on Mar 9, 2011
Eric Redon
Palaiseau, France
Solving a small problem is easy. Solving a big problem is only a matter of decomposing it into slightly smaller problems, and solving them.
Isn't that purely logical and deeply fascinating at the same time?
I love how software development is a craft based on that balance.
I am looking for a position within a free-software friendly organization that will allow me to be creative, technical, focused on delivery, and surrounded by people with similar interests.
Technologies
Experience (7) show all
Software Development Engineer, AFNIC
September 2007 - September 2010
AFNIC is the Internet Registry managing and operating top-level domains for France and associated territories (.fr, .re, etc.).
The story of my main achievement for a state company
In mid-2008, it was decided that some new strategic projects would be written in PHP, Java and Python, and should be able to interact with the up-and-running Perl-only code base. I picked up the project.
After drafting an API for using the mostly undocumented legacy code, I started building a service-oriented platform around it, focusing on making it cohesive, easy to integrate, inter-operable and extensible.
Of course, a fun variety of quirks paved the way. That included dealing with software unable to produce or understand Unicode, having to define a language-agnostic logic to harmonize undefined vs. null vs. empty vs. unserialized, finding out that crucial parts of the registry relied on "can't touch this" locally-hacked versions of CPAN libraries, and working with people who grant your efforts to smooth out the edges of arcane programming habits with skepticism at best.
Nevertheless, the core platform launched on time in March 2009 with support for Perl, Java and PHP clients, while programs on the server side were running Perl. From then on, it has been continuously consumed by most of our external-facing services (web site, extranet, EPP server, legacy e-mail bots) and internal applications (customer and domain management, test runners). It is now a central piece of the .fr and .re domain registration systems, serving around one million queries every day.
New developers found the client-side API clear and practical, and were very cooperative, submitting interesting defects and feature requests. The project became "strategic" itself, and expansions were decided:
- Support for services written in other languages than Perl
- Performance Improvements
I conducted both at the same time, with a lot of great input from the Java developers. Service descriptions were migrated from a mix of XML Schema and WSDL to a home-grown, practical to read and write, documentation-focused domain language, for which I wrote a parser and a code generator with templates for client and server-side Perl and Java. This allowed full abstraction of the serialization layer, which in turn allowed opting for the Apache Thrift protocol instead of a very heavy SOAP on HTTP stack. Performance benchmarks showed remote procedure calls could become an estimated 10 times faster, without rewriting any of the existing client code.
Unfortunately, this refactored version remained only experimental during my time in the company, as I decided to leave before a push to production could be scheduled...
Other assignments
During my time at AFNIC, I also worked on a variety of other stuff:
My very first assignment was to write a piece of software that would do two things: allow high-paying customer to access a daily-generated list of all domains operated by the registry, and allow a very narrow set of domain holders to opt-out of the published list. The project generated a lot of controversy before I was even hired, and it took longer to write down security disclaimers in case of potential service violation use cases than to actually implement.
I designed a Python library making it easy to write NAGIOS plugins for monitoring behavior of AFNIC applications. Subsequently, I developed a few plugins, and integrated them in the Zenoss systems management platform, before handing them to the newly-created monitoring duty team. They are still using and supporting them to this day. I wish there could have been a consensus reached to make this library free software.
In 2008, ICANN announced that they were going to allow third-parties to implement potentially any top-level domain into the DNS. In 2009, AFNIC submitted a candidacy for becoming the registry of an upcoming
.parisextension, and it was granted. I was appointed as a liaison between the executive and technical teams on that project. To make it possible, I worked on a proposal to harmonize coding and systems practices throughout the company (conventions about deploying, monitoring, logging and configuring software, naming hosts, systems, databases, software packages, etc.). It became a sanctioned standard.AFNIC has a strict policy on upholding DNS standards, which the company advocates by publishing and encouraging the use of a free software tool named ZoneCheck. Written in Ruby, its use is automatically enforced upon each update on a customer's zone. In 2009, though, this tool had pretty much been in a state of abandon for more than four years, and essential new features had to be implemented, but no resource were available for development. I made the case for hiring an intern to focus on it, and it was accepted. Along with a colleague from the R&D team, I took responsibility for recruiting, training and mentoring a great student engineer, and driving the project for six months. This was a success, as we were able to ship a bugfix realease within a month, and a new major version on schedule, by the end of the internship.
Software Development Engineer, Amazon.com
August 2004 - July 2007
The main project that I worked on was basically a rewrite of the core Amazon retail websites. It needed to upgrade from a legacy, proprietary macro language to a robust, expandable three-tier platform architecture. I was involved in the early stages of this migration. My role, within a team of three developers, was to help design, develop and support the front-end aspect of this project.
We initially focused on just the Books store of the US website. It took some time. Then, we focused on just the Music store of the US website. It took a shorter time. So it was decided to launch a company-wide effort to migrate entirely all of the other stores of all the US and international retail websites, with a much bigger team and within an aggressive time frame. And so we embarked for a little more than a year total.
We did it, I learned a lot and it was great. The back-end services were written in C++, Java or Perl, the controllers were written in Perl and the presentation was embedded in Mason.
Some of my other regular duties were:
Troubleshooting and maintenance. Due to routine reorganizations, the particular software that my team was on duty of maintaining wasn't necessarily the one we wrote! But we fixed or improved what needed to be.
Being part of engineer recruiting loops. I performed about 110 technical interviews for various teams over two and a half years.
Mentoring new hires in my team. I was the personal mentor of one software developer and one software developer intern.
Software Support Engineer, Amazon.com
February 2002 - August 2004
I was part of an international team of about 8 people, and we owned support of systems and applications throughout Amazon's worldwide fulfillment center network. We wrote a automation shell scripts, some custom SQL reports for local business owners of products and operations, and a lot of documentation.
Systems Engineer, Amazon.com
August 2000 - February 2002
Initially, I was on my own, locally in charge of administrating and supporting the UNIX production systems for Amazon.fr's fulfillment center. Then the team got global, and we were in charge of all systems throughout Amazon's worldwide fulfillment center network.
Systems Engineer, McKessonHBOC France
October 1998 - July 2000
Software Development Intern, WCube
January 1998 - July 1998
Software Development Intern, HEC Entrepreneurs
July 1997 - January 1998
Education
Computer Science Engineering Diploma, EFREI - Paris Sud
1993 - 1998
Equivalent to a Bachelor's Degree in Computer Science.
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I like Eclipse but sometimes I find myself firing up vim like a reflex.
Background
I feel so lucky that I am able to experience hands-on the history of personal computing. When the the Amstrad CPC 6128 was released, not too many of my friends were as excited as I was. Today, Apple makes the news when they announce a new product. Mobile applications downloaded over fiber connections have replaced disk-swapping at school. And of course, the Web was invented during my lifetime. This is priceless. So much has changed, and so much keeps changing.
My craft is software development. And I am so grateful for that!
