An open-source, cloud-agnostic tool to analyze and manage cloud cost, usage, security, and governance across multiple providers.
Komiser is an open-source cloud-environment inspector that analyzes and manages cloud cost, usage, security, and governance across multiple cloud providers. It helps organizations gain visibility into their cloud resources, identify inefficiencies, and detect security vulnerabilities in a unified dashboard.
Cloud Engineers, DevOps engineers, SREs, and developers who manage multi-cloud environments and need to optimize costs, improve security, and maintain governance.
Developers choose Komiser for its cloud-agnostic approach, comprehensive feature set covering cost, security, and governance, and the ability to self-host for full control over their data and deployment.
Open-source cloud-environment inspector. Supporting AWS, GCP, Azure, and more! Your cloud resources will have nowhere to hide!
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Integrates with AWS, Azure, GCP, Civo, DigitalOcean, OCI, Kubernetes, and more, as shown in the configuration table, providing a unified dashboard for diverse environments.
Identifies idle and untagged resources to reduce spending, explicitly mentioned in the 'What is Komiser?' section for achieving cost-effectiveness.
Detects potential risks across cloud environments, aiding in security improvements as highlighted in the philosophy for timely actions.
Offers CLI and Docker installation options, allowing full control over deployment and data without relying on third-party services.
Configuring credentials and permissions for each cloud provider requires detailed steps per the documentation table, which can be time-consuming and prone to errors.
The Elastic License 2.0 limits usage, such as prohibiting providing the software as a managed service, which may not suit all commercial needs.
Focuses on analysis and inventory rather than live monitoring or alerting, with no mention of real-time notifications in the README's key features.