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Work-Augmented Laziness with the Los Task Request System
Quotidian system administration is often characterized by the fulfillment of common user requests, especially on sites that serve a variety of needs. User creation, group management, and mail alias maintenance are just three examples of the many repetitive tasks that can crowd the sysadmin's day. Matters worsen when users neglect to provide necessary information for the job. They can grow bleakest, however, at volunteer-run or otherwise loosely-coordinated sites, where sysadmins often collectively hope for someone else to attend to the task.
The Los Task Request System addresses all three problems. It mitigates user vagueness with web forms generated from XML parameter specification files. It skirts sysadmin sloth by requiring one simple review and approval step to set changes into motion. It then saves time by automatically executing commands tailored from user input. Amidst this convenience, cryptographic signatures on Los directives ensure that only administrators can alter the system. Overall, Los aims to make life easier for users and sysadmins by standardizing and streamlining the submission, review, and execution of requests for common system tasks.
author = {Thomas Stepleton},
title = {{Work-Augmented} Laziness with the Los Task Request System},
booktitle = {16th Systems Administration Conference (LISA 02)},
year = {2002},
address = {Philadelphia, PA},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/lisa-02/work-augmented-laziness-los-task-request-system},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = nov
}
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