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Home/ Questions/Q 3240968
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T18:08:43+00:00 2026-05-17T18:08:43+00:00

We are currently looking for ways to help the non-programming members of the sysadmin

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We are currently looking for ways to help the non-programming members of the sysadmin group familiarize themselves with Python scripts used for day-to-day sysadmin tasks.

Does anyone have any suggested documentation tools or best practices that we might find useful for this purpose?

Edit to address S.Lott’s comment:

First, my apologies for being too brief on my initial question. My primary goal is to make sure that someone, even a non-programmer, is easily able to troubleshoot my scripts if I’m not in that day or if I leave the organization.

What I’m looking for is practices used by other people who have the “script coder” role in a technical group such as a sysadmin team. For example, before I begin the process of scripting a task, I’ve gotten into the habit of first writing an article in our shared wiki explaining each step in detail. I then base my Python scripts on the article–using it as pseudo code.

Other examples of the sorts of things I’m looking for:

  • Using tools such as Sphinx to provide easily available doc

  • Having group discussions to go over code before putting in production

  • Allowing group members to first go over the process manually (we usually go this route but perhaps we should make it a more common practice)

Or, just as valuable if not more so, negatives such as:

  • Found that heavy commenting is a waste of time because the logic flow is still foreign to non-programmers

  • Lean toward using pexpect because of the verbosity lost when using high level modules

The above are just examples of things I thought of. Hope this clarifies the question! As always, thanks SO’ers.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T18:08:43+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 6:08 pm

    There is a book on this subject – “Python for Unix and Linux System Administration”.

    • http://oreilly.com/catalog/9780596515829

    And an article on developer works which might provide you the flavor that you may want to follow.

    • http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/aix/library/au-python/

    And almost any one, irrespective of how, he is going to apply it, would want to work on the basics of the language itself. There is a good starter on web apart from tutorial that is distributed along with standard python distribution.

    • http://diveintopython3.ep.io/
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