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Comparison · Infra & APIs

CockroachDB vs Rootly

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

CockroachDB logo
CockroachDB
INFRA · APISDEVOPS
2.5

CockroachDB holds a metronomic dual-track release rhythm through v26

◆ Current state

CockroachDB is shipping on a predictable two-track cadence: Innovation releases roughly quarterly (v26.1 Feb, v26.3 May 2026) and Regular releases anchoring long-term support twice a year (v25.2, v25.4, v26.2). The schedule has held without slippage across the 18 months of entries visible here. Release artifacts are thin — version, date, track — with detail delegated to docs.

◆ Where it's heading

The product is in steady-cadence mode rather than narrative-driven release mode. Investment is visibly going into release engineering discipline — predictable GA dates, clean dual-track support windows — not into headline features that would surface in changelogs. Innovation acts as the feature pipeline; Regular acts as the LTS anchor enterprises pin against.

◆ Prediction

v26.3 lands on the announced May/June 2026 date; a v26.4 Innovation slot opens around late summer with v27.1 Regular following the established November cadence.

R
Rootly
INFRA · APIS
6.3

Rootly is wiring an AI incident commander into Slack and the editors engineers already use

◆ Current state

Rootly keeps building out on-call and incident management — deferred paging, team-scoped heartbeats, SLA-driven follow-ups, live alert streaming — while layering an AI agent across the surfaces responders already live in. The June launch of an in-Slack AI scribe and commander is the sharpest expression of that bet.

◆ Where it's heading

Two threads run in parallel: steady RBAC-and-reliability hardening of the core on-call product, and an AI push that meets responders in Slack, in editors (Claude Code, Cursor), and via MCP with proper OAuth. The direction is an agent that handles incident toil where work already happens.

◆ Prediction

Expect the Slack agent's commander/scribe role to deepen — more autonomous actions during incidents and tighter ties to the MCP and editor plugins — while core on-call features keep filling RBAC and SLA gaps.

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