I've been diving into open source projects and recently stumbled upon preq, a tool that scans applications including logs, configurations, and Kubernetes objects for potential issues, providing suggestions for fixes that are completely crowd-sourced. It's licensed under Apache 2.0 and supports various technologies like n8n, Kafka, RabbitMQ, and more. I'm curious if anyone here has tried it out in their homelab or workplace? Also, I'm interested in any suggestions for features I should consider contributing to it!
3 Answers
Not sure about the marketing, though. It feels like the least obvious marketing campaign I've seen. 😅
I had a hands-on demo with the founder, and it was impressive! If you're into tutorials, you can check it out here: https://rawkode.academy/watch/hands-on-with-preq-community-driven-reliability-problem-detection.
I really like what I've seen with preq; it kind of reminds me of tools like Cloud Custodian or AWS Config rules, which tackle similar reliability issues but in their own way.

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