Meredith Corp | Full-Time | ONSITE | Des Moines, IA | Sr Engineer - DevOps
This position is primarily responsible for managing our infrastructure in AWS, provision and configure AWS instances. Writing, debugging and managing applications to ensure optimal performance. Create and manage application and infrastructure monitoring solutions.
Skills required:
* Manage AWS Infrastructure using CloudFormation
* Write and maintain Ansible playbooks for server configuration
* Design and implement monitoring solutions for all application and infrastructures
* Work with engineers to make ensure applications are secure and adhere to the best practices
* Assist in the design and maintenance of infrastructure for automate testing
Meredith | Des Moines, Iowa | Sr Engineer - Web Operations | ONSITE
Meredith Corporation, a publicly held media and marketing services company founded upon serving our customers and committed to building value for our shareholders. We are on the pulse of pop culture, entertainment, food, fashion and lifestyle, news, business and finance, and sports.
We are looking for a Sr Engineer in our Digital Operations team. This member will be responsible for managing our AWS infrastructure using a combination of CloudFormation, Ansible and other tools. Strong Linux, Python and Jenkins experience is preferred. This is a great team and an opportunity to work for a company with a large digital presence in the middle of the heartland.
Meredith | Des Moines, Iowa | Sr Engineer - Web Operations | ONSITE
Meredith Corporation, a publicly held media and marketing services company founded upon serving our customers and committed to building value for our shareholders. We are on the pulse of pop culture, entertainment, food, fashion and lifestyle, news, business and finance, and sports.
We are looking for a Sr Engineer in our Digital Operations team. This member will be responsible for managing our AWS infrastructure using a combination of CloudFormation, Ansible and other tools. Strong Linux, Python and Jenkins experience is preferred. This is a great team and an opportunity to work for a company with a large digital presence in the middle of the heartland.
There was an issue in the beta where the installer would not recognize ZFS volumes for the boot installer. Will be verifying if still an issue as soon as I can.
I was able to log into the knowledgebase (e.g. https://access.redhat.com/solutions/412643) using my new developer account. Working in a CentOS shop, this has made my week!
I can also access the "premium" resources using my new account, however, on my first attempt I landed on my profile page asking for further details (address, phone number). Having completed my account I can read e. g. "verified solutions" I definitely couldn't access previously.
I wish there was more input as to why Apache 2.4 isn't suitable. It's been 3 years since its event driven model was released and it is a perfectly acceptable web server even for static content.
Apache 2.4 isn't event driven. The Apache's Even MPM only handles keep-alive connections asynchronously, while the whole request processing is still synchronous. It solves only one problem of Apache, but it still doesn't make it as scalable as nginx.
Hi, I'm one of the main authors (along with others, it is a community driven project) of the Event MPM for Apache.
On Benchmarks and timelines: I agree that 2.2+ was not widely available for many years due to the update cycle of linux distributions, but at the time nginx wasn't in the distros... so it become a thing where people would yum install apache2, get a 2-5 year old version, and they would benchmark that against an ngnix from their latest dev download.
The original work for the Event MPM started around 2004:
The version in 2.2 was mostly focused on Keep-Alive requests. Apache 2.2.0 was first kicked out on December 1, 2005.
To go beyond Keep-Alive requests, is a set of features/patches called "Async Write Completion". Much of this work was done in 2006-2007 by Graham Leggett:
Timing wise, most of that work did not find its way into a stable release until 2.4, which came out February 17, 2012. This is the date the article references.
Its going to be really nice if you are able to snapshot these like EBS volumes. I didn't see any reference in the details on how data recovery would work.
This position is primarily responsible for managing our infrastructure in AWS, provision and configure AWS instances. Writing, debugging and managing applications to ensure optimal performance. Create and manage application and infrastructure monitoring solutions.
Skills required: * Manage AWS Infrastructure using CloudFormation * Write and maintain Ansible playbooks for server configuration * Design and implement monitoring solutions for all application and infrastructures * Work with engineers to make ensure applications are secure and adhere to the best practices * Assist in the design and maintenance of infrastructure for automate testing
Apply Here: https://meredith.wd5.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/EXT/job/Iowa-De...