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geekhack Community => Other Geeky Stuff => Topic started by: xmagusx on Tue, 15 April 2014, 14:23:48

Title: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: xmagusx on Tue, 15 April 2014, 14:23:48
Anyone around here hold an RHCA (http://www.redhat.com/training/certifications/rhca) (not RHCSA)? Looking for any tips or self-study material available for EX401 (Satellite/deployment), EX436 (clustering/storage), and EX442 (performance). Already have EX318 done and EX413 has material provided by RedHat.

Thanks!
Title: Re: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: osi on Sat, 19 April 2014, 09:25:51
Do you work in the defense industry? Do you need those certs foryout job position? Sounds interesting!
Title: Re: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: xmagusx on Sun, 20 April 2014, 19:32:24
Adjacent to the federal sector, but for a private firm. Don't need it for a particular position, just for general career advancement.
Title: Re: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: esko997 on Sun, 20 April 2014, 20:57:26
Sysadmin here, currently studying for RHEL certs. All I know from what my coworkers have said is that its pretty tough.
Title: Re: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: xmagusx on Mon, 21 April 2014, 08:13:41
Sysadmin here, currently studying for RHEL certs. All I know from what my coworkers have said is that its pretty tough.
I've managed RHCE and RHCVA, and I can say that primarily they're different from other industry certs, rather than being more or less tough. On the one hand, they're all practical, so you don't need to have "the right answer", you just need to know how to accomplish tasks (one way or another). On the other hand, the diminished number of questions/tasks means that each counts for significantly more. One very nice thing though is that you have access to all the man pages, which are definitely invaluable.
Title: Re: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: esko997 on Mon, 21 April 2014, 13:04:55
Sysadmin here, currently studying for RHEL certs. All I know from what my coworkers have said is that its pretty tough.
I've managed RHCE and RHCVA, and I can say that primarily they're different from other industry certs, rather than being more or less tough. On the one hand, they're all practical, so you don't need to have "the right answer", you just need to know how to accomplish tasks (one way or another). On the other hand, the diminished number of questions/tasks means that each counts for significantly more. One very nice thing though is that you have access to all the man pages, which are definitely invaluable.

Access to the man pages!? Thats really awesome. Is it true you take the exam in a RHEL VM?
Title: Re: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: xmagusx on Thu, 24 April 2014, 08:48:35
Access to the man pages!? Thats really awesome. Is it true you take the exam in a RHEL VM?
Yuppers, you're given a VM, a list of tasks, and after the test is over they run scripts on the VM to determine if you accomplished said tasks. No internet access of course, but full access to man pages as well as other included documentation. The goal of the exam is to demonstrate not that you know how to answer questions about RedHat, but that you know how to actually do stuff with RedHat.
Title: Re: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: esko997 on Thu, 24 April 2014, 12:06:21
Access to the man pages!? Thats really awesome. Is it true you take the exam in a RHEL VM?
Yuppers, you're given a VM, a list of tasks, and after the test is over they run scripts on the VM to determine if you accomplished said tasks. No internet access of course, but full access to man pages as well as other included documentation. The goal of the exam is to demonstrate not that you know how to answer questions about RedHat, but that you know how to actually do stuff with RedHat.

Thats awesome, it sounds like something I would actually be able to pass. I've heard its pretty tough though. Hopefully just got to study for it properly.
Title: Re: RedHat Certified Architect help
Post by: william20111 on Mon, 28 April 2014, 03:42:31
I have never seen a job require a cert but it looks good on the CV I suppose. Its good you get access to the docs and the man pages, more life like. Because thats the first place everyone goes if they need some info. You get sponsored by your work to do the training, or is it something outside of work your doing yourself? Red Hat look quite expensive for this type of thing..

Cheers
Another sysadmin :)