Overview
qibdo is a multi-engine Hyperconverged Infrastructure (HCI) platform that helps companies run their own cloud
infrastructure without the engineering and operational overhead. It offers a complete, end-to-end cloud-native
experience through a range of services that have a 1:1 parity with the same FaaS, SaaS, PaaS, and IaaS products as the public cloud.
All of this at up to 10 times cheaper, and without complex billing models.
qibdo provides a unified orchestration and management layer that lets
companies administer all of their infrastructure resources across their public clouds,
third-party bare-metal providers, and their own premises, all from one place. That makes
qibdo not just a private-cloud platform, but a unified platform for multi-cloud, hybrid
cloud, and cloud repatriation.
At qibdo, an engine is a public or private cloud provider/vendor, such as AWS,
GCP, Azure, or qibdo itself. Each of our services provides a similar but enhanced
experience of what the public cloud offers. That experience isn’t only visual, but
technical too: it starts with the APIs, and runs through the documentation, the UI, and
support. We want to make everything that doesn’t work well in the public cloud, work.
qibdo also doesn’t try to solve every problem and become something no one wants to deal
with. We focus on the most core, common problems companies face. Where extra
capabilities are needed, we make our services highly integrable with other platforms
and frameworks.
Services
Section titled “Services”- Compute: Create, run, orchestrate, and repatriate Virtual Machines (VMs) onto your own reliable infrastructure or into your public-cloud accounts. Compute consolidates every VM in a single console: create, deploy, and repatriate, all in one.
- IAM: Manage who can do what, and where, across your on-premise infrastructure and every public cloud you operate. IAM provides fine-grained access control in a single console: it manages identities, bundles permissions into roles, and grants them within the right scope. The goal is to consolidate access control across all your clouds into one consistent model, so the same identities and the same rules apply everywhere, all in one.
- Network: Define and manage your virtual networking: VPCs, subnets, firewall policies and rules, and the quotas that keep usage in check, all from a single console. Network gives you one place to design isolated, secure connectivity for your resources, with a model built to extend across the clouds you manage.
- Observability: Metrics, logs, and traces unified across services. Open standards, no vendor lock-in. Observability gives you a single console to query logs with LogQL, metrics with PromQL, and traces with TraceQL, and to act on what you find with alert rules, silences, retention policies, and log sinks, all scoped to the workspace the telemetry belongs to.
- Registry: Store and manage your OCI-compliant container images and Helm charts from a single, workspace-scoped console. Registry gives your teams one place to push, pull, and govern artifacts, with vulnerability scanning, retention policies, deployment locks, and fine-grained access control built in, consolidating artifact storage and supply-chain governance into one consistent, IAM-integrated model.
- Storage: A distributed object, block, and file storage service for unstructured data, orchestrated across clouds. Storage consolidates your on-premise and public-cloud storage into a single console, so you can provision, access, and repatriate data anywhere with one consistent model, all in one.
- Taxonomy: Define organizations, groups, and workspaces to organize your resources. Taxonomy gives you a single console to structure your platform into a clean hierarchy, where workspaces are the boundary that every other service scopes its resources to, so your teams, environments, and projects stay isolated and easy to govern.
- Topology: Configure regions, zones, resource pools, and deployment nodes, and map them to your real infrastructure. Topology is where you organize your physical infrastructure into regions and zones and monitor your nodes from a single console, keeping an up-to-date view of your hosts and their capacity, so your workloads always run where they should.
- Vault: Generate dynamic secrets, manage PKI certificates, and encrypt application data. Vault consolidates secrets storage, encryption, private PKI, and short-lived credentials for databases, cloud, SSH, and Kubernetes into a single console, with every operation recorded, fully auditable and consistent wherever your infrastructure runs.
Where to start
Section titled “Where to start”If you are new to the platform, get familiar with the basics: how our APIs are designed, the responses they return, how to filter results, and how to authenticate. From there, open any service’s overview to dive into its concepts, guides, and generated API reference.