dyrector.io is a self-hosted continuous delivery & deployment platform with version management. With the platform's help, SaaS businesses can deploy and manage their containerized stack for testing or production purposes faster.
The platform has proven its worth alongside industry and market leading organizations by automating software maintenance tasks to reduce cognitive load on software engineers, and introducing transparency to already existing software development lifecycles.
This is the 2nd launch from dyrector.io platform. View more
dyrector.io
Open-source SelfOps platform for containers.
dyrector.io is an open-source continuous delivery & deployment platform with version management. It's designed to help SaaS businesses increase productivity by reducing cognitive load on engineers by automating and bringing capabilities to one place.
Hey Product Huntπ
This is Levi, co-founder and CEO of the team developing dyrector.io, an open-source continuous delivery and deployment platform that helps SaaS businesses turn user demand into software faster by automation and bringing multiple phases of software development lifecycle to one place.
We bring you this solution with more than 50 years of collective experience in several roles of software development, knowing the ins and outs of all the pitfalls that are bound to happen when you develop and maintain a business application.
Here's what makes dyrector.io special:
π¬ Manage your entire infrastructure and all your services in one interface
This capability replaces SSH, kubectl, and other tools you might need to use to manually access your infrastructure and attach unnecessary cognitive load to seemingly simple processes.
π¬ Deploy your new services without understanding Docker
When you're done developing a new feature and it's integrated into your application, you can configure and deploy it with other self-developed or 3rd-party services with a few clicks.
π¬ 100% open-source and cloud agnostic developer platform
The platform is designed to be compatible with your stack right away. This way you don't have to migrate your services to an entirely new cloud provider.
If you like our platform, please support us by giving a β on our GitHub repository.
Do you have questions? Ask away in the comments, we're happy to answer!
Imagine this: Slack message on a Friday afternoon. Coworker just let me know that we're essentially in the 'generating traffic for DownDetector' business for 20 minutes now. New release broke everything and the one who made the changes is on holiday now. Status page: red, like my face when it hits me I'm going to have to deal with this instead of leaving to buy the railroads in Monopoly and eating pizza with pineapple (my favorite) to end the week. Finding which component it is, which environment, how is it built and deployed, then finding my way to the infrastructure is already a decent todo list to tackle. As I am not accessing this resource often, I have to request access to workload, though automatized, still an additional step. Entering the VM, scraping logs and try to restart the service on the server, praying that it is fairy powder that was missing, of course not. Checking logs, the output is written in alien language to me but it's fine, I'm missing the context completely, no problem. What now? Let's see recent changes in VCS. New feature it is, with configuration changes. Cool, think I found the problem. Edit configuration on the server, because I know how to exit vim. Restarting again π€. Well, what now? I don't know, I'm just a guy working with JavaScript frameworks, I barely know containers & infrastructure. Google "why my site is still down", enter, StackOverFlow, ChatGPT. It's been 67 minutes now since I received the message and it's still down. The guy who can help me out will be out of meeting in 30+ minutes. So, it is going to be fine, at least I keep telling this to myself.
Way to kick off the weekend, right?
As an engineer, technology can become overwhelming and you can feel like a total noob. Being a developer doesn't grant anyone magical skills to fix any problem that occurs. dyrector.io is a platform designed to eliminate the skill gap and the cognitive load of engineers when they inevitably need to wander outside their comfort zones.
Wow, dyrector.io sounds like an outstanding tool for SaaS businesses! I love the idea of reducing the cognitive load on engineers and bringing automation capabilities to one place. Can you tell me more about the version management feature? How does it work, and what benefits does it offer for continuous delivery and deployment?
I'm curious to know if there are any plans to integrate with popular container orchestration tools like Kubernetes or Docker Swarm. It would be great to leverage the strengths of these existing platforms while benefiting from dyrector.io's unique features.
Overall, I'm excited to give dyrector.io a try and see how it can streamline our deployment processes. Keep up the great work!
Congrats guys, we will give it a go! Also i've sent this to few friends that will make a good use of the tool! Congrats once again and I'm sure this will absolute success.
darklens
darklens
Visla
darklens