site/static/resume/min/resume.md

5.2 KiB

Christine Dodrill

Email

me@christine.website

Phone

+1 425.221.7761

Rockstar Hacker, Gopher, Cloud Architect

Some links may reference my old name "Sam Dodrill"

http://github.com/Xe

Skills

  • Go, Moonscript, Lua, Python, PHP, C
  • Docker deployments
  • git-centric project management
  • Research and Development for new ways to do things

Past Jobs

VTCSecure

Deis Consultant (Contract)

2014-10-27 thru 2015-01-15

VTCSecure is a company dedicated to helping with custom and standard audio/video confrencing solutions. They specialize in helping the deaf and blind communicate over today's infrastructure without any trouble on their end.

Highlights
  • Started groundwork for a dynamically scalable infrastructure on a project for helping the blind see things
  • Developed a prototype of a new website for VTCSecure
  • Education on best practices using Docker and CoreOS
  • Learning Freeswitch

CrowdFlower

Deis Consultant (Contract)

2014-09-10 thru 2014-10-15

Crowdflower is a company that uses crowdsourcing to have its customers submit tasks to be done, similar to Amazon's Mechanical Turk. CrowdFlower has over 50 labor channel partners, and its network has more than 5 million contributors worldwide.

Highlights
  • Research and development on scalable Linux deployments on AWS via CoreOS and Docker
  • Development of in-house tools to speed instance creation
  • Laid groundwork on the creation and use of better tools for managing large clusters of CoreOS and Fleet machines

OpDemand

Software Engineering Intern

2014-07-14 thru 2014-08-27

OpDemand is the company behind the open source project Deis, a distributed platform-as-a-service (PaaS) designed from the ground up to emulate Heroku but on privately owned servers.

Highlights
  • Built new base image for Deis components
  • Research and development on a new builder component

Side Projects

  • Programming, administration and orchestration of complicated, multi-tenant IRC networks.
  • Mitigation of active attacks against IRC networks and creation of sane tools to make future mitigation easier
  • Design and implementation of next generation services and administrative tools for IRC networks
  • Research and development of new container-based scalable deployment systems

Project Details

Elemental-IRCd

A scalable RFC compliant IRCv3 enabled IRC server for personal and professional use.

Accomplishments

Elemental is currently in use in production on several networks, totaling 800-1000 users per day with spikes of up to 50,000 on special events.

Cod

A set of extended services for IRC networks written from scratch and released for public use under the terms of the Zlib license.

Accomplishments

Cod is currently in use in production on a network with over 300 people daily.

Tetra

Cod's next generation replacement written from scratch in Go with Lua for scripting.

Accomplishments
  • Parallel execution of handlers and scripts
  • Moonscript -> Lua transpiling support
  • A clean, declarative domain-specific language for declaring features or bot commands:
Command "PING", ->
  "PONG"

This will create a command named "PING" that will return "PONG" to the user when it is used.

Tetra is currently in a development state, but it is in use on several networks and does not serve more than 300 users daily.

Flitter

Flitter is an experimental from-scratch platform as a service implemented in Go that runs on top of CoreOS and Fleet, building Docker containers on a git push to its builder ssh server. It is a combination of the Heroku workflow with a pure docker environment. It currently is in a mostly working state, with things such as old applications being purged as new ones are started not yet implemented due to time constraints. It is intended to be built such that it is completely scalable from one server to any number of servers. There is an example video of a deployed application linked in the readme of Flitter.

Personal Hosting

I use Dokku-alt for hosting my websites. A lot of my websites are written in such a way that they meld seamlessly with parts of the stack and are able to build themselves on deployment. See this Dockerfile or an example of this.

Personal Tools

I will release most (if not all) of the one-off tools I make into the public domain when it makes sense to. The most recent tools I release into the public domain will be here: https://github.com/Xe/tools