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Comparison · Infra & APIs

Depot vs Rootly

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

D
Depot
INFRA · APIS
6.3

Depot is rounding out Depot CI into a credible GitHub Actions alternative, and just shipped nested virtualization.

◆ Current state

Eight of the last ten changelog entries are Depot CI updates: a new workflow summary page, environment-aware secret and variable variants, CLI commands for metrics, JSON status output, live log streaming, workflow listing and inspection, run cancel/rerun/retry/dispatch, and a DEPOT_JOB_URL env var in every job. Registry got pull-through cache improvements with provider presets. The dominant theme is filling in the feature surface a serious CI platform needs.

◆ Where it's heading

Depot is methodically closing the gap between its CI product and the incumbents. The recent run reads like a checklist: workflow UX, secrets, metrics, log streaming, scriptable CLI surface — the table-stakes ergonomics teams expect before migrating off GitHub Actions or CircleCI. The May 20 nested virtualization release expands what kinds of workloads Depot CI can host at all, not just how nicely it hosts them, which is a different and more aggressive move.

◆ Prediction

Expect more workload-expansion moves following the nested virtualization release — likely Android-specific tooling, deeper matrix/sharding UX (the workflow page already groups matrix failures), and continued CLI parity work. The secrets-and-variables variant model looks set up to grow into broader policy-as-code for CI configuration.

R
Rootly
INFRA · APIS
7.5

Rootly is moving the incident workflow out of the dashboard and into the IDE.

◆ Current state

Rootly is shipping steadily across three lanes: on-call ergonomics (SLA follow-ups, deferred paging, team heartbeats), AI surfaces (Claude Code and Cursor plugins), and enterprise plumbing (Google Workspace directory sync, deeper RBAC). The cadence is roughly one release per week and the changes are coherent rather than scattershot — each lane is building toward a recognizable end-state.

◆ Where it's heading

The on-call work is a maturation arc: features that used to be coarse (paging, heartbeats, follow-ups) are gaining ownership, scheduling, and SLA awareness. The AI work is the more interesting axis — pulling on-call context, retros, and incident state into Claude Code and Cursor signals that Rootly wants engineers to interact with the platform inside their editor, not by tabbing away to a separate UI.

◆ Prediction

Expect the IDE plugins to gain write-side actions next (acking pages, drafting retros, triggering runbooks from the editor), and on-call configuration to keep moving toward team-scoped, RBAC-aware defaults rather than global ones.

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