Combat misconfigurations. Empower engineers.
Automated policy checks for your Kubernetes pipeline.
“Engineering Director at Canonical- building things - rather than constantly checking for misconfigurations.”
Prevent misconfigurations much earlier
Why combat misconfigurations here?
When you can prevent them so much earlier?
Once launched,
policy checks run automatically
Simply install Datree in one command, configure your policy and add the tool to your workflow.
Engineers
Save time finding and fixing misconfigurations
Automatically flag misconfigurations
Provide easy fixes within the workflow
Enable early detection by shifting left
DevSecOps
Secure your infrastructure, from development to production
Address code security early and prevent errors from reaching production.
“Finding a security bug in production is not a good thing; it’s way too late.” Davide Benvegnù (CoderDave), DevOps Architect at Microsoft & GitHub
Kubernetes Administrators
Enforce your organization’s standards
Choose from rules based on industry best practices and customize additional rules for your teams.
“Get your whole team on board without needing to communicate with them constantly.” Anais Urlichs, Site Reliability Engineer, CNCF Ambassador
Engineers
Reveal unknown configuration issues
Automatically identify errors
Pinpoint error locations
Prevent the next post-mortem!
Empower engineers to write more stable and secure configurations
Free SaaS Plan Available
No Prerequisites to Get Started
Engineer-Friendly Documentation
Lift-Off in Just 3 Steps
with automated policy checks
Install Datree in one command
Test a Kubernetes manifest
Sign in to customize your policy
Loved by engineers across galaxies
Wojciech Krzywiec
"Datree has been such a complementary tool for my personal workloads with Kubernetes. No more firefighting! I can actually sleep at night."
Nana Janashia
“By moving misconfiguration checks to the left, we prevent them from ending up in the cluster.”
Anais Urlichs
“Enable developers to fix errors right away, without the need of back and forth communication.”