Photo Courtesy of Viney Khokar
The modern enterprise often resembles a vast symphony, each system, application, and data stream a distinct instrument. As cloud infrastructure takes the baton, orchestrating this complexity demands more than raw technical skill. It requires engineers who can convert abstract code into enterprise resilience. Viney Khokar, a veteran in cloud automation engineering, brings that precision and clarity to scale, crafting systems that keep global infrastructure humming in real time.
From Open-Source Roots to Automation at Scale
Khokar’s journey parallels the evolution of enterprise IT over the last two decades. Beginning with Unix and early Linux systems, he quickly positioned himself at the forefront of open-source transformation. As one of the earliest globally certified Red Hat Enterprise Engineers, he recognized early on both the risks of vendor lock-in and the promise of flexible, standards-based computing. Nearly two decades later, he again stands among the pioneers, this time as one of the first members of the Red Hat Accelerators community.
Today, Khokar’s work spans multi-cloud environments, designing platforms on Google Cloud and other enterprise-grade providers. But his real contribution lies in how he reimagines infrastructure, not as static systems, but as dynamic, self-sustaining frameworks.
Blueprints for Repeatable Reliability
Traditional infrastructure was often bespoke, crafted with care but resistant to change. Khokar’s approach is different. He develops automation frameworks using tools like Terraform, Jenkins, Ansible, Pytho, and Github Actions. shifting from handcrafted setups to high-throughput systems that scale predictably.
Under his guidance, deployment workflows become codified, version-controlled, and testable. Tasks that once consumed hours of engineering time are reduced to minutes. Error rates drop. Teams move faster. What used to be guesswork becomes governed by logic.
His high-availability automation for in-memory database clusters, for instance, includes proactive failover systems built with Red Hat Pacemaker. “If it takes 20 minutes to recover instead of two, that can be the difference between a minor incident and a major disruption,” he says. In his world, reliability is baked into the code, not left to chance.
Engineering at the Crossroads of Functions
Khokar’s work spans more than infrastructure. It bridges teams, connecting development, operations, and security within unified automation frameworks. Developers seek speed. Infra teams want stability. Security demands compliance. Khokar ensures none of them are sacrificed.
Through tools like HashiCorp Packer, he builds hardened OS images embedded with security controls, ensuring safeguards are active without slowing developers down. “Protection should be invisible,” he notes. “If it adds friction, it doesn’t scale.”
His mentorship is equally critical. Whether guiding junior engineers on Kubernetes architecture or collaborating across functions, Khokar sees knowledge sharing as foundational. “Automation becomes resilient only when more than one person understands how it works,” he often says.
Where Automation Goes Next: Infrastructure as Data
Today, Khokar is exploring what he calls Infrastructure as Data (IaD), a progression beyond Infrastructure as Code. His pipelines don’t just deploy systems; they monitor, analyze, and correct them. Using GitHub Actions and telemetry feeds, his systems can detect drift, compare against expected states, and auto-remediate without triggering alerts or involving operators.
This approach represents a shift from reactive operations to intelligent infrastructure, systems that sense, decide, and act. For enterprises handling critical workloads, it’s not a luxury, it’s the future.
And it’s already happening. In recent projects, Khokar’s workflows have enabled continuous enforcement of compliance, real-time recovery from performance degradation, and infrastructure-wide visibility, all orchestrated through automation rather than manual review.
Expanding Into GenAI Agents
Alongside this evolution, Khokar is now developing GenAI-powered agents to support cloud operations. These agents are designed to monitor automation pipelines, handle common remediation tasks, and surface insights to engineers in natural language. While still in early stages, the work highlights his commitment to exploring how generative AI can reduce operational toil and enable teams to focus on higher-value engineering.
A Broader Impact Across the Industry
The Infrastructure as Code market is projected to exceed USD $2.1 billion by 2027, and Viney Khokar’s contributions are helping shape that trajectory. His templates, hardened image pipelines, and CI/CD frameworks are in use well beyond individual teams, serving as benchmarks for global infrastructure practices.
More than just a technical leader, he’s a systems thinker, designing guardrails that hold even under extreme pressure. His work ensures that infrastructure not only functions but thrives under real-world stress, from latency-sensitive services to globally distributed applications.
Redefining Reliability, One Line of Code at a Time
For Viney Khokar, cloud automation isn’t about flashy deployments or theoretical models. It’s about building trust, between systems, between teams, and between people and the platforms they rely on. His frameworks reduce toil, enhance collaboration, and create a foundation that lets innovation happen without hesitation.
“The goal isn’t automation for its own sake,” Khokar says. “It’s about removing the blockers that prevent people from doing meaningful work.”
In a world increasingly dependent on invisible infrastructure, his work may not always be seen, but it’s certainly felt, every time something simply works the way it should.