Senior Linux Kernel CameraISP Driver Engineer
Job Location:
Palo Alto, CA - USA
Monthly Salary:
Not Disclosed
Posted on:
Yesterday
Vacancies:
1 Vacancy
Job Summary
HI
Greetings from Conch Technologies Inc
Position: Senior Linux Kernel Camera/ISP Driver Engineer
Location: Palo Alto CA
Duration: 6 months
10 years of embedded systems experience with a minimum of 5 years dedicated to Linux kernel driver development.
Expert-level C programming in kernel space including memory management locking primitives (mutexes spinlocks RCU) workqueues and interrupt handling.
Production-level experience with the Linux media stack (V4L2 ioctls Media Controller entities and videobuf2).
Hands-on experience with MIPI CSI-2 sensor and ISP bring-up.
Strong knowledge of DMA-BUF scatter-gather mapping cache coherency and kernel debugging tools (JTAG GDB ftrace lockdep).
Solid understanding of Linux power management (runtime PM and suspend/resume).
Preferred Qualifications
Familiarity with vendor-specific GPU driver stacks TTM memory models and firmware mailbox protocols.
Understanding of camera sensor controls exposure timing and 3A tuning pipelines.
Experience with automotive-grade reliability standards (such as ISO 26262).
A track record of active contributions to the upstream Linux kernel.
Expert-level C programming in kernel space including memory management locking primitives (mutexes spinlocks RCU) workqueues and interrupt handling.
Production-level experience with the Linux media stack (V4L2 ioctls Media Controller entities and videobuf2).
Hands-on experience with MIPI CSI-2 sensor and ISP bring-up.
Strong knowledge of DMA-BUF scatter-gather mapping cache coherency and kernel debugging tools (JTAG GDB ftrace lockdep).
Solid understanding of Linux power management (runtime PM and suspend/resume).
Preferred Qualifications
Familiarity with vendor-specific GPU driver stacks TTM memory models and firmware mailbox protocols.
Understanding of camera sensor controls exposure timing and 3A tuning pipelines.
Experience with automotive-grade reliability standards (such as ISO 26262).
A track record of active contributions to the upstream Linux kernel.
With Regards
Teja Maripeti
Desk: