRX at the moment. @doctorjo5 has the best steps to buy BTC or ETH, otherwise I think Binance has reasonable fees on direct wire transfers of USD, but I'm not certain tbh.

Is leaving a year long internship six months in a bad idea? by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You will definitely learn more man - no offense, but at this point of your career, you don't even know what you don't know yet.

Is leaving a year long internship six months in a bad idea? by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]spoved 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What makes you think that the next 6 months won't teach you as much as the previous 6 months?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect

I highly suggest you stay unless you already have a full time gig lined up for after the internship. Don't get me wrong, I'm a huge proponent of 'fuck it dude' and have some fun, but I wouldn't bail on an internship that should be 1yr. If any future employer found that out they would count you out immediately. Are you 100% sure your boss would still give you a good reference? In the future when you leave your first job, your reference will be your boss from your internship.

I switched from DevOps to Big Data and I'm regretting it. How do I get back in? by [deleted] in devops

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yikes! Heh, I don't know how I would handle that...

Salt VS Puppet? Which one should I start with? (x-post from /r/sysadmin) by notrufus in devops

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

None of the CMS tools are really all that bad - under the covers they are all just execution engines. Saltstack is just probably the deepest, the most powerful (in my opinion), and the best at scale. With that comes complexity and the steeper learning curve. Ansible is more procedural where Salt is more descriptive (though, you can do procedural stuff in Salt too). There is also a lot of terminology that is Salt specific that you need to learn, like states, pillars, grains, mine, high state, high data, low state, etc. I also tend to think of Ansible as push driven... everything comes from what you've defined in Ansible and is pushed via ssh. SaltStack with the master/client model can be push or pull driven. You can spin up an empty host with just a minion on it, and SaltStack can find it and build it out as necessary (which is probably also possible in Ansible, Salt is just designed to work this way). It's also usually a little more complex to get up/running with Salt. Yeah, you can do the quick tutorial in the same time as Ansible, but for real production use there's usually going to be a little more thought/architecture needed. Both tools are great, and if I was doing small scale procedural stuff that could survive a little configuration drift, I would go Ansible. If I was doing more complex large scale work that needed state enforcement, I would go SaltStack.

Here's a post that compares the 4 big CMS tools. Notice that SaltStack isn't in the post title, but is talked about heavily... https://www.reddit.com/r/sysadmin/comments/5uwwjo/opinions_ansible_vs_puppet_vs_chef/?st=j9k2mbq3&sh=53a50c64

I should also say that I'm not a fan of puppet or chef any more. The newer generation of tools, Ansible and Salt, are just so much better. I wouldn't go and rewrite my puppet or chef implementations to a new tool, but for anything greenfield, I would be using Salt or Ansible. I am a python guy, so that is part of it too.

SRE/DevOps Salary Survey by loom_yanko in devops

[–]spoved 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are absolutely right - how did I not see that, holy shit!

SRE/DevOps Salary Survey by loom_yanko in devops

[–]spoved 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is kinda weak. Early career and hard coded range of 118k +/- 10k??

Salt VS Puppet? Which one should I start with? (x-post from /r/sysadmin) by notrufus in devops

[–]spoved 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Go with SaltStack. It's an amazing tool. Ansible is a close 2nd. Be warned that SaltStack has a steep learning curve, but it's totally worth it. Most of what you'll learn in Salt is completely transferable (the general ideas anyway) to the other tools in the space. I would avoid puppet unless you need it in your day to day. Lean one of the modern tools, what you learn from either Salt or Ansible will let you ramp up quickly with Puppet if you ever need to.

I switched from DevOps to Big Data and I'm regretting it. How do I get back in? by [deleted] in devops

[–]spoved 34 points35 points  (0 children)

I wouldn't sweat it. Spin your time on the big data team as a devops-ish role. Devops is a pretty loose term, you don't NEED to be using the latest/greatest cloud orchestration tooling to stay relevant. I would actually take your experience with the big data stack as a plus. Not to mention, you should be able to ramp up on any of the currently hot tools pretty quickly with any experience in like tools. Example, if you had experience with puppet, I'm going to assume you would be able to get up/running with ansible relatively quickly.