Likes: | mesos go linux java devops machine-learning |
Dislikes: | jsf struts ejb ruby php perl |
I was responsible for the "glue" of DC/OS. I mainly contributed to dcos-diagnostics and CLI. During time I spent in Mesosphere I introduced common linter for Go, improved performance of diagnostic tool by distribuiting the workload, move CLI from Python to Go
I'm responsible for creating infrastructure for microservices covering all steps in application life-cycle: creating, building, deploying, scaling, updating. I work with admins as a developer configuring, fixing and adding features to Marathon, Mesos and our custom tools that tied together whole ecosystem providing continuous deployment framework for microservices. I work with developers helping them with configuration their tools so they can use all features that my team is delivering.
I worked as backend developer in one of the biggest Polish e-commerce platform. I was responsible for fixing problems with handling traffic that outreach current capabilities. I was migrating monolith PHP system to scalable micro services. Replacing old not scalable MSSQL/MySQL with MongoDB and changing slow disk data operations with Hazelcast in memory cache with DB storage to remove bottlenecks on database lookups.
I was responsible for
For the first time in my life I earned money by doing research project (for 3 months I could try Data Science). It was based on my Artificial Intelligence project assignment. I also learned something about Linux in embedded systems and how to create them.
I studied on Faculty of Mathematics and Information Science but main accent was put on mathematics and theoretical computer science. We have very little time with real computers. My biggest achievement was (special 3 hours training prepared by professor form Electronic Faculty to encourage maths students to electronics) blinking LED using only capacitor, rheostat and transistor. I soldered everything by myself and understood how it worked.
My thesis was group project on "Distributed Time Series Database on CUDA cluster" We finished with working proof of concept. I learned Go (it was quite new at that time) and CUDA. Code is available here but I don't have time to take care of it.
Customizable Apache Mesos task executor
Mirror of Apache Mesos
Efficient cache for gigabytes of data written in Go.
Event-based registration of Marathon apps in Consul
With Daniel Krawczyk we take two projects from Cisco Cloud and merge it into one working solution. Great experience of pair programming and working with open source code. In fact Cisco Cloud code was well written so this project was real pleasure and fun.
Deploy and manage containers (including Docker) on top of Apache Mesos at scale.
Gradle plugin takes a WSDL document and generates fully annotated Java code from which to implement a service
I'm creator of this simple plug-in. I did I for several reasons
How to improve application performance with no code – just update Go version. This talk will focus on Go GC and maps. In 2016 I started https://github.com/allegro/bigcache to avoid GC pauses. At that time full GC took 10s now it's 10ms. I'll present story behind Bigcache and talk about it's architecture.
Slices are a handful way to represent collections. They are so simple that sometimes we forgot how they work underneath. This talk will present a bug that was caused by improperly used slices.
The Mesos executor is a part of Mesos that could be replaced with custom implementation. The executor controls tasks lifecycle. In this talk I will present the benefits that comes from writing a custom executor.
Mesosphere Marathon is a Mesos scheduler that can handle huge production installation. In this presentation, I will present 8 tips that improves Marathon performance and prevents outages. Each tip will have summary with information when and how it can decrease performance and how to avoid the danger of the outage.
Over 50 recipes on the core features of Apache Mesos and running big data frameworks in Mesos
In this post I present a story of a bug that hit us recently. Everything was caused by unexpected (although documented) behavior of Go built-in function append. This bug has lived silently for nearly a year in allegro/marathon-consul. Ensure you run the latest version.
Running Mesosphere Marathon is like running… a marathon. When you are preparing for a long distance run, you’ll often hear about Hitting the wall. This effect is described mostly in running and cycling but affects all endurance sports. It happens when your body does not have enough glycogen to produce power and this results in a sudden “power loss” so you can’t run anymore. At Allegro we have experienced a similar thing with Mesosphere Marathon. This is our story on using Marathon in a growing microservice ecosystem, from tens of tasks and a couple applications, to thousands of tasks and over a hundred applications. If there is no mention of Marathon version, it is 1.3.10 and below; we need some time to test and deploy the latest 1.4 release. If you are interested in how our ecosystem is built, take a look at below MesosCon presentation.
Recently our team has been tasked to write a very fast cache service. The goal was pretty clear but possible to achieve in many ways. Finally we de...
Collection of songs related to IT
I have an opportunity to work with all code review styles - No, Pre and Post commit. In this post I’m going to show the differences and compare the strong and weak side of every style.
IMO best way to merge for post commit code review
Simple notification for awaiting reviews in Chrome
Creator
Pathfinder for Warsaw bikes - Veturilo @ 1st FreeportMetrics Hackaton
I was responsible for showing route on map
This book (or in fact two books) thaought me that profesional approach metters and quality should be before quantity. I think that @TheAgileMATT summary is the best:
And there is no exception from this rule
It's unbelievable to me that a company would pay a developer $60-$100k in salary, yet cripple him or her with terrible working conditions and crusty hand-me-down hardware. This makes no business…
My own, highly irresponsible, sloppy test to rate the quality of a software team.
It seems there are three kinds of pull requests that I get. * Awesome, appreciated and wanted. * Not so good, thanks for trying, but perhaps another time. * THE WALL OF PINK
First Computer: | Generic i486 PC with Windows 3.11 |
Favorite Editor: | IDEA IntelliJ |