Omniboard is a repository insights and change enablement tool built for enterprise polyrepo environments. Rather than focusing on code quality inside a single repository, it looks across many independent repositories to identify migration gaps, dependency risks, architecture drift, missing standards, ownership data, and exception governance. Typical users include engineering leaders, architects, platform teams, library maintainers, and security teams.
Its core abstraction is the check: teams first define questions such as “which projects are still using a deprecated API,” “which services are still on old Node/Java runtimes,” or “which repositories are missing CODEOWNERS,” then run those checks locally or in CI/CD via @omniboard/analyzer. The analyzer is an open-source Node.js CLI that downloads check definitions into the project workspace, analyzes the code, extracts structured metadata, and uploads the results. The FAQ states that source code is not uploaded, but results may include matched values or metadata, so configuration should follow the organization’s internal data policies.
Omniboard provides project views, result views, and custom dashboards, allowing teams to track adoption progress by project, team, check, version, exception, and other dimensions. It supports scenarios involving package.json, pom.xml, Maven, npm, Gradle, Angular, Node/Java runtime, Dockerfile, CI configuration, and more, though the available materials do not provide a complete language matrix. For enterprise integration, it supports CI/CD, Microsoft Entra ID / Azure enterprise applications, and MCP integration for coding agents. The documentation covers checks, analyzer, CI, security, dashboards, and API keys, with a fairly complete structure.
The free Starter plan requires no credit card and supports unlimited projects and users, but is limited to 5 checks, 100 updates per day, 1 dashboard, and 5 widgets. The enterprise plan is priced per project: USD 7.99/project/month with an annual commitment, or USD 9.99/project/month when paid monthly. Educational institutions can apply for a free full-featured subscription. The site notes that customers can contact the team for SSO, custom limits, or on-prem deployment, but it does not publicly disclose self-hosting details or pricing.
Its strengths are its clear positioning and its ability to build a “discover issues—assign fixes—verify again” loop on top of real repository data. It is well suited to large-scale multi-repository migrations, dependency cleanup, architecture standard rollout, and reduction of security exceptions. The downsides are that it is primarily designed for polyrepo setups, so its value may be lower for a single large monorepo; advanced rules may require regex/XPath skills; and payment methods, SLA details, and the list of supported code hosting platforms are not disclosed. There is not enough information to judge accessibility from China, so users should test direct connectivity and the enterprise payment workflow. If access is limited, alternatives or combined toolchains such as Sourcegraph, Semgrep, SonarQube, Backstage, and Renovate may be worth evaluating.
⚠ 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 omniboard.dev official site.
omniboard.dev is an United States Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach omniboard.dev directly.