Ecosystem

The Loom

The deployment surface. Everything required to run a production cluster of Disentangle nodes — Helm charts, Terraform modules, post-quantum mesh networking, GitOps secrets bootstrap, operator CLI — is open-source, continuously integrated, and deployable in minutes on Oracle Always Free. For an operator, the whole stack is one config file. For an investor, it is the story that operational cost discipline is built in at the infrastructure level, not bolted on later. Every repository has CI. Every repository has tests. Dependency updates auto-merge when all checks pass.

Core Protocol
Infrastructure
Foundation
9
Projects
1,300+
Tests Passing
5
Languages
0
Failures
Anyone can run the network

Trivial to deploy. The infrastructure projects above are not scaffolding — they are the product. deploy takes a single config file and stands up a full cluster: Helm charts, FluxCD GitOps, or Docker Compose. k8s-oci-foundation provisions production Kubernetes with one Terraform apply. genesis-operator bootstraps secrets with envelope encryption. The entire pipeline from bare cloud account to running nodes is automated.

Perpetually free. The reference deployment runs on Oracle Cloud's Always Free tier — 4 ARM Ampere OCPUs, 24GB RAM, 200GB block storage. No monthly bill. No runway dependency on cloud spend. If you can sign up for a free cloud account, you can run the network indefinitely. The barrier to participation is zero.

Self-healing by default. GitOps with FluxCD means the cluster converges to its declared state continuously. Nodes that drift are corrected automatically. Dependency updates auto-merge when all tests pass. Manual intervention is the exception, not the workflow. You deploy once; the system maintains itself.

Post-quantum from genesis. ML-KEM key exchange in the overlay network. ML-DSA certificates for identity. No elliptic curves in the critical path. Every node in every cluster gets post-quantum security by default — not as an upgrade, but as the only option.

The goal is a network where running nodes is so easy and so free that the question stops being "can I afford to participate?" and becomes "why wouldn't I?"