Sanskar Jaiswal is a software engineer with 7 years of experience building distributed systems and cloud-native tooling, currently at Kong in Bengaluru. He primarily writes Go and Rust and has been a core maintainer on CNCF projects like Flux and Flagger, contributing production-grade GitOps, Git/OCI integration, and progressive delivery features used widely in Kubernetes environments. His open-source work spans high-impact repos—including Kubernetes and Tremor—where he improved storage, networking, Kafka integration, and error/metadata handling, reflecting a strong focus on reliability and observability. Practical and security-minded, he’s added AWS KMS support and SSH/host-key hardening to Fleux components and masked sensitive secrets across tooling. Beyond code, he gravitates toward changes that measurably improve operational stability and developer experience.
6 years of coding experience
4 years of employment as a software developer
Bachelor of Technology - BTech Electronics and Communications Engineering, Bachelor of Technology - BTech Electronics and Communications Engineering at Vellore Institute of Technology
High School Diploma, High School Diploma at Birla High School
Progressive delivery Kubernetes operator (Canary, A/B Testing and Blue/Green deployments)
Role in this project:
DevOps Engineer
Contributions:219 reviews, 86 commits, 178 PRs in 1 year
Contributions summary:Sanskar primarily contributed to improving the stability and functionality of the `flagger` project through a series of commits. Their work focused on resolving issues related to e2e tests for Kuma by updating the installation scripts, and fixing finalizer duplication, likely in relation to Kubernetes resources managed by Flagger. They also removed support for Helm v2 in the loadtester and updated various testing configurations to bump up the versions of test dependencies such as podinfo.
Contributions:151 reviews, 37 commits, 62 PRs in 1 year
Contributions summary:Sanskar primarily focused on improving the source-controller's functionality and maintainability. Their contributions included adding features for configuring SSH key exchange algorithms and garbage collection of artifacts, which suggests improvements to the Git operations. They also addressed bugs related to panics and host key verification, and refactored and optimized the codebase, which implies a focus on code quality and operational efficiency. Their work involved changes to the core git checkout logic.
gitopskubernetesgitops-toolkit
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