We are seeking a highly skilled Principal Software Engineer with Windows Device Driver Developer experience to join our core engineering team in Bangalore, India. This role is pivotal to our virtualization strategy, focusing on the seamless interoperability of Windows Guest Operating Systems within the Kernel based Virtual Machine stack. You will be responsible for building the "bridge" that allows Windows guests to run with near-native performance, stability, and deep integration on Linux-hosted infrastructure.
Responsibilities
Design, develop, and maintain high-performance Windows kernel-mode drivers (WDM/KMDF) specifically for virtualized environments.
Optimize the Windows-on-KVM stack by implementing "enlightenments" and specialized drivers (e.g., VirtIO) to reduce hypervisor overhead.
Debug complex, low-level interactions between the Windows kernel, the virtual hardware abstraction layer, and the KVM/QEMU host.
Build and maintain internal diagnostic tools to monitor driver health and performance
Work closely with Linux Kernel/KVM specialists to align host-side features with guest-side driver requirements.
Identify and resolve race conditions, memory leaks, and BSODs (Blue Screens of Death) occurring in virtualized contexts.
Requirements
Expert C/C++ Programming: Mastery of systems-level programming where resource management and concurrency are critical.
Windows Kernel Internals: Deep architectural knowledge of Windows memory management, I/O request packets (IRPs), interrupt handling, and the Windows Driver Model (WDM).
Debugging: Expert-level proficiency with kernel debugging
Virtualization Knowledge: Understanding of x86 virtualization extensions (Intel VT-x, AMD-V) and how guest OSs interact with a hypervisor.
Problem Solving: Proven ability to troubleshoot "silent failures" and performance regressions at the boundary between software and virtual hardware.
The following are considered a plus:
Familiarity with the Linux Kernel and subsystems (Scheduler, KVM, QEMU).
Experience using Linux-side debugging tools like gdb , perf , or ftrace to analyze host-guest interactions.
Contributions to open-source virtualization projects or Windows-Linux interoperability layers is a plus