Networking: many clusters, one fabric
VPC peering you don't fully understand is a liability. Zeus replaces it with something you can read.
Even with one cluster, networking config quietly drifts into something nobody wants to touch. Zeus gives you a visual policy surface and planned IP space so a single cluster stays legible — and when you add more, an encrypted WireGuard overlay lets services resolve across clusters by name, with no NAT and no manual wiring. Access is default-deny with explicit, revocable grants.
The details that matter.
Cross-cluster service discovery
A pod in one cluster reaches a service in another by name, encrypted, by its real IP. No load balancer hairpins, no manual wiring.
Default-deny, grant by grant
A connected cluster reaches nothing until you allow it. Grants are one-directional, optionally port-limited, and revocable in a click. The map is exactly what’s enforced.
Network Plans (IP that doesn’t collide)
Allocate pod CIDRs from a global plan so clusters never overlap. It’s the thing that quietly breaks every multi-cluster setup, handled up front.
Dials out, nothing exposed
The overlay connects by dialing out over WireGuard: no public endpoints, no inbound ports, nothing to open on a firewall.
There’s more in the box.
All features →Most teams start with one cluster they half-understand. Zeus makes that one legible — and stays out of your way when you add more.
Explore →One builder per build. No QEMU. No blocked teams waiting for a slow job to free a runner.
Explore →Config drift — a value different in prod than staging — is behind most outages nobody can explain.
Explore →