this post was submitted on 27 Sep 2024
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[–] slazer2au@lemmy.world 38 points 1 month ago (7 children)

Scream tests are a last resort though.

[–] intensely_human@lemm.ee 13 points 1 month ago (6 children)

Sounds like it was a last resort if he “couldn’t figure out” whose machine it was.

[–] superkret@feddit.org 12 points 1 month ago (4 children)

I don't understand how that is even possible.
Are there no logs? No documentation? Does everyone share an admin user with full rights?
I mean, there has to be a way to find out who accessed the machine last time.

[–] ramble81@lemm.ee 21 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

You’d be surprised with inheriting tech debt. Quite often there’s no documentation, the last person to log in to the system is an admin that quit 3 years ago, but it doesn’t much matter because that’s only for a direct console login which normal users don’t do when accessing the application. With tribal knowledge gone and no documentation, only when you pull the network for a bit do you discover that there was this one random script running on it that was responsible for loading up all the needed data in the current system, when 9 of the other 10 times those scripts were no longer needed.

In a perfect world you’d have documentation, architecture and data flow diagrams for everything, but “ain’t nobody got time for that” and it doesn’t happen.

[–] superkret@feddit.org 6 points 1 month ago

Had that the other way around recently. A docker container failed to come back up after I had updated the host OS.
Was about ready to restore the snapshot, when I looked further back in the logs on a hunch.
Turns out that container hadn't worked before the update either. The software's developer is long gone, and no one could tell me what it was supposedly doing.

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