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Our installer is indeed an important part of what we’re offering and we’re continuously evolving our operator to manage the ongoing maintenance. But in terms of being a feature complete, Open Source Datadog, you’re right that we have a long way to go to achieve our vision. As mentioned in other replies, we are working on other interesting components as well, such as a new collaborative UI (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25996154), API integrations (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=25994268), and more. That being said, in case you couldn’t tell, we love software from Grafana Labs. It’s popular for a reason. However, we want it to be as easy to install and maintain as clicking a button, i.e., as simple as Datadog. So one problem we are trying to solve today is that while, yes, you can stitch together all of their OSS projects yourself (and many, many people do), it’s a non-trivial exercise to set up and then maintain. We’ve done it ourselves, seen friends go through it; we’d like to stop everyone from becoming a subject matter expert and reinventing the wheel. (Especially since when our friends do it themselves they always skimp on important things like, say, security.) Bottom line—we’re inspired by Grafana Labs. We strive to also be good OSS stewards and contribute to the overall ecosystem like they have. Another way to solve the “stitching-it-together” problem, as you mentioned, is of course pay Grafana Labs for their SaaS (which I’ve done in the past) or one of their on-prem Enterprise versions. However, these are not open source. The former is hosted in their cloud account and single-tenant; the latter have no free versions. We think Opstrace provides a lot of value, but we understand that it’s not for everyone. |