The Idle Resource Scanner consolidates every idle-detection workflow (EC2, RDS, EBS, ELB, NAT, EIP) into a single, prioritized report. Resources are sorted by recoverable cost so cleanup effort goes to the biggest wins first.
New Unified idle resource report across EC2, RDS, EBS, ELB, NAT, and EIPs
New Resources sorted by recoverable monthly cost for biggest-wins-first workflow
Improved Idle thresholds now configurable per workspace and per resource type
Activate AWS Cost Allocation Tags directly from ZopNight without leaving the FinOps dashboard. Tag activation requests are queued and applied across the AWS organization with a single approval step.
New AWS Cost Allocation Tag activation from inside ZopNight
New Organization-wide tag activation with single approval step
Improved Tag activation status now visible per account in real time
A redesigned onboarding flow takes new workspaces from sign-up to first AWS account connected in under five minutes. The wizard offers IAM Identity Center, role assumption, and access keys as connection options.
New Redesigned 5-minute onboarding wizard for new workspaces
New AWS connection options: IAM Identity Center, role assumption, access keys
Improved First inventory scan now completes in under 10 minutes for typical accounts
Every page in ZopNight now renders correctly on mobile and tablet, with dashboards, reports, and approvals reflowed for touch. Quick-approval cards make it easy to triage remediations during oncall.
New Mobile and tablet layouts across every page in the app
New Quick-approval cards optimized for touch and oncall triage
Improved Login flow now uses native mobile biometric prompts where supported
Anomaly detection enters open beta. A statistical model establishes a per-service baseline and flags deviations that exceed two standard deviations, attaching a probable root-cause analysis to each anomaly.
New Statistical anomaly detection per service and per account (beta)
New Probable root-cause analysis attached to every anomaly
Improved Beta participants get an in-app feedback button on every anomaly
Showback v1 splits cloud spend by team based on cost allocation tags and surfaces the per-team monthly total in a printable format. CSV export and date range filtering ship as core features.
New First-generation showback report by team
New CSV export and custom date range filtering
Improved Showback page load latency reduced by 60 percent vs internal preview
AWS GovCloud (US) regions are now supported as connection targets. ZopNight workloads remain in commercial regions while the data plane communicates with GovCloud APIs over an isolated, FIPS-validated transport.
New AWS GovCloud (US-East and US-West) supported as connection targets
New FIPS-validated transport for GovCloud API communication
Improved Connection wizard now detects GovCloud account type automatically
Role-based access control launches with three default roles (Admin, Operator, Viewer) and the ability to define custom roles by combining permission verbs. RBAC applies to every action in the workspace.
New RBAC with default Admin, Operator, and Viewer roles
New Custom role definitions by combining permission verbs
Improved Permission denial UX now explains which role is required
The cloud-native scheduler replaces the cron-based prototype and supports per-resource recurring stop/start with timezone-aware execution. Schedules survive instance type changes and ASG scaling events.
New Cloud-native scheduler with timezone-aware execution
New Schedules survive instance type changes and ASG scaling events
Improved Schedule UI now previews the next 7 executions per schedule
Cluster, namespace, and pod-level cost breakdown is now available for ECS and EKS clusters. Allocation is based on requests when available and falls back to actual usage otherwise.
New ECS and EKS cluster, namespace, and pod-level cost breakdown
New Allocation method (requests vs actual usage) selectable per cluster
Improved Container inventory refresh now driven by kube-events rather than polling
Connect any Kubernetes cluster (EKS, AKS, GKE, or self-hosted) via a lightweight collector deployed as a DaemonSet. The collector streams cluster-state metrics back to ZopNight without exposing the API server publicly.
New Kubernetes collector for EKS, AKS, GKE, and self-hosted clusters
New DaemonSet-based deployment with zero public API exposure
Improved Cluster connection wizard now uses kubectl context for one-click install
Get release notes in your inbox.
We ship every two weeks. Subscribe to receive a short summary of what's new, no marketing, just the changelog in email form.