Release note
Release note v0.9.0
Terraform Cloud support, tracking drifts from a clean state, additional features and news from the community
Terraform Cloud support, tracking drifts from a clean state, additional features and news from the community
How to start tracking drifts from a clean state whatever your IaC coverage, by automatically generating a .driftignore file
How a simple manual change in an AWS Security Group using the AWS Web Console can have bitter security consequences
How minimizing our attack surface with CircleCI Contexts helped us pass the Codecov bash uploader security issue unharmed
Concise drift output, HTTP backend support, additional features and news from the community
How to build your own driftctl Docker image (including your own .driftignore file)
Reflecting on the first steps of the project, we are both grateful and humbled by the support we received from the open source community. Here are our commitments to the community and why we bring a new open source DevOps tool.
Reading all Terraform states from a bucket, GitHub provider support, additional features and news from the community.
This blog post is a written transcript of the FOSDEM Talk : “Infrastructure drifts aren’t like Pokemon, you can’t catch ’em all”, by Stephane Jourdan – CTO and founder