Full-Time

Openshift Senior Software Engineer

Posted on 5/16/2026

Deadline 5/31/26
Red Hat

Red Hat

10,001+ employees

Open-source enterprise software platform and services.

No salary listed

Pune, Maharashtra, India

In Person

Category
Software Engineering (1)
Required Skills
Kubernetes
Microsoft Azure
OpenShift
Git
Java
AWS
Go
C/C++
Google Cloud Platform
Requirements
  • 3+ years of professional software development experience with kubernetes or related platforms
  • Bachelor's or Master's in computer science, computer engineering, or a technology-related degree program
  • Practical development experience in Go, Java or C++. Good understanding in at least one of the programming languages to build enterprise applications and/or backend services/applications
  • Familiarity with frameworks, libraries, or SDKs for your language of choice
  • Hands on with both the development and operational topics to Red Hat OpenShift/Kubernetes
  • Developing a Kubernetes controller, operator, or platform component
  • Excellent communication skills; knowledge of agile programming practices and pair programming practices
  • Understanding of test-driven development, continuous integration (CI) and delivery (CD), committer or contributor model and experience using Git
Responsibilities
  • Develop secure, reliable and scalable software, primarily in Golang, OpenShift and cloud-native technologies
  • Work in an agile team using agile development practices based on test-driven development and DevOps
  • Developing and maintaining OADP controllers and operators
  • Integrating with various cloud backup providers (AWS, GCP, Azure)
  • Implementing new features based on Velero enhancements
  • Troubleshooting and resolving customer issues related to backups and restores
  • Performance tuning and optimization of OADP
  • Participate in the Velero community by submitting patches, features, documentation, and participating in forums, and speaking at user groups and conferences
  • Support Customers for the product

Red Hat provides open-source software and services for large organizations, focusing on cloud-native infrastructure and application management. Its flagship OpenShift is a Kubernetes-based platform that lets enterprises deploy, manage, and scale containerized apps across multiple clouds. It offers a marketplace of certified enterprise software and professional services under a subscription model with updates and support. Its goal is to help enterprises modernize IT infrastructure across clouds while avoiding vendor lock-in.

Company Size

10,001+

Company Stage

Acquired

Total Funding

$34B

Headquarters

Raleigh, North Carolina

Founded

1993

Simplify Jobs

Simplify's Take

What believers are saying

  • AI tooling like Red Hat Desktop and OpenShift Dev Spaces deepens developer workflows.[1]
  • OpenShift Virtualization helps customers modernize VMs without disrupting existing infrastructure.[4]
  • Red Hat's broad hybrid-cloud portfolio fits enterprises seeking consistency, choice, and control.[2][4]

What critics are saying

  • Hyperscaler-managed Kubernetes platforms keep compressing OpenShift pricing power.[2][4]
  • VMware migration cycles expose OpenShift Virtualization to slower-than-expected conversion demand.[2][4]
  • Subscription buyers face procurement pressure as community alternatives and partner services improve.[5][6]

What makes Red Hat unique

  • Red Hat monetizes enterprise open source through subscriptions, support, training, and consulting.[2][4]
  • OpenShift and OpenShift Virtualization target hybrid-cloud modernization across applications and virtual machines.[2][4]
  • Ansible and Lightspeed position Red Hat as an automation and governance layer for operations.[1][4]

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Benefits

Health Insurance

Dental Insurance

Vision Insurance

401(k) Retirement Plan

401(k) Company Match

Paid Vacation

Paid Sick Leave

Paid Holidays

Parental Leave

Family Planning Benefits

Tuition Reimbursement

Growth & Insights and Company News

Headcount

6 month growth

0%

1 year growth

0%

2 year growth

0%
AbstractCore
May 26th, 2026
Red Hat launches new developer tools for agentic AI.

Red Hat launches new developer tools for agentic AI. ANI 26 May 2026, 21:11 GMT+10 New Delhi [India], May 13: Red Hat, the world's leading provider of open-source solutions, today announced expanded capabilities across its developer portfolio specifically built for the requirements of AI agents. Through the newly-available Red Hat Desktop and enhancements to Red Hat Advanced Developer Suite, Red Hat intends to smooth the transition from agents running locally on developer workstations to production-scale deployments across the hybrid cloud. What Red Hat announced With today's general availability of Red Hat Desktop, Red Hat is providing commercial support for the Red Hat build of Podman Desktop, creating a more reliable foundation for local container and AI development. Red Hat Desktop also includes capabilities for isolated AI agent sandboxing, an initiative designed to help developers execute and test autonomous agents in a protected sandbox on their local hardware, preventing unverified agent actions from affecting the host OS. Red Hat Advanced Developer Suite also adds new capabilities, including a trusted software factory, Red Hat Trusted Libraries and AI-driven exploit intelligence to modernize security across the software supply chain. These new features use AI to determine if known vulnerabilities in generated code are relevant to a specific application runtime, allowing developers to prioritize remediation based on actual risk. Why this matters As the volume of AI-generated code increases, developers need a workflow that balances local experimentation with enterprise-grade deployment. Whether developers start locally with Red Hat Desktop or in a cloud-based development environment via Red Hat OpenShift Dev Spaces, they receive the same consistency and governance required for enterprise production. By unifying these environments and transitioning to production scale with Red Hat OpenShift, Red Hat enables teams to treat AI agents as tier-one applications. This approach provides a security-driven path to production, enabling developers to move from experimental local sandboxes to verified, scalable innovation across the hybrid cloud. What Red Hat experts are saying 'The transition to agentic AI expands the requirements for modern application development,' said James Labocki, Senior Director, Product Management, Red Hat. 'By establishing a trusted production path across the hybrid cloud with Red Hat Advanced Developer Suite and providing consistent environments through Red Hat Desktop and Red Hat OpenShift Dev Spaces, The UK News is helping developers accelerate and own their AI strategy with the same rigor they apply to their core IT applications.' Key takeaways - Standardized AI lifecycle: Red Hat provides a more consistent experience from local machines to the cloud, helping organizations move AI from experimental projects to repeatable production workflows.- Maintain developer choice: Red Hat has expanded support in Red Hat OpenShift Dev Spaces, a Red Hat OpenShift feature, to include integration with Amazon Web Services (AWS) Kiro coding assistant (technical preview). This joins existing integration for Microsoft Copilot, Claude CLI and more, providing the flexibility to use preferred coding assistants and environments from local machines.- Shift security left: Built on Red Hat Hardened Images and Red Hat Trusted Libraries (both available with SLSA Level 3 origin and integrity), these tools provide a software supply chain that is transparent and verifiable before code is even written.- Sandbox-first testing: Developers can execute autonomous agents in an isolated environment, providing a safety layer to observe agent behaviors before cluster deployment. Deeper details: Red Hat Desktop and Podman integrationRed Hat Desktop delivers an enterprise-supported environment for local container and AI development centered on the hardened and supported Red Hat build of Podman Desktop. Developers can easily access the full library of Red Hat Hardened Images from their laptop, while connecting to local or remote OpenShift clusters for unit testing. This ensures that the container running on the developer's machine is architecturally consistent with the one running in production. Developers looking to test sandboxed AI agents can find more information at www.openkaiden.ai. Flexible coding assistants Red Hat OpenShift Dev Spaces now provides an extensible framework that allows developers to integrate preferred AI-driven tools directly into their cloud-based IDE. This includes new support for the AWS Kiro coding assistant (technical preview), alongside existing integrations for Microsoft Copilot, Claude CLI, Cline, Continue, Roo and more. By supporting both proprietary and open-source assistants, Red Hat enables teams to use frontier models or host private models, helping to align developer productivity tools with corporate security and sovereignty requirements. Red Hat Advanced Developer Suite enhancementsThe latest version of Red Hat Advanced Developer Suite introduces the developer preview of a trusted software factory based on accepted CNCF best practices and Red Hat's internal build processes. This provides a standards-based CI/CD implementation that customers can use as-is or tweak and replicate to meet specific needs. Additional features include: - Red Hat Trusted Libraries: Curated Python packages built on SLSA Level 3 infrastructure with added software bill of materials (SBOMs) and cryptographic signatures to help provide a more transparent and verifiable software supply chain.- Exploit intelligence: Developed using the NVIDIA AI blueprint for vulnerability analysis, this capability uses AI-driven code reasoning to determine if a vulnerable function is actually reachable in an application's runtime environment. By isolating exploitable code paths from broader vulnerability data, Red Hat helps developers prioritize fixes that actually impact security. Red Hat Summit Join the Red Hat Summit keynotes live on YouTube to hear the latest from Red Hat executives, customers and partners: - The next platform is choice - Tuesday, May 12, 8:30-10 a.m. EDT- The AI-ready enterprise is here - Wednesday, May 13, 9-10 a.m. EDT Learn more: - OpenShift: Consistent integration for the hybrid enterprise- Red Hat Hardened Images Accelerates Cloud-Native Development and Zero-CVE Strategies- Red Hat Desktop brings Kubernetes-aligned development to the desktop- From experimentation to production: Building trust in the agentic AI era- Learn more about Red Hat Summit- See all of Red Hat's announcements this week in the Red Hat Summit newsroom- Follow @RedHatSummit or #RHSummit on X for event-specific updates Connect with Red Hat - Learn more about Red Hat- Get more news in the Red Hat newsroom- Read the Red Hat blog- Follow Red Hat on X- Follow Red Hat on Instagram- Watch Red Hat videos on YouTube- Follow Red Hat on LinkedIn About Red Hat Red Hat is the open hybrid cloud technology leader, delivering a trusted, consistent and comprehensive foundation for transformative IT innovation and AI applications. Its portfolio of cloud, developer, AI, Linux, automation and application platform technologies enables any application, anywhere-from the datacenter to the edge. As the world's leading provider of enterprise open source software solutions, Red Hat invests in open ecosystems and communities to solve tomorrow's IT challenges. Collaborating with partners and customers, Red Hat helps them build, connect, automate, secure and manage their IT environments, supported by consulting services and award-winning training and certification offerings. Forward-Looking Statements Except for the historical information and discussions contained herein, statements contained in this press release may constitute forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are based on the company's current assumptions regarding future business and financial performance. These statements involve a number of risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially. Any forward-looking statement in this press release speaks only as of the date on which it is made. Except as required by law, the company assumes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. Red Hat, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, the Red Hat logo and OpenShift are trademarks or registered trademarks of Red Hat, LLC or its subsidiaries in the U.S. and other countries. Linux is the registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in the U.S. and other countries. (ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by NewsVoir. ANI will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same.)

TSANet
May 19th, 2026
Red Hat hosts TSANet Europe Focus Group meeting.

Red Hat hosts TSANet Europe Focus Group meeting. Red Hat hosted the Europe TSANet Focus Group at its site in Munich, Germany, on May 6-7, 2026. Participants representing HPE, Microsoft, Red Hat, NetApp, Fujitsu, AWS, IBM, Nutanix, F5 Networks, and DriveSavers attended the meeting either in person or virtually. Sovereign support. Red Hat emphasized support as a core contributor to customer value, highlighting sovereign cloud, AI adoption, and virtualization migration as key industry trends. A dedicated legal session examined the complexity of IT sovereignty and its variations across regions. AWS, Microsoft, and NetApp presented their sovereignty strategies, focusing on data residency, resilience, multi-region architectures, flexible cloud deployment options, and on-premises control. 2026 TSANet plan update. TSANet provided an update, explaining that the strategy focuses on the partner collaboration platform. This includes TSANet Connect, the Technology Partner Framework (clarifying collaboration with OEM, solution, and certified partners), and an upcoming expansion into the service provider space. AI in Motion - Discover practical applications for internal processes and customer solutions. The theme "AI for the grind, humans for the gold" focused on AI in technical support. Companies reported declining support volumes as customers increasingly self-solve with AI, while critical cases remain steady. AWS, Red Hat, HPE, Nutanix, and IBM presented AI initiatives, including agentic AI, automated workflows, and embedded assistants designed to boost engineer productivity rather than replace them. Discussions highlighted AI's growing role in case reduction, proactive support, skill-based routing, and customer experience, with consensus that AI will handle routine work while humans focus on complex issues. Next meeting planned - fall 2026. The next TSANet EMEA meeting will be hosted by HPE in Sofia, Bulgaria in fall 2026.

Acordis Technology & Solutions
May 18th, 2026
Acordis joins the Red Hat partner ecosystem.

Acordis joins the Red Hat partner ecosystem. Acordis is proud to announce that Acordis Corp has officially joined the Red Hat partner ecosystem, further expanding its ability to deliver enterprise infrastructure, hybrid cloud, automation, and modernization solutions for organizations across South Florida and beyond. As businesses continue navigating rapid digital transformation, the demand for scalable, secure, and flexible technology environments has never been greater. Through this partnership, Acordis gains access to expanded enterprise technologies, training, technical resources, and collaboration opportunities designed to help organizations modernize more efficiently. Red Hat is globally recognized as a leader in enterprise open-source software, powering advanced hybrid cloud, Linux, Kubernetes, automation, and containerized environments for organizations worldwide. By joining the Red Hat partner network, Acordis strengthens its ability to support clients with future-ready infrastructure solutions built for performance, resilience, and innovation. This partnership enhances Acordis' capabilities across: * Hybrid cloud infrastructure * Enterprise Linux platforms * Kubernetes and container orchestration * IT automation with Red Hat Ansible * Cloud-native application development * Infrastructure modernization * AI-driven technologies * Cybersecurity resilience and compliance By combining Acordis' expertise with Red Hat's industry-leading open-source technologies, clients gain a trusted partner capable of guiding them through every stage of their technology evolution. "Technology is evolving faster than ever, and organizations today need partners that can help them modernize strategically while remaining agile, secure, and scalable," said Rehan Khan, CEO of Acordis Technology & Solutions. "Joining the Red Hat partner ecosystem strengthens our ability to support clients as they continue adopting hybrid cloud environments, automation, AI-driven technologies, and enterprise infrastructure solutions designed for the future." As Acordis continues growing its partnerships with leading technology providers, Acordis Corp remain focused on helping organizations simplify operations, improve resilience, strengthen security, and embrace innovation with confidence. Acordis is a South Florida-based technology provider specializing in Managed IT, Cybersecurity, Cloud, Networking, Collaboration, and Enterprise Technology Solutions. Through strategic partnerships, Acordis helps organizations build secure, scalable, and innovative environments that support long-term growth.

Leostream
May 5th, 2026
Leostream announces unified HPC Remote Access interoperability to simplify decentralized live and post-production.

Leostream announces unified HPC Remote Access interoperability to simplify decentralized live and post-production. Partner ecosystem built with technical integrations and validation from Nutanix, AWS, Red Hat OpenShift, HP, Mechdyne, and Microsoft BOSTON - May 5, 2026 - Leostream Corporation, creator of the world-leading Leostream(R) Remote Desktop Access Platform, today announced unified remote access for high-performance computing environments built with widely available tools and platforms from partners including Nutanix, AWS, Red Hat OpenShift, HP, Mechdyne, and Microsoft. Leostream's HPC "ecosystem" ensures customers gain a simplified, fully interoperable, integrated solution for cloud/hybrid cloud HPC with scalability for large workloads that delivers strong GPU performance in distributed enterprises, whether multi-site or fully virtual. The Leostream platform and partner components optimize compute usage to lower cost, simplify IT, and ensure end-user productivity. Leostream's Connection Broker and Gateways provide end-user access, orchestration, provisioning and power control - key to cost savings in cloud HPC. Leostream's unified HPC ecosystem includes high-performance display protocols Amazon DCV, HP Z Remote Graphics Software, and Mechdyne TGX that support demanding workloads such as video editing in live or post-production, AI training, running and viewing simulations, and 3D rendering in scientific research. "A unified, interoperable HPC ecosystem offers options for enterprises of all sizes and all flavors, with the Leostream platform in the center for controlling end-user connections to resources like cloud GPUs, session management, and ensuring data and applications stay secure regardless of where they're located," said Karen Gondoly, Leostream CEO. "These vendors represent the industry's best options for running HPC in cloud, multi-cloud, and hybrid cloud scenarios, and multiple enterprise deployments with one or more partners have verified the cost savings, reduced complexity, and radical performance and scalability improvements that result." Leostream has achieved certifications, validations, and integrations with Nutanix Prism, Red Hat OpenShift via KubeVirt API, AWS EC2 and Amazon WorkSpaces Core Managed Instances, Microsoft Azure, HP Anyware (PCoIP) and HP Z Remote Graphics Software, Amazon DCV, and Mechdyne TGX. Leostream's HPC family also includes OpenStack for open-source public and private clouds, such as Virtuozzo, and GeoComputing's RiVA solution for oil/gas and energy providers. The Leostream Remote Desktop Access Platform for hosted desktops and workstations offers a comprehensive solution for remote access to maintain productivity, control costs, and ensure security with strict authentication and authorization built on zero-trust concepts. Its connection management system eliminates clunky corporate VPNs with an ultra-efficient gateway that gives users access to only the specific resources they have permission to use, automatically, regardless of their location or device. The Leostream Platform shines even in environments that rely on complex, specialty applications like energy and science; large files such as media and entertainment; real-time performance like financial services; and bulletproof network security like government and defense. About Leostream Leostream digital workspace management solutions embody over 20 years of Leostream research and development in supporting customers with hosted desktop environments, including VDI, hybrid cloud, and high-performance display protocols. The Leostream high performance Remote Desktop Access Platform provides the world's most robust digital workspace connection management and remote access feature set, allowing today's enterprises to choose the best-of-breed components to satisfy their complex security, cost, and flexibility needs while working with them as they evolve into tomorrow. The Leostream Privileged Remote Access service simplifies, secures, and monitors temporary access to corporate resources for vendors, service providers, and external contractors. Follow Leostream on LinkedIn and X. Leostream is a registered trademark of Leostream Corporation in the United States. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Global Media Relations Contact: JPR Communications Judy Smith +1 818 522 9673

It's FOSS
Apr 28th, 2026
After 2 weeks of delay, Fedora 44 is finally here!

After 2 weeks of delay, Fedora 44 is finally here! It's good to fix bugs rather than rushing for the release. The Fedora Project has had an interesting journey since its inception in November 2003. It started as a community-backed effort spun off from Red Hat Linux, which Red Hat had decided to retire in favor of its commercial Enterprise Linux product. Rather than leave the community without a home, Red Hat partnered with contributors to launch Fedora as an open, community-driven distribution that would push new technologies forward. That upstream-first philosophy has held ever since. Fedora consistently ships things before most other distributions dare to, from Wayland adoption to newer compiler toolchains, often serving as the real-world test bed for what eventually becomes Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Of course it is not limited to that; its various flavors serve all kinds of users, starting from desktop users to server administrators, hobbyist tinkerers, and anyone running containerized workloads at scale. Now, to the topic at hand, a new Fedora release has landed, and as always, TagSpaces GmbH must check out what it offers. Fedora 44: what's new? The release ships with Linux kernel 6.19, which introduces expanded hardware support, and some noteworthy improvements for gaming that TagSpaces GmbH will talk about later. Both desktop variants, Workstation and KDE Plasma Desktop, arrive with fresh wallpapers, as is tradition with every Fedora release. Workstation gets GNOME 50, which finalizes the removal of X11 from GDM and promotes variable refresh rate and fractional scaling to stable status. KDE Plasma Desktop bumps up to Plasma 6.6, which introduces a post-install setup wizard and swaps out SDDM for the new Plasma Login Manager as the default across all KDE variants. Beyond the desktops, this release brings meaningful improvements to gaming through the NTSYNC kernel module, a reworked Games Lab spin, a freshly updated GNU toolchain, and a range of language runtime upgrades. There's quite a bit packed in here! GNOME 50. GNOME 50 is the flagship desktop for Fedora Workstation 44, and it comes with a major change that has been a long time coming. X11 has been fully removed from GDM. The plan was originally to do this in GNOME 49, but a last-minute bug had caused it to be pulled back. Then there are the two features, variable refresh rate and fractional scaling, that have been sitting behind experimental flags for an awkwardly long time are now stable. If you have a high refresh rate display and have been holding off, then this Fedora release is the right time to try them out. Additionally, the Files app (Nautilus) picks up case-insensitive path completion in the location bar and switches to GNOME's sandboxed Glycin library for more efficient loading of image thumbnails. KDE Plasma 6.6. KDE Plasma 6.6 powers Fedora KDE Plasma Desktop 44 in this release, with improvements like OCR support in Spectacle, the screenshot tool. You can now pull text directly out of a screenshot, which can be a genuinely useful thing to have when you are copying error messages or text from images. Accessibility sees a solid round of additions too. There is a new on-screen keyboard called Plasma Keyboard, a grayscale filter in the Color Blindness Correction settings, and the Zoom and Magnifier tool gains a new tracking mode that keeps the pointer centered. The release also adds the ability to save your current desktop layout as a custom global theme, ambient light sensor support for automatic brightness adjustment, and Wi-Fi QR code scanning from the system tray's Networks widget. But wait, there are more KDE-related changes! All Fedora KDE variants now include Plasma Setup, a post-install wizard that handles account creation and initial configuration separately from the OS installer, and Anaconda (the installer) has been updated to skip the setup stages that would otherwise overlap with it. The other notable change for KDE users is the switch from SDDM to Plasma Login Manager (PLM) as the login manager, making Fedora 44 the first distribution to ship it by default. Gaming is better now. Installing Wine, Steam, or open source game launchers (e.g., Lutris and Heroic Games Launcher) on Fedora 44 now quietly pulls in the NTSYNC kernel module as a recommended dependency. NTSYNC handles thread synchronization at the kernel level, which takes a chunk of work off Wine and Proton's plate. The result is better Windows game (and software) compatibility and a performance bump in many titles, with no configuration work required from your side. The Games Lab spin also gets a proper refresh. Xfce is out, KDE Plasma is in, specifically for the better Wayland support it brings to gaming workloads. If you didn't know, this is one of Fedora's curated offerings that brings together a decent spread of open source games across genres like turn-based strategy, puzzles, and first-person shooters. Toolchain upgrades. Fedora 44 also brings a pack of toolchain and language runtime updates, keeping it well-positioned as a development platform: * PHP 8.5 * LLVM 22 * CMake 4.0 * Golang 1.26 * Ansible 13 (Core 2.20) * Ruby 4.0 (up from Ruby 3.4 in Fedora 43). * MariaDB 11.8 as the new distribution default (up from 10.11). * GNU Toolchain: GCC 16.1, glibc 2.43, binutils 2.46, gdb 16.3. Download or upgrade to Fedora 44. This release of Fedora is offered for Workstation, KDE Plasma Desktop, Server, IoT, and the various spins. You can either pick a relevant ISO from one of those or visit the official website for an overview of this release. Existing Fedora users can upgrade through their software center. Open Software (Workstation) or Discover (KDE Plasma) and look for the upgrade notification banner to begin the process. Users of other Fedora spins need to upgrade using DNF. TagSpaces GmbH has a dedicated Fedora upgrade guide to help you. A nerd with a passion for open source software, custom PC builds, motorsports, and exploring the endless possibilities of this world.

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