Gremlin
helps companies build more resilient systems through a new engineering
philosophy called chaos engineering. It is launching with the
availability of its Gremlin tool and announcing Series A funding from
Index Ventures and Amplify Partners. Starting today, any company will be
able to employ chaos engineering to safely inject failure into systems
in order to proactively identify and fix unknown faults - similar to an
engineering flu shot.
Each year, North American businesses lose over $700 billion a year due to outages. In 2017 alone, major companies including Amazon, Whatsapp,Macys.com, and Slack have
all experienced outages that impacted the bottom line and
inconvenienced customers. This unreliability is due to the complexity
gap in how distributed systems are built. Previously, software ran in a
controlled, bare metal environment that introduced few variables, making
it possible for engineering teams to identify potential risk and
failures before they occurred. Within the last decade, systems have
shifted to the cloud and become distributed with microservices and
serverless methodologies, which introduced new dependencies on services
outside of one's control - creating complexity for any team of engineers
to fully understand. This makes failure and outages inevitable.
"Having
been an engineer at Amazon and Netflix for the past decade and on the
front lines of system outages, this was a tool I built out of necessity.
I was tired of the burnout from being paged at all hours of the night -
there had to be a better way," said Kolton Andrus, CEO of Gremlin.
"Chaos engineering is a new principle that is just starting to take
hold, and I believe it is one of the most effective ways to make the
internet more reliable. We have to empower engineers to safely
experiment to build knowledge and more resilient systems."
Gremlin
is helping companies and teams of engineers anticipate and mitigate
failure before it occurs through its new tool that simulates how a
system would react when encountering challenges, such as network
latency, data center outages, etc. With nearly a dozen attacks and more
launching soon, Gremlin recreates the most common failures across three
categories: Resource, Network, and State. The tool is equipped with
state-of-the-art security, including multi-factor authentication and
principle of least privilege, as well as an undo button to drive safe,
controlled experiments. Gremlin's tool allows engineers to see how the
system will behave in the face of failure, validates that defenses will
work to prevent outages, minimizes the blast radius to allow for safe
experimentation in production, and saves time and resources for
engineering teams.
Today, the company counts Expedia, Twilio, Confluent, and Remind, as some of the customers using the Gremlin service.
In
addition to the company and product launch, Gremlin is announcing $7.5
million in Series A funding led by Index Ventures, with participation by
Amplify Partners. Combined with the previously raised Seed round, this
brings the total amount raised to $8.75 million.
"In
these times of being always-on and high customer expectations, you
can't afford for your business to be down even a few minutes," said Mike
Volpi, General Partner at Index Ventures. "Chaos engineering is a
breakthrough way to anticipate failure and build resilient systems.
We're thrilled to be partnering with Kolton, a leading pioneer of this
movement, and the rest of the team to bring cloud engineering to every
cloud-based company."
Gremlin is a subscription-based service, with pricing based on per instance or service. You can get started with Gremlin here.