u/Traditional-Cell3566

▲ 1 r/CMMC

Kubernetes ok for CMMC L2?

Hey everyone! Baby sysadmin here...

i have a quick question! My company is going for CMMC L2 audit and I am tasked with setting up and migrating a github into on-prem gitlab.

Is Kubernetes ok to use with it being opensource? We as an IT, has been saying no to anything open source to make our lives little easier!

All the engineers touch CUI in some form or another as well as derived CUIs as well.

Thank you!!!

reddit.com
u/Traditional-Cell3566 — 11 days ago
▲ 0 r/it

Baby sysadmin seeking advice to become a sys engineer!

Hey everyone!

I am a baby sysadmin who has been sysadmin for only 1 year!! I want to see what kind of skill I would need to pick up to step towards sys engineer (IT) path :)

Ofcourse can't ask for advice like that without telling you guys what my day to day job looks like!

Purchasing everything IT(Laptops, docking station, printer, server, switches, Software license etc.)

- I buy anything that is related to IT for my company and its subsidiaries!

Helpdesk

- There are always drive bys.. getting grabbed on your way to the bathroom.. Teams messages for help XD

Most recent CMMC tasks

- Currently we are getting ready for CMMC L2 audit!

- Through intune's script remediation, taking away all Windows machine's admin privileges with the exception of some engineers. Of course I sent out the company wide email before hand and gave them some time to prepare ;)

- Did the samething for Macbooks as well!

- Using runbook in Azure to find users who are in a certain department, find that user's computer and putting that device into a security group

- Keeper onboarding and automatic provisioning

- Purview's sensitivity label setup and rollout

Current projects

- Merger & Acquisition (2 current acquisition)

- I take over newly acquired company's tech stacks and its license payments

- Migrate newly acquired company's Microsoft tenant into my company's Microsoft

- Migrate newly acquired company's github into on-prem gitlab

- Setting up a Commercial Microsoft tenant (Autopilot, Defender, everything) for non-US acquisition and managing it.

- Solidwork's standalone license conversion to network license

- Random CMMC documentation tasks

- Gitlab server setup and github to on-prem gitlab migration ( Separate from M&A migration but might roll it into one)

- AWS IAM architecture setup and roll out..(Got put in the back burner due to CMMC for now )

I think that is about it... If I remember more, I'll edit it later!!!!

So our tech stack is Microsoft GCCHIGH, GovAWS, gov everything...So! my question is same as above! Now that you know what I do day to day, What are certs, skills, scripting languages etc. that I should be focusing on to become a systems engineer or cloud systems engineer?? I know title and responsibilities differ depending on the org, but I just want to hear from other people's experience and their thought of what kind of skills sys engineer should have!!

Thank you so much and sorry for rambling!!!!! :)

reddit.com
u/Traditional-Cell3566 — 12 days ago

Baby sysadmin seeking advice to become a sys engineer!

Hey everyone!

I am a baby sysadmin who has been sysadmin for only 1 year!! I want to see what kind of skill I would need to pick up to step towards sys engineer (IT) path :)

Ofcourse can't ask for advice like that without telling you guys what my day to day job looks like!

Purchasing everything IT(Laptops, docking station, printer, server, switches, Software license etc.)

- I buy anything that is related to IT for my company and its subsidiaries!

Helpdesk

- There are always drive bys.. getting grabbed on your way to the bathroom.. Teams messages for help XD

Most recent CMMC tasks

- Currently we are getting ready for CMMC L2 audit!

- Through intune's script remediation, taking away all Windows machine's admin privileges with the exception of some engineers. Of course I sent out the company wide email before hand and gave them some time to prepare ;)

- Did the samething for Macbooks as well!

- Using runbook in Azure to find users who are in a certain department, find that user's computer and putting that device into a security group

- Keeper onboarding and automatic provisioning

- Purview's sensitivity label setup and rollout

Current projects

- Merger & Acquisition (2 current acquisition)

- I take over newly acquired company's tech stacks and its license payments

- Migrate newly acquired company's Microsoft tenant into my company's Microsoft

- Migrate newly acquired company's github into on-prem gitlab

- Setting up a Commercial Microsoft tenant (Autopilot, Defender, everything) for non-US acquisition and managing it.

- Solidwork's standalone license conversion to network license

- Random CMMC documentation tasks

- Gitlab server setup and github to on-prem gitlab migration ( Separate from M&A migration but might roll it into one)

- AWS IAM architecture setup and roll out..(Got put in the back burner due to CMMC for now )

I think that is about it... If I remember more, I'll edit it later!!!!

So our tech stack is Microsoft GCCHIGH, GovAWS, gov everything...So! my question is same as above! Now that you know what I do day to day, What are certs, skills, scripting languages etc. that I should be focusing on to become a systems engineer or cloud systems engineer?? I know title and responsibilities differ depending on the org, but I just want to hear from other people's experience and their thought of what kind of skills sys engineer should have!!

Thank you so much and sorry for rambling!!!!! :)

reddit.com
u/Traditional-Cell3566 — 12 days ago
▲ 0 r/gitlab

I need help with the project I am leading

I am a baby sysadmin who has been sysadmin for only a year, so I'm sorry if somethings doesn't makes sense or sound stupid!

So I became in charge of setting up a on-prem gitlab server, and migrating two of my company's subsidiary's github into it.

I already took care of the licensing end, but I have never work with any kind of gitlab, github instance so this is my first project involving gitlab/github.

On prem server has more then enough capacity to house both of the gitlab instances.

My question is, is it better to host each gitlab separately? One VM per entity? or both entities in one gitlab instance and set up the access policy for it?

I saw Linux server tends to work better with gitlab so I was thinking about spinning up a Linux VM..

Oh and another thing to mention is that we are in DoD contracting environment and going through CMMC L2 audit soon...

Is there anything I am misunderstanding or shouldn't do??

Thank you in advance!!!

-Baby sysadmin-

reddit.com
u/Traditional-Cell3566 — 12 days ago