Junio Cezar

Software Engineer at Cyral
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Contact Information
us****@****om
(386) 825-5501
Location
Belo Horizonte, Minas Gerais, Brazil, BR

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Robert Tolmach

Junio interned with us this summer. In a word, he's fantastic! He is smart, diligent, responsible, a great team member and team leader, innovative, and very capable. We are so glad to have had the chance to work with him, and we would hire him again any time we could. I give him my most enthusiastic recommendation.

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Experience

    • United States
    • Data Security Software Products
    • 1 - 100 Employee
    • Software Engineer
      • Sep 2019 - Present

      Cyral provides an automated, scalable and production grade solution for logging, baselining and governing all accesses to all data repositories in the hybrid cloud. Cyral provides an automated, scalable and production grade solution for logging, baselining and governing all accesses to all data repositories in the hybrid cloud.

    • Brazil
    • Research
    • 1 - 100 Employee
    • Graduate Researcher
      • Sep 2017 - Oct 2019

      Worked with code instrumentation and developed compiler analyses using the Soot Framework. Dissertation: Scheduling in Heterogeneous Architectures via Multivariate Linear Regression on Function Inputs Worked with code instrumentation and developed compiler analyses using the Soot Framework. Dissertation: Scheduling in Heterogeneous Architectures via Multivariate Linear Regression on Function Inputs

    • France
    • Think Tanks
    • 1 - 100 Employee
    • Graduate Researcher
      • Sep 2018 - Dec 2018

    • Brazil
    • Higher Education
    • 700 & Above Employee
    • Undergraduate Student Researcher
      • Aug 2016 - Sep 2017

      Part-time research working on a compilers project. The goal was to optimize an alias analysis technique using the LLVM infrastructure. Paper: "Demand-driven less-than analysis" https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3125374.3125379 [Working with C++, Bash Script, Linux, LLVM] Part-time research working on a compilers project. The goal was to optimize an alias analysis technique using the LLVM infrastructure. Paper: "Demand-driven less-than analysis" https://dl.acm.org/doi/abs/10.1145/3125374.3125379 [Working with C++, Bash Script, Linux, LLVM]

    • Non-profit Organization Management
    • 1 - 100 Employee
    • Full Stack Developer
      • May 2016 - Aug 2016

      At ClassWish I worked on an online community service platform where high school students could access and work on tasks related to community service. The platform gives the student a certificate indicating the amount of time spent and the tasks done. [Worked with HTML, Javascript, Weebly, CASPIO Database, CSS] At ClassWish I worked on an online community service platform where high school students could access and work on tasks related to community service. The platform gives the student a certificate indicating the amount of time spent and the tasks done. [Worked with HTML, Javascript, Weebly, CASPIO Database, CSS]

    • Brazil
    • Higher Education
    • 700 & Above Employee
    • Undergraduate Student Researcher
      • Jun 2014 - Jun 2015

      Part-time research working on three projects at the Programing Languages Laboratory The first one was an empirical study on the asymptotic complexity of LLVM optimizations. The goal of this project was to provide a snapshot of the asymptotic complexity of all the analyses and optimizations that LLVM runs at its highest optimization level. In order to make this picture available, I have used CSmith, a generator of C programs, to produce a suite of benchmarks with 500 functions of different sizes, ranging from 12 to 11 123,456 instructions. By reporting the time that each one of the LLVM optimization passes takes to run on these programs we obtain a comprehensive idea of its complexity. [On this project I worked with C/C++, LLVM, CSmith] The second project, named Automatic Inference of Loop Complexity through Polynomial Interpolation was a tool we have created which main goal was to determine automatically the asymptotic complexity of functions in C and C++ programs. This project resulted in two published papers (Automatic Inference of Loop Complexity through Polynomial Interpolation) and (Asymptus – A Tool for Automatic Inference of Loop Complexity) in which I am the second author and first author respectively. [On this project I worked mainly with C/C++, LLVM, Bash Script] The third project was the creation of a web page (both frontend and backend) where external users (from outside our laboratory group) could access and use the tools that we create. The frontend was made using HTML, PHP, CSS and the backend with PHP, C++ and some other tools. The page may be accessed using this link: http://cuda.dcc.ufmg.br. It's important to clarify that I've created the initial web page and also a template page which is used by other researchers to create a frontend to their tools. [I worked mainly with HTML, CSS, PHP, Javascript, C++, Linux Systems, CGI-BIN] Show less

Education

  • Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
    MSc in Computer Science, Compilers and Compilers Optimizations
    2017 - 2019
  • Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
    Bachelor of Computer Science
    2012 - 2017
  • Columbia University in the City of New York
    Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Computer Science
    2016 - 2016
  • Indiana University of Pennsylvania
    Bachelor of Science (B.S.), Computer Science
    2015 - 2016

Community

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