Antonio Ramos is a Network DevOps Engineer with 10 years of hands-on experience building and automating networks, cloud infrastructure and Kubernetes clusters across on-prem and cloud environments. He combines practical networking expertise with backend development—contributing to HashiCorp's Terraform providers for Vault and AzureRM—demonstrating skill integrating with APIs, writing provider resources and improving test coverage. Comfortable in Linux, containers, Python and IaC (Terraform, Ansible, Salt), he focuses on self-service networking and automation that makes operations easier for customers. A fast learner who has adapted across many roles and industries, he pairs troubleshooting of consumer and enterprise systems with a knack for simple design and concepting. Based in the Netherlands, he seeks work that creates tangible impact, however small, and has a track record of turning that intent into open-source and production outcomes.
10 years of coding experience
7 years of employment as a software developer
VWO Science and Health + Economy, VWO Science and Health + Economy at Wolfert Dalton Lyceum
Pharmaceutical Sciences, Pharmaceutical Sciences at Utrecht University
Secondary Education Level Portuguese, Secondary Education Level Portuguese at Portuguese School
Contributions:6 reviews, 29 commits, 9 PRs in 1 year 11 months
Contributions summary:Antonio's primary contributions involve enhancing and testing Azure Resource Manager provider for Terraform. The commits demonstrate the addition of an update option and tests for storage containers. Further contributions include the addition of the `extended_key_usage` argument and acceptance tests for key vault certificates. The user is responsible for code integration, ensuring the provider's functionality, and improving test coverage.
Contributions:7 commits, 2 PRs, 7 comments in 7 months
Contributions summary:Antonio primarily contributed to the development of the Vault Terraform provider, adding and modifying backend configurations for various databases and services, including Consul and AWS. Their work involved implementing and updating resources, such as database secret backend connections and roles. These changes required interacting with Vault's API and integrating with various database-specific plugins, demonstrating a focus on back-end functionality and Terraform provider development. Furthermore, the user also made changes to the audit and AWS secret backend resources.
hashicorp-vaultprovidervaulthashicorpterraform
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