I write code that makes computers go brrr. Currently making Kubernetes clusters behave, teaching containers to play nice, and occasionally contributing to projects when my code doesn't segfault.
// Loading awesome code...
404: Social life not found
I'm that person who gets genuinely excited about container orchestration and thinks YAML indentation errors are a personality trait. Currently surviving my B.Tech. at Jabalpur Engineering College while convincing computers to do what I want (sometimes successfully).
When I'm not fixing "it works on my machine" issues, you'll find me deep in the Kubernetes rabbit hole, breaking CI/CD pipelines (then fixing them, I promise), or writing Go code that actually compiles on the first try (rare achievement unlocked).
It's a feature, trust me
Coffee.isRequired() = true
Vim user (btw)
Some code that actually works (mostly)
A README on steroids documenting my adventures in code. Because if you didn't document it, did it even happen? Contains actual proof that I write code beyond "Hello, World!" and occasionally my PRs get merged.
Replaced Minio with SeaweedFS because why not? Made Kubeflow components actually secure instead of just hoping nobody notices. Now pods can't do whatever they want - they have standards to follow (PSS enforced, no more wild west).
Made Jaeger V2 talk to more databases because apparently one wasn't enough. Now it speaks Cassandra, Badger, Elasticsearch, and Memstore fluently. Also wrote tests that actually test things (revolutionary, I know).
Enhanced CI/CD workflows in the Kubeflow ecosystem with automated code quality checks, pre-commit hooks, and improved testing frameworks. Migrated critical infrastructure from DockerHub to GCR.
Sometimes I see a bug, I fix it. Sometimes I see missing features, I add them. Mostly I'm just trying to make the tools I use daily suck less. Turns out CNCF projects always need help (shocking, right?).
My commit history IRL
Pursuing Bachelor of Technology with focus on cloud computing, distributed systems, and software engineering. Actively participating in hackathons and technical communities.
Response time may vary based on coffee levels
Want to discuss why Kubernetes is both the best and worst thing ever invented? Need someone to blame for broken deployments? Or just want to argue about tabs vs spaces? I'm your person.