Create your own release protection in plain English to flag or block team code changes, so you instantly know if everything’s on track or breaking the rules.
We’re super excited to launch Warestack’s first official, enterprise-ready release today 🚀
Why we built Warestack
Working as a team and want to stay on top of things?
What if someone accidentally merges into a critical branch. How soon would you know?
Who it’s for
Warestack is built for DevOps teams, engineering managers, and fast-moving organizations who need to keep quality under control without slowing down delivery.
What it does
It works alongside your CI/CD pipelines, GitHub protection rules, and deployment checks (not replacing them) and allows you to:
Create rules in plain English.
Trace violations of rules against your daily Ops.
Monitor every code event in a single view.
Get notified instantly about rule violations via Slack and Linear.
Extract reports for any timeframe and event.
Why it’s different
Today there are two ways of protecting your Ops:
Create a contribution list and ask everyone to follow it, but everyone forgets about it.
Use branch protection in GitHub, but these rules are static, made for the codebase not your team daily needs.
Warestack adapts dynamically:
Rules can evolve in context (e.g. PR size limits, required reviewers, deployment safety checks).
You get continuous insights even after merges, not just pre-checks.
Works seamlessly with GitHub, Slack, and Linear to keep everyone aligned.
That’s the goal - give teams the guardrails they need to govern their releases without adding friction. We’re here to keep refining how ops work today!
That’s the goal - give teams the guardrails they need to govern their releases without adding friction. We’re here to keep refining how ops work today!
I think Warestack is a must-have for any team — writing plain-English guardrails to keep releases safe without touching code feels both powerful and reassuring.
Finally, a tool that catches risky merges without slowing us down Congratulations on the successful launch of your new product. Wishing you continued success and growth.
Warestack brings release protection into plain English. It monitors PRs, issues, and deployments flagging risky changes instantly, without touching your code. Seamless with CI/CD, GitHub, Slack, and Linear. Full visibility, zero surprises.
This is sharp. 👏
Most dev teams don’t crash because they ship too slow… they crash because nobody’s keeping the guardrails up when they ship fast.
What I like here is you’ve taken something that’s usually buried in “tech talk” and made it simple: plain English rules, instant clarity, less chaos. That’s exactly how good products win attention.
I’m a copywriter, and this is the same hill I fight on every day: if people can’t understand you instantly, they don’t buy, they don’t trust, and they sure don’t stick around.
Warestack nails the clarity side curious to see how you expand on this. 🚀
Also, check out our open-source tool Watchflow, built by Warestack with 💙 for the community. It’s free and takes a minute to setup. We’ll keep you posted on our progress.
This is exactly what our fast-moving engineering team needs, we spend way too much time untangling messy releases. Thanks for addressing such a real pain point! Congrats on the launch :)
Love seeing someone finally tackle safe releases with agentic guardrails—rolling out updates has always been nerve-wracking for my team. Is it easy to integrate with existing workflows?
Interesting approach to handling release rules. It would certainly save a lot of back and forth for teams.
This tackles such a real pain point that every engineering team faces - the constant tension between moving fast and maintaining quality. What I love about Warestack is how it bridges the gap between "write it down in a doc that everyone forgets" and "rigid GitHub rules that don't adapt to your actual workflow."
👋 Hey Product Hunt!
We’re super excited to launch Warestack’s first official, enterprise-ready release today 🚀
Why we built Warestack
Working as a team and want to stay on top of things?
What if someone accidentally merges into a critical branch. How soon would you know?
Who it’s for
Warestack is built for DevOps teams, engineering managers, and fast-moving organizations who need to keep quality under control without slowing down delivery.
What it does
It works alongside your CI/CD pipelines, GitHub protection rules, and deployment checks (not replacing them) and allows you to:
Create rules in plain English.
Trace violations of rules against your daily Ops.
Monitor every code event in a single view.
Get notified instantly about rule violations via Slack and Linear.
Extract reports for any timeframe and event.
Why it’s different
Today there are two ways of protecting your Ops:
Create a contribution list and ask everyone to follow it, but everyone forgets about it.
Use branch protection in GitHub, but these rules are static, made for the codebase not your team daily needs.
Warestack adapts dynamically:
Rules can evolve in context (e.g. PR size limits, required reviewers, deployment safety checks).
You get continuous insights even after merges, not just pre-checks.
Works seamlessly with GitHub, Slack, and Linear to keep everyone aligned.
👉 Try it out:
Landing page: www.warestack.com
GitHub Marketplace: https://github.com/marketplace/warestack
Watchflow, our open-source preview (test your own rule ideas without signup): https://watchflow.dev/
We built Warestack to give teams back control, visibility, and traceability — without adding friction.
💬 We’d love to know: what’s the first release protection rule you’d write in plain English for your team?
Thanks for checking us out and supporting our launch 🙌