Luca Dariz is an Embedded System Software Engineer with 17 years of experience bridging applied research and product-grade firmware for real-time and safety-critical systems. He has a strong track record in security protocol design, functional-safety-aware communication stacks, and statistical modelling for cryptosystems, coupled with hands-on embedded Linux driver and RTOS firmware development. His background spans academia and industry—from CNR research and university teaching to R&D and Linux specialist roles at ABB/Hitachi and senior engineering at Praim—bringing both theoretical depth and pragmatic delivery. An active contributor to open-source tooling for interoperable services, he has improved SOAP/WSGI robustness in notable RPC libraries. Based in Trentino–Alto Adige, he blends systems-level C/MISRA expertise with scientific Python and distributed simulation skills, making him adept at turning complex protocol and safety requirements into reliable, audited implementations.
17 years of coding experience
8 years of employment as a software developer
Engineering Telcomunication, Engineering Telcomunication at Universidade de Vigo
Master of Science (M.Sc.) Information and Telecomunication Tecnologies, Master of Science (M.Sc.) Information and Telecomunication Tecnologies at University of Ferrara
A transport agnostic sync/async RPC library that focuses on exposing services with a well-defined API using popular protocols.
Role in this project:
Back-end Developer
Contributions:16 commits in 6 months
Contributions summary:Luca primarily focused on refactoring and improving the `soaplib` library, as suggested by the numerous modifications to the `soaplib` source code. Their work involved removing unnecessary output messages and schemas, and adjusting message handling within the SOAP service. Additionally, the user implemented changes to address WSGI validation and fixed issues related to multiple SOAP binding elements and partnerlink extensions to improve functionality and conformance.
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.