
Vercel
Next.js
Netlify
GitHub Pages
Heroku
Render
Railway
Tailwind CSS
CodeRifts
Bump.sh
StopLight
Spectral
Insomnia CLI
Merge Freeze
Optic
CodeRifts detects breaking changes in OpenAPI schemas on every pull request. It scores risk across 4 dimensions (revenue impact, blast radius, app compatibility, security), enforces governance policies before merge, and translates technical API changes into business impact โ blast radius, affected clients, and estimated cost.
Works with GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket, and any CI/CD pipeline. Zero config. Free to start.
Key features: - Breaking change detection with risk scoring (0-100) - Policy engine: breaking budgets, freeze windows, approval matrix - Economic impact estimation: cost and engineering effort - Security analysis: auth changes, sensitive field exposure - Auto-changelog and semver suggestions - GitHub App, GitHub Actions, GitLab CI, Bitbucket Pipelines, REST API, CLI
Vercel
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CodeRifts's answer:
Currently in beta, onboarding early adopters
CodeRifts's answer:
CodeRifts is the only API governance tool that combines breaking change detection with risk scoring, policy enforcement, and economic impact estimation โ all delivered as a zero-config GitHub App. It does not just tell you what changed, it tells you how dangerous it is, who it affects, and what it will cost to fix.
CodeRifts's answer:
A field rename broke a POS system across 19 restaurants for a week. The PR passed code review, all tests were green, nobody checked the API schema. CodeRifts was built to catch this class of problem before merge โ automatically, on every pull request.
CodeRifts's answer:
Most tools only diff your OpenAPI specs. CodeRifts goes further: it scores risk across 4 dimensions, enforces governance policies before merge, estimates migration costs in dollars and engineering hours, and works with GitHub, GitLab, Bitbucket, and any CI/CD pipeline. One YAML file replaces review meetings.
CodeRifts's answer:
Senior backend engineers, platform engineers, and staff engineers at companies with microservices architectures who need to prevent breaking API changes from reaching production.
CodeRifts's answer:
Node.js, Express, GitHub Apps API, OpenAPI diff engine, Railway, Cloudflare Pages
We have been using Vercel to host some of our internally developed apps that help our team run our operations on Vercel and have found it to be a very developer friendly platform. With our apps built in Next JS it is a natural fit and the dev op pipelines can quickly and easily be configured. As these are internal apps used by our team they don't need to support huge traffic volumes so pricing has been affordable for us.
Based on our record, Vercel seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 652 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Vercel Hobby is free for personal, non-commercial projects and is built around HTTP serverless functions and static frontends. Node.js is the primary runtime, and Vercel does a lot of Next.js-specific work for you automatically: caching pages that don't change often, running lightweight functions close to the user, resizing images, and running middleware on every request. Hobby includes 100 GB of bandwidth per... - Source: dev.to / about 10 hours ago
Vercel is where JS-heavy Heroku apps land when the shape they really wanted was framework-native serverless, especially anything on Next.js. ISR caching, edge functions, image optimization, middleware, and the AI SDK all wire up automatically from the framework's build output, so the parts of the app Heroku was serving as HTTP handlers become serverless functions that don't pay for idle time. - Source: dev.to / 1 day ago
What went wrong: The security commit added a Content-Security-Policy Header with connect-src 'self' https://*.public.blob.vercel-storage.com. The Vercel Blob SDK's client-side upload() makes a PUT to Https://vercel.com/api/blob. That domain wasn't in connect-src. The browser silently blocked the request. - Source: dev.to / 18 days ago
A host: A host is really just a computer that stays powered on and connected to the internet with a public address of its own. When a visitor types in the app's address, their browser sends a request across the internet to that machine, the machine runs the code, and it sends the finished page back. A laptop was quietly doing both jobs during the build, the server and the only visitor allowed in; a host is that... - Source: dev.to / 20 days ago
The short version is this: BabyChain lets you design a ComfyUI-style media chain on a canvas, then call that same chain from product code as POST /api/v1/chains/runs. Every step executes through provider APIs with server-side credentials, every state transition persists to AWS Aurora, and Vercel functions stay stateless. - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
Next.js - A small framework for server-rendered universal JavaScript apps
Bump.sh - Much more than stunning docs. For all your APIs.
Netlify - Build, deploy and host your static site or app with a drag and drop interface and automatic delpoys from GitHub or Bitbucket
StopLight - Stoplight is an API Design, Development, and Documentation platform that enables consistency,ย reusability, andย quality in your API lifecycle, all with an easy, enjoyable developerย experience.
GitHub Pages - A free, static web host for open-source projects on GitHub
Spectral - Spectral is an experimental Sinclair ZX Spectrum emulator from the 80s, which has been randomly assembled since the pandemic days. Accuracy and performance are long-term goals, but the primary focus is just having fun with this thing.