GIT_FEED

TencentBlueKing/blueking-dbm

DBM,数据库管理,集成了MySQL、Redis、ES、Kafka、HDFS、InfluxDB、Pulsar等多种数据库组件的全生命周期管理,提供了海量集群的批量管理能力,以及相应DB组件的集群管理工具箱,并配套DB个性化配置、高可用切换、域名管理等DB个性化服务,同时全方位的监控告警可观测能力,让数据库管理员、运维、开发等用户可以轻松完成数据库管理工作,更高效、更安全、更全面的管理数据库。 The database management platform integrates a variety of database components such as MySQL...

View on GitHub

What it does

BlueKing DBM is an open-source platform built by Tencent that lets teams manage dozens of different database systems — like MySQL, Redis, and Kafka — all from a single dashboard, handling everything from initial setup to monitoring and automated failover. It's essentially a unified control center that replaces the need to juggle separate tools for each database type your organization runs.

Why it matters

As companies scale, managing multiple database systems becomes a serious operational burden that requires specialized expertise for each one — this platform reduces that cost by centralizing control, which is a strong signal that enterprise infrastructure tooling is moving toward consolidation. For founders and investors, it reflects a growing market need for 'database operations as a managed layer,' a space where both open-source and commercial players are competing intensely.

40Hot

Gaining traction — heating up

Stars
116
Forks
85
Contributors
52
Language
Python

Score updated Mar 18, 2026

Related projects

85Breakout

systemd is the core software that manages the startup, shutdown, and background services on most Linux-based computers and servers — think of it as the operating system's traffic controller that decides what runs, when, and in what order. It's the foundational layer that keeps everything from web servers to databases running reliably on Linux machines.

// why it matters Almost every major cloud server, enterprise Linux deployment, and embedded device runs on systemd, making it one of the most widely deployed pieces of software infrastructure in the world — understanding it matters if you're building anything that runs on Linux servers. For product and infrastructure teams, it's the invisible backbone that determines how reliably and quickly your services start, recover from failures, and scale.

C16.1k stars4.4k forks3228 contrib

OpenWrt is a Linux-based operating system designed to run on home routers and other small networked devices, replacing the factory software that comes pre-installed. It gives users and developers complete control over the device, allowing them to install custom apps and features — much like turning a basic flip phone into a smartphone.

// why it matters For builders creating connected hardware products or IoT solutions, OpenWrt is a battle-tested foundation with a massive community, meaning you don't have to build networking software from scratch. Its 25,000+ stars and 12,000+ forks signal it's a go-to platform for companies building routers, smart home hubs, and embedded networking devices — making it a key dependency to understand in that market.

C26.0k stars12.2k forks1756 contrib

WebKit is the engine that powers how web pages are displayed and run inside Apple's Safari browser, Mail app, and many other applications on iPhone, Mac, and beyond. Think of it as the invisible layer that reads website code and turns it into the visual, interactive experience users actually see and click on.

// why it matters Any product that embeds a browser view on Apple devices — from apps to e-commerce checkouts to in-app browsers — runs on WebKit, making it a foundational dependency that shapes what web features you can actually ship to Apple users. Builders and investors tracking the web-versus-native app debate should watch WebKit closely, as Apple's pace of adding new capabilities here directly determines how powerful browser-based products can be on the world's most profitable mobile platform.

JavaScript9.7k stars1.9k forks2568 contrib

ESPHome lets you program and control small wireless devices — like smart plugs, sensors, and switches — using simple configuration files instead of traditional coding, then manage them remotely through home automation platforms. It essentially turns cheap, widely available hardware chips into customizable smart home gadgets without requiring deep software expertise.

// why it matters With over 10,000 stars and 1,200+ contributors, ESPHome has become a cornerstone of the DIY smart home movement, signaling massive consumer demand for affordable, customizable alternatives to expensive proprietary smart home products. Builders and hardware startups can use it as a foundation or reference point for IoT product development, dramatically reducing time-to-market for connected device projects.

C++10.8k stars5.1k forks1270 contrib
// SUBSCRIBE

The repos that moved this week, why they matter, and what to watch next. One email. No noise.