Cloud Infrastructure Map
Visualize your entire cloud infrastructure with AI-powered workload classification and real-time traffic.
Understanding your cloud infrastructure shouldn't require stitching together a dozen different consoles. Today, we're launching Cloud Infrastructure Map - a unified view of your entire cloud environment with AI workload classification and real-time traffic visualization.

Complete Environment View
Cloud Infrastructure Map shows your entire infrastructure in a single view - AWS accounts, Azure subscriptions, GCP projects, and Kubernetes clusters. No more jumping between consoles to understand how your services interact.
Resources are automatically organized by VPC, region, and service type, with clear visualization of network boundaries and connectivity.
Real-Time Traffic Visualization
See live network traffic flowing through your infrastructure. Traffic is classified by type (TCP and UDP for L4, HTTP and gRPC for L7) and annotated with volume and latency metrics - giving you instant visibility into what's actually communicating across your cloud environment.
For Kubernetes clusters, we capture inter-cluster flows by integrating directly with the CNI layer. For L3/L4 visibility, Kestrel connects to Cilium (via Hubble Relay), GKE Dataplane V2, and AWS VPC CNI. For L7 traffic analysis (HTTP routes, gRPC methods, database queries), we integrate with Istio service mesh via Envoy's Access Log Service or Ztunnel.
A Single Pane of Glass
Engineering leaders often struggle to answer basic questions: What does our infrastructure actually look like? What services depend on what? Where is traffic actually flowing? Cloud Infrastructure Map provides a single source of truth - no more piecing together information from your cloud console, kubectl, observability tools, and tribal knowledge.
With everything in one view, you can quickly identify:
- Workloads communicating with unexpected destinations (security and compliance risks)
- Orphaned resources that should have been decommissioned months ago
- Services responsible for disproportionate egress costs
- Network paths that bypass expected security boundaries
- Dependencies between teams and services that aren't documented anywhere
Getting Started
Cloud Infrastructure Map is available now for all Kestrel users. Connect your cloud accounts via Settings → Cloud Integrations and the map will begin populating automatically. For Kubernetes traffic visibility, deploy the Kestrel Operator and Kestrel will automatically discover and connect to your CNI and service mesh.