Your responsibilities
Join CERN's Storage and Data Management group and help to evolve the data storage systems used at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and across CERN's experimental programme. The Storage and Data Management Group (IT-SD) is responsible for enabling data access for the laboratory. The group manages more than one exabyte of storage across about 2,000 data servers - CERN, take part!
As a Full-Stack Computing Engineer (Data Storage Systems), you will join the CERNBox team, responsible for providing disk-based cloud storage to the whole CERN community, ranging from Scientists to Engineers or Administrative users. Your job will include both software development and operations tasks.
On the software development side, you will work on integrating the system with large scale storage systems (such as CephFS) and will participate in a project aimed at developing and promoting data and code repositories at the European level.
On the operations side, you will take part in troubleshooting problems and diagnosing the cause of any system failures. This will include interaction with user support tickets as well as other storage services in the IT-SD group.
Your responsibilities will include:
Your profile
Skills
This position would suit a candidate with some experience, or a strong interest, in either front or backend development, and a desire to evolve into a full-stack development and operations profile. The organisation will provide any training necessary to complement the successful candidate's profile.
Required skills:
Skills which would be an advantage (but not required; training will be provided where necessary):
Language Requirements: Fluent in English
Eligibility criteria:
Job closing date: November 10, 2024 at 23:59 AM CET.
Contract duration: 24 months, with a possible extension up to 36 months maximum.
Working hours: 40 hours per week
Target start date: 01-April-2025
Job reference: IT-SD-GSS-2024-176-GRAE
Field of work: Software Engineering and IT
What we offer
About us
At CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear Research, physicists and engineers are probing the fundamental structure of the universe. Using the world's largest and most complex scientific instruments, they study the basic constituents of matter - fundamental particles that are made to collide together at close to the speed of light. The process gives physicists clues about how particles interact, and provides insights into the fundamental laws of nature. Find out more on http://home.cern.
Diversity has been an integral part of CERN's mission since its foundation and is an established value of the Organization. Employing a diverse workforce is central to our success.