What It Does
Your app doesn’t just need a database. It needs message queues, object storage, caches, API gateways, and more. Monk detects these needs during code analysis, then provisions and configures them automatically. You pick how they’re deployed: self-hosted, cloud managed, or third-party. Monk handles provisioning, connection strings, and wiring.How It Works
Automatic Service Detection
During code analysis, Monk identifies your infrastructure requirements:- Message queue usage (RabbitMQ, Kafka, SQS clients)
- Object storage references (S3 SDK, MinIO client, file uploads)
- Caching layers (Redis, Memcached)
- API gateway and web server needs (Kong, Nginx, Apache)
Deployment Options
You’ve got three choices for each service.Option 1: Self-Hosted in Containers
Best for development, staging, and full control. Services run in containers on your infrastructure. Monk handles setup, persistence, and configuration. Quick to spin up, easy to tear down.Option 2: Cloud Provider Managed
Best for production. Uses your cloud provider’s managed services (AWS S3/SQS, GCP Cloud Storage/Pub-Sub, Azure Blob/Service Bus). You provide credentials, Monk provisions and configures everything.Option 3: Third-Party Managed
Best for specialized needs or multi-cloud setups. Uses providers like Cloudflare R2, Redis Cloud, or other SaaS platforms. Often have free tiers or pay-per-use pricing.Progression Examples
Object Storage:- Start with MinIO (containerized) for development
- Move to DigitalOcean Spaces or AWS S3 for production
- Scale to Cloudflare R2 for global CDN + storage
- Start with RabbitMQ (containerized) for development
- Move to AWS SQS or managed RabbitMQ for production
- Scale to Apache Kafka for high-throughput event streaming
- Start with Redis (containerized) for development
- Move to AWS ElastiCache or managed Redis for production
- Scale to Redis Cloud for global, multi-region caching
Supported Services
Monk supports 50+ services out of the box. Here are the major categories:- Message Queues & Brokers — RabbitMQ, Apache Kafka, AWS SQS
- Object Storage — MinIO, AWS S3, Cloudflare R2
- Caching — Redis, Memcached, Hazelcast
- API & Gateway — Kong, Hasura GraphQL Engine, AWS API Gateway
- Web Servers & Proxies — Nginx, Apache, HAProxy
- Security & Secrets — HashiCorp Vault, Keycloak
- Monitoring & Observability — Prometheus + Grafana, ELK Stack, Fluent Bit
- DevOps & CI/CD — Jenkins, GitLab, SonarQube
- Data Integration & ETL — Airbyte, Apache Airflow
- Analytics & BI — Metabase, Apache Superset
- AI/ML Serving — Ollama, TensorFlow
Automatic Connection Management
Monk generates and manages connection strings and credentials automatically via Configuration & Wiring. This includes:- Connection string generation (queue URLs, storage endpoints, cache URLs)
- Credential creation and secure storage
- Network configuration and authentication setup
- Service discovery registration
Service Configuration
Monk can configure service settings to match your requirements — queue sizes, storage quotas, cache memory limits, rate limits, health checks, monitoring thresholds, and more. Tell Monk what you need. It understands service-specific parameters for each supported type.Data migration, advanced monitoring, and custom management actions are on the roadmap. Vote on what to prioritize.
Next Steps
Integrations
Browse the full catalog of 50+ supported services and providers.
Configuration & Wiring
Learn how Monk manages connection strings and credentials.

