After seven years building Crossplane, we're excited to announce Crossplane 2.0. This release extends beyond infrastructure to support applications as first-class citizens, enabling platform teams to offer unified APIs that manage apps and infrastructure together.| The Crossplane Blog
We are excited to announce the first release of Function Python, a powerful new tool that enables you to write Crossplane compositions using Python. This release opens up new possibilities for platform engineers and developers who prefer Python's simplicity and readability when configuring Crossplane. Function Python was developed by Upbound| The Crossplane Blog
Today, we're excited to announce key updates for the Crossplane community aimed at fostering the growth of community-contributed Crossplane extensions (providers and functions) while reinforcing our commitment to vendor neutrality—just like all CNCF projects.| The Crossplane Blog
Crossplane v2 introduces a more intuitive, namespaced-first approach to managing both applications and infrastructure, making it easier to compose Kubernetes resources without unnecessary complexity. With backward compatibility and an opt-in migration path, these changes improve usability while preserving Crossplane’s core strengths in platform engineering and declarative infrastructure management.| The Crossplane Blog
As someone passionate about open-source software, being a mentee in the LFX Mentorship Program, backed by the Linux Foundation, has been one of the most enriching experiences of my career| The Crossplane Blog
We are excited to announce today that Crossplane v1.16.0 has been released and is now available for installation into your control planes. This latest release of Crossplane focused on maturing a number of key areas of functionality across the project, as Crossplane continues to become more capable, more| The Crossplane Blog
Level Up with Crossplane, presented by Upbound, is coming May 7. This new event series is for engineers interested in getting hands-on with Crossplane.| The Crossplane Blog
What’s the latest with the Crossplane cloud native control plane framework? Catch these Crossplane community talks from KubeCon/CloudNativeCon Europe.| The Crossplane Blog
Learn about Crossplane provider-http, explore its capabilities, and see how it can enhance your infrastructure management.| The Crossplane Blog
Upbound’s engineering team has made a breakthrough to improve the efficiency of Upjet-based providers in Crossplane, benefitting anyone using Crossplane.| The Crossplane Blog
Learn about the latest addition to the Crossplane ecosystem: Provider Ceph, your Kubernetes control plane for Ceph object storage.| The Crossplane Blog
Imagine Learning uses Crossplane in its IDP to deploy resources into AWS. Learn about how it got started building its own Composition Functions.| The Crossplane Blog
Announcing the donation of function-kcl to Crossplane! KCL, a constraint-based record and functional language, enhances writing complex configurations.| The Crossplane Blog
The latest Crossplane news includes Crossplane 1.15, proposing to move the project towards CNCF graduation, and opportunities to meet at KubeCon Paris.| The Crossplane Blog
Explore Crossplane 1.15! Discover enhanced CLI, improved DevEx for platform engineers, and new features for cloud infrastructure management.| The Crossplane Blog
Crossplane changes the default registry from DockerHub to xpkg.upbound.io in the Crossplane v1.15.0 release.| The Crossplane Blog
Crossplane and Upbound warmly welcome Brian Lindblom from Apple and Bob Haddleton from Nokia to the Crossplane Steering Committee.| The Crossplane Blog
Kubernetes 1.29 was recently released. Check out highlights important for the Crossplane community, such as CRD Validation Expression Language moving to GA.| The Crossplane Blog
Celebrating 5 years of Crossplane and community around the open source cloud-native control plane framework.| The Crossplane Blog