When we talk about the open stack, we mean the parts of Skene that live in public: tools, schemas, and utilities that you can inspect, fork, and run without touching the product surface.
The open stack is not a separate product. It is a set of building blocks we publish in the open when they are useful on their own: analyzers, generators, injectors, components, and the schemas that tie them together.
The goal is to make the underlying mechanics visible. You should be able to see how we think about growth infrastructure, not just the surface in the main Skene app.
Over time, the open stack will include:
The concrete projects live on the open source page, where each one is listed with a short description and current status.
Not every repository in the open stack is equally stable. We use simple maturity labels to make that obvious without turning this page into a roadmap.
These labels are descriptive, not promises. They exist so you can decide how much to rely on something in your own stack.