Summary
Caleb Fultz is a Research Computing Linux Engineer with over two decades of hands-on experience building and operating high-performance Linux environments for scientific and telecom domains. He architects and maintains HPC clusters, Lustre and Ceph storage, and virtualized OpenStack/KVM infrastructures while automating deployments with Ansible and orchestrating workloads via Slurm, Docker, and Kubernetes. At the National Radio Astronomy Observatory he supported science that contributed to landmark achievements like the M87 black hole imaging, and now at the University of Virginia he focuses on scalable, secure research computing. Caleb combines deep sysadmin chops (RHEL/CentOS/Ubuntu, ZFS, Cisco) with practical data-network experience from LTE operations, making him adept at bridging compute, storage, and network needs for demanding research workflows. He’s as comfortable tuning a scheduler or filesystem as he is managing GitLab and Nextcloud instances to enable collaborative science.
13 years of coding experience
9 years of employment as a software developer
High School Diploma, High School Diploma at Riverheads High School
CompTIA Certified Information Technology, CompTIA Certified Information Technology at Valley Vocational Technical Center
English