The 10 Coolest New DevOps Startups Of 2020

Here are 10 startups helping to power the DevOps revolution with a diverse array of technology for enabling the collaboration between developers and operators that‘s necessary to release software at the speed of the cloud.

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DevOps has become the guiding philosophy of almost every modern application development and delivery organization.

A new breed of DevOps startups is supporting the broad shift to Agile software development and delivery by simplifying the automation of workflows, providing greater visibility into cloud-native architectures and integrating security across DevOps processes.

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Here are 10 startups helping to power the DevOps revolution with a diverse array of technology for enabling the collaboration between developers and operators that‘s necessary to release software at the speed of the cloud.

Apollo GraphQL

CEO: Geoff Schmidt

DevOps teams are increasingly turning to GraphQL as a simplified method of sending queries to APIs for specific and useful data. The query language open-sourced by Facebook delivers significant benefits in application performance and end-user experience compared to traditional REST APIs.

Apollo GraphQL is the leading provider of the technology, accounting for more than 90 percent of GraphQL downloads.

The San Francisco-based startup‘s platform simplifies app development by combining APIs, databases and microservices into a single data graph that can be queried by GraphQL.

Lightstep

CEO: Ben Sigelman

This San Francisco-based startup offers performance monitoring solutions for modern applications built with microservices or serverless architectures.

LightStep enables DevOps teams to take advantage of distributed tracing to get deep visibility into those cloud-native environments so they can improve their performance and reliability. The platform detects changes impacting the health of services spanning multi-cloud environments, and a correlation engine performs rapid root cause analysis.

DevOps teams can also take advantage of aggregate trace analysis functionality such as latency histogram comparisons and operations diagrams.

LogDNA

CEO: Tucker Callaway

LogDNA, based in Mountain View, Calif., provides a log management offering that can rapidly parse and search petabytes of data across disparate cloud environments.

The startup enables DevOps teams to centralize their logs and glean from them actionable insight on the status of development and production environments across the stack. The offering is built on Kubernetes and easily spans public cloud and on-premises infrastructure.

LogDNA took a leap forward with its channel strategy this year while forging a close partnership with IBM Cloud.

Netlify

CEO: Mathias Biilmann Christensen

More than a million developers use Netlify to automate their web applications with modern build workflows.

The San Francisco-based startup, which brings DevOps methods to web development, also offers a global application delivery network to deliver secure and scalable websites and applications.

Netlify is the driving force behind Jamstack, a modern web architecture that enhances the functionality of static websites with APIs and serverless functions.

Postman

CEO: Abhinav Asthana

Postman‘s collaboration platform enables DevOps teams to jointly develop APIs and manage their complete life cycles. In that sense, the San Francisco-based startup’s technology is akin to what GitHub did for open-source software development.

The technology also automates testing and integrates APIs into the CI/CD pipeline to ensure code changes don‘t impact their functionality in production environments.

Refactr

CEO: Michael Fraser

Refactr‘s DevSecOps platform enables cybersecurity-focused MSPs and enterprises to collaborate and visually design complex service environments and secure automation through a CI/CD pipeline. The Refactr Platform also incorporates playbook.cloud, an Ansible-as-a-Service approach to configuration management.

The startup out of Seattle added a slate of new features to its drag-and-drop service automation platform over the past year, including credential integrations with external secrets management systems.

Refactr also introduced its “freemium” Community Edition and an installer for automation tools.

Salto

CEO: Rami Tamir

This Israeli startup that emerged from stealth in October brings DevOps methodologies and tools to the realm of business operations.

Salto automates configuration of popular enterprise SaaS solutions like Salesforce, NetSuite and Marketo by extracting configuration data and translating it into a standardized text format.

Implementing Salto‘s structured language saves enterprises time in delivering those business applications to users while reducing human errors, bugs and breaks.

A built-in Git client simplifies auditing, change documentation, debugging and reversions.

ShuttleOps

CEO: David Found

This DevOps startup born inside channel consultancy Indellient recently released a visual platform for deploying containerized workloads into the cloud.

The company spawned from the realization among Indellient‘s DevOps experts that the one-off services they were deploying for customers were actually often repeatable.

ShuttleOps came out of stealth in May aiming to ease application delivery and help customers adopt cloud with more fluidity and ease.

The new CI/CD platform offers drag-and-drop functionality for deploying applications into Kubernetes clusters running on Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform.

Traceable

CEO: Jyoti Bansal

Traceable, a startup from the founders of AppDynamics and Harness, recently came out of stealth with technology that looks to enable DevSecOps processes by getting developers and security professionals speaking the same language.

Traceable integrates security into the DevOps pipeline by providing end-to-end visibility into data flowing through any API. The distributed tracing system enforces security policy at those critical soft points in cloud-native workloads.

Triggermesh

CEO: Mark Hinkle

TriggerMesh‘s platform for integrating enterprise applications enables DevOps teams to automate workflows spanning hybrid and multi-cloud environments.

The startup‘s technology, built on Kubernetes and the Knative serverless project, empowers developers to build event-driven applications that integrate event streams from legacy and containerized applications.

The startup just released its TriggerMesh Cloud Native Integration Platform 1.0, which can be procured as a self-administered environment orchestrated by Kubernetes or a fully managed service on TriggerMesh Cloud.