I have spent the last year watching the AI conversation shift from smart autocomplete to autonomous contribution. When I test tools like Claude Code or GitHub Copilot Workspace, I am no longer just seeing code suggestions. I am watching them solve tickets and refactor entire modules.
The promise is seductive. I imagine assigning a complex task and returning to merged work. But while these agents generate code in seconds, I have discovered that code verification is the new bottleneck.
For agents to be force multipliers, they cannot rely on humans to validate every step. If I have to debug every intermediate state, my productivity gains evaporate. To achieve 10 times the impact, we must transition to an agent-driven loop where humans provide intent while agents handle implementation and integration.
The code generation feedback loop crisis
Consider a scenario where an agent is tasked with updating a deprecated API endpoint in a user service. The agent parses the codebase, identifies the relevant files, and generates syntactically correct code. It may even generate a unit test that passes within the limited context of that specific repository.
However, problems emerge when code interacts with the broader system. A change might break a contract with a downstream payment gateway or an upstream authentication service. If the agent cannot see this failure, it assumes the task is complete and opens a pull request.
The burden then falls on human developers. They have to pull down the agent’s branch, spin up a local environment, or wait for a slow staging build to finish, only to discover the integration error. The developer pastes the error log back into the chat window and asks the agent to try again. This ping-pong effect destroys velocity.
Boris Cherny, creator of Claude Code, has noted the necessity of closed-loop systems for agents to be effective. An agent is only as capable as its ability to observe the consequences of its actions. Without a feedback loop that includes real runtime data, an agent is building in the dark.
In cloud native development, unit tests and mocks are insufficient for this feedback. In a microservices architecture, correctness is a function of the broader ecosystem.
Code that passes a unit test is merely a suggestion that it might work. True verification requires the code to run against real dependencies, real network latency, and real data schemas. For an agent to iterate autonomously, it needs access to runtime reality.

Source: Signadot.
The requirement: Realistic runtime environments at scale
In a recent blog post, “Effective harnesses for long-running agents,” Anthropic’s engineering team argued that an agent’s performance is strictly limited by the quality of its harness. If the harness provides slow or inaccurate feedback, the agent cannot learn or correct itself.
This presents a massive infrastructure challenge for engineering leadership. In a large organization, you might deploy 100 autonomous agents to tackle backlog tasks simultaneously. To support this, you effectively need 100 distinct staging environments.
The traditional approach to this problem fails at scale. Spinning up full Kubernetes namespaces or ephemeral clusters for every task is cost-prohibitive and slow. Provisioning a full cluster with 50 or more microservices, databases, and message queues can take 15 minutes or more. This latency is fatal for an AI workflow. Large language models (LLMs) operate on a timescale of seconds.
We are left with a fundamental conflict. We need production-like fidelity to ensure reliability, but we cannot afford the production-level overhead for every agentic task. We need a way to verify code that is fast, cheap, and accurate.
The solution: Environment virtualization
The answer lies in decoupling the environment from the underlying infrastructure. This concept is known as environment virtualization.
Environment virtualization allows the creation of lightweight and ephemeral sandboxes within a shared Kubernetes cluster. In this model, a baseline environment runs the stable versions of all services. When an agent proposes a change to a specific service, such as the user service mentioned earlier, it does not clone the entire cluster. Instead, it spins up only the modified workload containing the agent’s new code as a shadow deployment.
The environment then utilizes dynamic traffic routing to create the illusion of a dedicated environment. It employs context propagation headers to route specific requests to the agent’s sandbox. If a request carries a specific routing key associated with the agent’s task, the service mesh or ingress controller directs that request to the shadow deployment. All other downstream calls fall back to the stable baseline services.
This architecture solves the agent-environment fit in three specific ways:
- Speed: Because a single container or pod is launching, rather than a full cluster, sandboxes spin up in seconds.
- Cost: The infrastructure footprint is minimal. You are not paying for idle databases or duplicate copies of stable services.
- Fidelity: Agents test against real dependencies and valid data rather than stubs. The modified service interacts with the actual payment gateways and databases in the baseline.
The seamless verification workflow for AI agents
The mechanics of this verification loop rely on precise context propagation, typically handled through standard tracing headers like OpenTelemetry baggage.
When an agent works on a task, its environment is virtually mapped to the remote Kubernetes cluster. This setup supports conflict-free parallelism. Multiple agents can simultaneously work on the same microservice in different sandboxes without collision because routing is determined by unique headers attached to test traffic.
Here is the autonomous workflow for an agent refactoring a microservice:
- Generation: The agent analyzes a ticket and generates a code fix with local static analysis. At this stage, the code is theoretical.
- Instantiation: The agent triggers a sandbox via the Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. This deploys only the modified workload alongside the running baseline in seconds.
- Verification: The agent runs integration tests against the cluster using a specific routing header. Requests route to the modified service while dependencies fall back to the baseline.
- Feedback: If the change breaks a downstream contract, the baseline service returns a real runtime error (e.g., 400 Bad Request). The agent captures this actual exception rather than relying on a mock.
- Iteration: The agent analyzes the error, refines the code to fix the integration failure, and updates the sandbox instantly. It runs the test again to confirm the fix works in the real environment.
- Submission: Once tests pass, the agent submits a verified pull request (PR). The human reviewer receives a sandbox link to interact with the running code immediately, bypassing local setup.

Source: Signadot.
Why engineering’s future is autonomous
As we scale the use of AI agents, the bottleneck moves from the keyboard to the infrastructure. If we treat agents as faster typists but force them to wait for slow legacy CI/CD pipelines, we gain nothing. We simply build a longer queue of unverified pull requests.
To move toward a truly autonomous engineering workforce, we must give agents the ability to see. They need to see how their code performs in the real world rather than just in a text editor. They need to experience the friction of deployment and the reality of network calls. This is Signadot’s approach.
Environment virtualization is shifting from a tool for developer experience to foundational infrastructure. By closing the loop, agents can do the messy and iterative work of integration. This leaves architects and engineers free to focus on system design, high-level intent, and the creative aspects of building software.
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