
During a two-month period, Hooksie contributed to the chainguard-dev/edu repository by developing features focused on automation and security in Kubernetes environments. They created a regex-based example for assumable ID creation, demonstrating how IDs can be scoped across multiple GitHub repositories and branches using command line interfaces and Shell scripting. This work clarified onboarding processes and enabled more flexible automation workflows for customers. Additionally, Hooksie authored comprehensive documentation for Gatekeeper image signature verification, aligning Chainguard’s approach with Kyverno and providing YAML-based setup instructions. Their contributions emphasized clear, actionable documentation and practical security guidance, supporting both developers and operators in production environments.
In April 2026, delivered documentation work for Gatekeeper image signature verification in the chainguard-dev/edu repository, enabling secure image deployments by verifying and potentially blocking unsigned images in Kubernetes environments. The work also aligned Chainguard's docs with Kyverno's approach to image signatures to improve cross-project consistency and onboarding for operators.
In April 2026, delivered documentation work for Gatekeeper image signature verification in the chainguard-dev/edu repository, enabling secure image deployments by verifying and potentially blocking unsigned images in Kubernetes environments. The work also aligned Chainguard's docs with Kyverno's approach to image signatures to improve cross-project consistency and onboarding for operators.
February 2026: Delivered a feature in chainguard-dev/edu that demonstrates Regex-based assumable ID creation across multiple GitHub repositories and branches. This example clarifies that assumable IDs can be scoped beyond a single repo via the github subcommand. The single commit (67bc9999c623555df401950b99177814b7b54b07) adds the sample and aligns documentation with customer needs. This work reduces onboarding friction and enables customers to apply ID regex patterns across repositories, enhancing automation potential.
February 2026: Delivered a feature in chainguard-dev/edu that demonstrates Regex-based assumable ID creation across multiple GitHub repositories and branches. This example clarifies that assumable IDs can be scoped beyond a single repo via the github subcommand. The single commit (67bc9999c623555df401950b99177814b7b54b07) adds the sample and aligns documentation with customer needs. This work reduces onboarding friction and enables customers to apply ID regex patterns across repositories, enhancing automation potential.

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