Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Being DevOps appears, based on the extracted content, to be a technical content site focused on DevOps, cloud architecture, and infrastructure automation. It includes Projects, Blogs, Tutorials, CVEs, and Academy Paths. It is not a clearly defined SaaS developer tool; rather, it provides project examples, hands-on tutorials, and architecture explanations. Its topics center on Proxmox, KVM, Vagrant, Libvirt, HashiCorp Consul, service mesh, and zero-trust security.
Its most concrete content is the “Nested Sandbox” project: running Ubuntu 24.04 inside Proxmox VE, then using Vagrant + Libvirt to create a 3-node highly available Consul cluster. The tutorial provides kernel modules, CPU passthrough, a Vagrantfile, bootstrap.sh, Consul Raft validation, and failover steps, making it fairly reproducible from an engineering perspective. Another focus area is Consul Enterprise service mesh, covering enterprise networking topics such as namespaces, Envoy sidecars, mTLS intentions, WAN federation, and Vault integration.
The main content does not disclose Being DevOps’s pricing model, plans, payment methods, or service SLA. Phrases such as “BeingDevOps Cloud Account” and “Join weekly insights” appear on the page, but they are not enough to determine whether paid courses or cloud services are offered. The Consul Enterprise tutorial mentions that enterprise features require a license file, but this is a HashiCorp product requirement, not pricing information for Being DevOps.
The main strength is that the content is highly engineering-oriented and does not stop at concepts; it includes commands, configurations, and validation workflows. It also analyzes architectural trade-offs, such as nested virtualization performance, Libvirt configuration complexity, and Consul quorum requirements. The downside is that the site’s own product positioning is not very clear: there is no visible information about an API, SDK, console, self-hosted deployment, or open-source license. Some homepage marketing metrics, such as deployment volume, latency, and availability, lack verifiable support in the main content. The tutorials are also fairly advanced and require prior knowledge of Linux, virtualization, and Consul.
It is suitable for DevOps engineers, SREs, cloud architects, and learners who want to build a homelab or a local distributed systems lab environment. If you are simply looking for an out-of-the-box tool or commercial platform, the available information is insufficient. The main content does not provide details on access from China, and payment methods are also unknown. Alternative references include HashiCorp Developer, Proxmox Wiki, Vagrant documentation, official Kubernetes/CNCF documentation, and DigitalOcean Tutorials.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on beingdevops.com official site.
beingdevops.com is an Unknown Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach beingdevops.com directly.