A Support Developer with Unix is a specialized IT professional who bridges the critical gap between software development and operational stability. This unique role combines the problem-solving mindset of a developer with the hands-on, keep-the-lights-on focus of production support, all within Unix/Linux-based environments. Professionals in these jobs are essential for ensuring that business-critical applications run smoothly, securely, and efficiently around the clock. They are the guardians of application health, responsible for both proactive maintenance and reactive firefighting. Typically, the core responsibility of a Support Developer is the end-to-end ownership of applications in a production setting. This involves daily monitoring of systems, controlling scheduled batch processes, and being the first line of defense for incident resolution. When issues arise—from performance degradation to complete failures—they diagnose the root cause, which often requires delving into logs, scripts, and application code. Unlike pure support roles, however, a Support Developer doesn't just identify problems; they fix them. They adapt, modify, and write code to resolve bugs, implement patches, and apply necessary parametrization changes. Furthermore, they are actively involved in the project lifecycle for enhancements, taking requirements through analysis, technical specification, coding, unit testing, and deployment across various environments (development, integration, UAT, production). The skill set for these jobs is a powerful hybrid. Proficiency in Unix/Linux shell scripting is non-negotiable, as much of the automation, monitoring, and batch control is script-based. Strong SQL knowledge, often with Oracle or other RDBMS, is required for data querying, reporting adjustments, and backend troubleshooting. A solid understanding of software development principles, version control systems like Git, and configuration management tools is essential. Experience with job schedulers (e.g., Control-M) and code quality/vulnerability scanners is also common. Crucially, professionals must possess analytical prowess to perform technical impact studies and a meticulous approach to following development standards and architectural guidelines. Common requirements for Support Developer with Unix jobs typically include several years of combined experience in development and production support. While industries like finance and banking are prominent employers due to their reliance on stable, report-heavy systems, the role is vital anywhere robust, Unix-hosted applications are key to business operations. Strong communication skills are imperative, as the role involves liaising between business owners, development teams, and operations. A methodical, calm demeanor under pressure and a commitment to continuous improvement—turning support incidents into permanent fixes or enhancements—define success in this critical and rewarding profession, making these jobs a cornerstone of modern IT infrastructure.