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Remote Linux Device Driver Developer Jobs (NOW HIRING)

C Programming , Device Driver development, Linux Kernel development, Protocol stack development/enhancements e.g. TCP/IP, UDP/IP, Socket layer development/enhancements and adjacencies e.g. libevent ...

$135K - $155K/yr

Low-level ASIC and device drivers. Linux development environment, systems debugging experience ... remote/hybrid virtual team members - Compensation range is $135,000 to $155,000 plus annual bonus

... Linux device management • Experience with a variety of MDM's • Experience with CrowdStrike ... or remote-first workforce • Experience working in public clouds (AWS, GCP, Azure) • Stays ...

Develop and maintain Linux kernel drivers and low-level system software for embedded compute ... Work with device trees, bootloaders, and system bring-up for new hardware platforms * Perform ...

New

Basic understanding of Linux device drivers or hardware bring-up. * Scripting experience in Python ... Engineer at Flock Safety. The First 30 Days * Set up your local development environment and ...

Sr. Embedded Software Engineer

$126K - $166K/yr

Be an embedded Linux expert (kernel, CPU-architecture, security, general device-drivers, and ... Remote work opportunities based on role * Employee Assistance Program (EAP) * Career growth and ...

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How much do remote linux device driver developer jobs pay per hour?

As of Jul 14, 2026, the average hourly pay for remote linux device driver developer in the United States is $55.32, according to ZipRecruiter salary data. Most workers in this role earn between $50.24 and $59.38 per hour, depending on experience, location, and employer.

What does a Remote Linux Device Driver Developer do?

A Remote Linux Device Driver Developer designs, develops, tests, and maintains device drivers for the Linux operating system while working remotely. Their main responsibility is to enable hardware devices, such as network cards or storage controllers, to communicate properly with Linux-based systems. This role involves writing low-level code in languages like C, debugging kernel modules, and collaborating with hardware and software engineers to ensure compatibility and performance. Remote work allows these developers to collaborate with teams worldwide using communication tools and version control systems.

What are the key skills and qualifications needed to thrive as a Remote Linux Device Driver Developer, and why are they important?

To thrive as a Remote Linux Device Driver Developer, you need strong proficiency in C/C++ programming, Linux kernel architecture, and hardware interface protocols, typically backed by a degree in computer science or related field. Familiarity with development tools like Git, GDB, and cross-compilation toolchains, as well as experience with kernel module development, is essential. Excellent problem-solving skills, self-motivation, and effective remote communication set top candidates apart in this role. These skills ensure robust driver performance, smooth hardware integration, and efficient collaboration across distributed teams.

How does a Remote Linux Device Driver Developer typically collaborate with hardware and QA teams?

As a Remote Linux Device Driver Developer, collaboration with hardware engineers and QA teams is crucial to ensure drivers are robust and compatible with target devices. Communication is typically managed through regular video meetings, documentation, and issue tracking platforms like Jira or GitHub. Developers often review hardware specifications, participate in design discussions, and respond to QA feedback on bugs or performance issues. This collaborative workflow ensures hardware-software integration is seamless, even when teams are distributed globally.
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Senior Linux Kernel & Driver Engineer - HPC/AI Fabrics

Senior Linux Kernel & Driver Engineer - HPC/AI Fabrics

Cornelis Networks

Austin, TX • On-site, Remote

Full-time

Posted 14 days ago


Job description

At Cornelis we're building the future of AI and HPC networking with an AI-first approach to silicon and software development. We're seeking engineers who are energized by working on cutting-edge ASIC design and distributed software systems, and who are motivated to push the boundaries on how AI can transform everything from chip architecture to system performance at scale.


Cornelis Networks delivers the world's highest performance scale-out networking solutions for AI and HPC datacenters. Our differentiated architecture seamlessly integrates hardware, software and system level technologies to maximize the efficiency of GPU, CPU and accelerator-based compute clusters at any scale. Our solutions drive breakthroughs in AI & HPC workloads, empowering our customers to push the boundaries of innovation.Backed by top-tier venture capital and strategic investors, we are committed to innovation, performance and scalability - solving the world's most demanding computational challenges with our next-generation networking solutions.


We are a fast-growing, forward-thinking team ofarchitects, engineers, and business professionals with a proven track record of building successful products and companies.As a global organization, our team spans multiple U.S. states and six countries, and we continue to expand with exceptional talent in onsite, hybrid, and fully remote roles.


Cornelis Networks is seeking a talented Linux Kernel and Driver Developer to architect and optimize our next-generation High-Performance Computing (HPC) and Artificial Intelligence (AI) fabric software stack.

Your mission will center on development, optimization, and upstream maintenance of host driver software, focusing on our open-source hfi1 kernel driver and our high-performance user-space Omni-Path Express (OPX) libfabric provider. You will collaborate directly with silicon architects, hardware engineers, and the global open-source community to design software that scales to thousands of nodes with sub-microsecond latency. This role is remote from within the United States.


Key Responsibilities:

  • Design & Optimize Device Drivers: Develop, maintain, and upstream the open-source `hfi1` kernel driver and related subsystems (such as InfiniBand verbs and RDMA core).
  • Hardware-Software Co-Design: Partner closely with silicon architects and hardware developers to define register interfaces, MMIO pathways, command queues, and hardware-software contracts.
  • Develop Zero-Copy Data Paths: Design and optimize low-latency, high-throughput DMA and RDMA transport engines, minimizing buffer copies and maximizing CPU-bypass capabilities.
  • Debug Complex Kernel Concurrency: Identify and resolve intricate kernel-space race conditions, deadlocks, and memory issues under heavy multi-threaded, asynchronous networking workloads.
  • Upstream & Community Engagement: Actively submit patches, participate in code reviews, and represent Cornelis within the Linux Kernel Mailing List (LKML) and open-source networking communities.
  • Package & Build Automation: Maintain and optimize system build environments, kernel-module packages (DKMS, RPM, Kbuild), and automated integration tests.


Required Qualifications:

  • Education: BS, MS, or Ph.D. in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, or a related field (or equivalent practical experience).
  • Kernel-Space Mastery: 3+ years of professional experience writing production-grade C code inside the Linux kernel (kernel modules, LKM, memory management, or interrupt handlers).
  • High-Speed Networking Protocol Knowledge: Direct experience with RDMA, InfiniBand (IB) Verbs, RoCE, or high-performance user-space bypass frameworks (such as libfabric / OFI or DPDK).
  • Hardware Interface Fundamentals: Strong understanding of PCIe architectures, DMA engines, memory mapping (`mmap`), and MMIO.
  • Advanced Kernel Debugging: Hands-on proficiency with kernel analysis tools including `KASAN`, `kmemleak`, `ftrace`, `tracepoints`, `kprobes`, and core crash dump analysis.
  • Scripting & Automation: Proficiency in scripting languages (e.g., Python, Bash) for automated testing and performance profiling.


Nice to Haves:

  • Active track record of contributions to upstream `kernel.org` (specifically under `drivers/infiniband/` or `drivers/net/`).
  • Familiarity with kernel storage protocols (e.g., Lustre, NFS, SRP).
  • Experience with GPU-direct communication technologies (e.g., GPUDirect RDMA, DMA-buf).