What are your go-to tools?
Let's get this community popping with some useful information. Reddit's sysadmin subreddit seemed like a place of complainers, I look forward to having actual productive conversation in this community.
Let's get this community popping with some useful information. Reddit's sysadmin subreddit seemed like a place of complainers, I look forward to having actual productive conversation in this community.
Notepad++ is one of the best applications ever made
Kinda new to the whole sysadmin thing, but tmux has been an absolute game changer for me. No more remote desktop for long running processes, I can just do everything from ssh.
Put a dev box in the cloud/Colo whatever run tmux, learn about sync panes, work on multiple hosts at once, ..., Profit
Pretty minor one, but for Windows, greenshot is a great replacement for Snipping Tool, and includes easy to use highlighting tools for SOP's, etc.
One of the first installs on any new computer. Can’t live without it once you have it! It makes it so quick and easy to grab a screenshot, draw some arrows/boxes/whatever, then just copy and paste.
Almost forgot obfuscation — the pixelization is so much better than blank white boxes.
Greenshot lacks the option to time screenshots. ShareX has it, but very janky
Yep. They're unstable builds have been great, lately.
Is love to see them ship a stable, though...
I’m a big fan of RoyalTS for managing my RDP / SSH access to servers. Keepass for password storage.
Big fan of the IODD. I love having a ton of bootable images ready to go on a single drive. I mostly use it to boot disk wiping software, disk imaging software, and malware removal tools but it also serves as my main flash drive with common software and scripts I use a lot.
Powershell scripts have been my tool of choice for the past few years (stuck in Windows world unfortunately).
Lately I've been dipping my toes into automating switch config - Ansible has been fantastic for that.
My company has been moving onto Kubernetes recently and I've found Lens to be very helpful with it. It has a nice cluster dashboard and has inbuilt shortcuts to jump onto containers, see logs, etc.
Vscode. Yes it's managed by Microsoft, and yes it's a newage emacs (it can do anything with add-ons), but regardless of what your tasks are it's probably going to be useful.
Use it 6-10 hours a day. Probably the most versatile IDE I've ever used.
Terraform and Terragrunt as a combination are really powerful.
Building reusable modules that you string together to infinity with automatically managed strategies is really powerful.
PDQ! Inventory and Deploy
Along with pre packed PowerShell scripts.
I have a bunch of pages and tasks that can be run from the right click menu in Inventory so not only myself, but also less technical team members can run them.
It also is nice to RDP or VNC into a machine with a keyboard shortcut.
mRemoteNG
For having RDP, VNC, and SSH sessions all in a single page with tabs.
KeepassXC. Covers all I need for my personal password management, I like putting my encrypted databases to e.g. OneDrive instead of relying to something solely cloud-based.
Vivaldi Browser. Because I like messing around with tabs and this is one is supporting side tabs (instead having them on top), you can have Chrome extensions as well.
remote desktop manager by devolutions powershell - duh ansible vscode sharex or greenshot (I've been favoring sharex lately) firefox with the container plugin (so I can keep the authentication contexts separate for all the o365 consoles I have to deal with)
Microsoft's PowerToys has a lot of cool stuff in it and I use the color picker, awake, and mass rename tools frequently.
Scappman is also very useful if you're deploying software though Intune and provides automated software updates for a lot of applications.
I've been in the weird space of on-prem "cloud" infrastructure (mostly kubernetes) for the last seven years but I've been doing infra, middleware, and devops for more than twenty years and have my own way of working that's nearly GUI-free.
Tools I use every single day:
Less often but very useful:
Languages, because I write my own tools:
Currently doing a lot with csv data, mlr is something I learned about 3 months ago.. thanks for sharing!
The greatest tool we added at work was Apache Guacamole.
We have it integrated with salesforce and our monitoring software for easy access to servers when it's needed.
CMDER
A Linux style tabbed terminal in Windows. It can do CMD, PowerShell, Python, and more all in one app with tabs. Opens with a hotkey.
Sysinternals and Nirsoft Tools.
Outside of the typical
ping,nslookup,curl, etc...Absolutely huge plug for Devolutions Remote Desktop Manager. Couldn't iive without it. The rest of their product stack is also top-notch.
Also VSCode with various extensions for scripting. Also ObsidianMD for notes and knowledge.
Lots of onprem cluster work. I generally use k3s with an nfs provisioner. I've gotten into using ansible with AWX. Summerwind gh runners. I still stick with vim but having read comments, see I need to check out tmux over ssh. I like uptime kuma for basic monitors and while I setup signoz I still go back to just using Datadog.