Vacancy Circular No:
National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA)
invites applications for recruitment of Senior Devops Engineer
-, New Delhi, - Delhi
Number of Vacancy: 1 Posts
| NIUA Vacancy 2022 Recruitment 2022 | Details |
|---|---|
| Job Role | Senior Devops Engineer |
| Education Requirement | B.Tech, B.E |
| Total Vacancy | 1 Post |
| Job Locations | New Delhi |
| Experience | 4 - 6 years |
| Salary | Not Disclosed |
| Posted on | 25 Mar, 2022 |
| Last Date To Apply | 31 Mar, 2022 |
Educational Qualification: B.Tech/B.E
Experience: Please refer to official document
1. Post Name: Senior Devops Engineer 2. Scope of work: Lead the development and operations team to efficiently coordinate with the developers in the program; facilitate coordination among operations, development, and testing functions by automating and streamlining the integration and deployment processes. The deployment of the UAT, Production, and certain other environments and owning the secure day to day operations of these instances will be the main responsibility of this role. 3. Project: UPYOG - Urban Platform for deliverY of Online Governance under National Urban Digital Mission 4. Duration: 12 Months - extendable 5. Qualification: BE/B.tech 6. Experience: 4-6 Years of relevant experience Strong Computer Networking fundamentals Experience with modern DevOps fundamentals, tools and techniques
Pay Scale:
INR
Not Disclosed
Age Limit: As Per Rules
Selection Will be Based either Written Exam/Interview
Last Date to Apply: Thursday, 31 March 2022
Published on: 25 March 2022
For more details, please refer to official notification at Download Official Notification
The National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA) is India’s leading national think tank on urban planning and development. As a hub for the generation and dissemination of cutting-edge research in the urban sector, NIUA seeks to provide innovative solutions to address the challenges of a fast urbanizing India and pave the way for more inclusive and sustainable cities of the future.
Since the 1970s, Indian cities have undergone a transformative journey. Following rapid industrialization post-Independence, an increase in population has taken place alongside large-scale rural-to-urban migration. With urban hubs swelling in size and density, exciting opportunities for growth have come into view whilst being accompanied by new risks and challenges. As cruxes of economic and political power, the question of how cities are planned, governed, and indeed, for who becomes all the more crucial.