Kordian Bruck is a Site Reliability Engineer based in Bavaria, Germany, with 12 years of experience building and maintaining dependable backend systems. He combines pragmatic SRE practices with hands-on Go development, evident from contributions like migrating terminal weather app wego to Go modules and extending the go-gitlab SDK to support GitLab Packages APIs. Kordian focuses on improving build systems, API integrations, and maintainability—often preferring clean refactors such as switching to pointer parameters for clarity and efficiency. He describes himself as someone who "converts pizza to code," hinting at a practical, productivity-driven approach and a fondness for getting things done.
Contributions:3 releases, 13 reviews, 3 commits in 1 day
Contributions summary:Kordian primarily focused on maintaining and updating the project's dependencies and backend logic. Key contributions include migrating the project to Go modules and updating the Go version. They also reverted a previous update to the openweathermap.org backend and removed a reference to an obsolete backend. The user's work involved modifying the `go.mod` file and various Go source files, highlighting their focus on maintaining the project's build and API integrations.
Contributions:5 reviews, 10 commits, 1 PR in 9 days
Contributions summary:Kordian primarily focused on adding support for packages APIs within the GitLab Go SDK. Their contributions involved defining data structures (`Package`, `PackageFile`) and implementing methods for interacting with the GitLab Packages API, including listing and deleting packages and package files. They also refactored code to use pointers for parameters within the API methods. This work demonstrates a focus on extending the SDK's functionality for managing packages within GitLab projects.
golanggitlab-cigitlab-apigitlabsdk
Find and Hire Top DevelopersWe’ve analyzed the programming source code of over 60 million software developers on GitHub and scored them by 50,000 skills. Sign-up on Prog,AI to search for software developers.