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commit 4115dde67a26c7898a66bec8cdb14526e0d1c9bd
Author: Wu Sheng <[email protected]>
AuthorDate: Thu Jan 1 15:33:16 2026 +0800

    Release 2025 release blog.
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+---
+title: "Apache SkyWalking 2025 in Review: Making BanyanDB Ready for Production"
+date: 2026-01-01
+author: SkyWalking Team
+description: "A review of Apache SkyWalking community work in 2025, with a 
focus on BanyanDB becoming the production-grade native storage for SkyWalking."
+tags:
+- Community
+- Year in Review
+- BanyanDB
+- Storage
+- Release Blog
+---
+
+2025 was a very focused year for the Apache SkyWalking community: **moving 
BanyanDB from “native storage” to a “production-ready default”**, and making 
SkyWalking APM fully benefit from that foundation.
+
+This post summarizes the key milestones, with an emphasis on BanyanDB.
+
+## Storage strategy: saying goodbye to H2
+
+We started 2025 with a clear direction: the **H2 storage option is permanently 
removed**.
+This change reduced long-term maintenance burden and removed a storage choice 
that was not aligned with production and cloud-native deployments.
+
+## BanyanDB: from 0.8.0 foundations to 0.9.0 production features
+
+**BanyanDB 0.8.0** delivered the “day-2 operations” foundation that a default 
storage backend needs. The community put a lot of effort into making queries 
faster and more predictable (for example `index_mode`, numeric index types, and 
multiple query-path optimizations), while also making the system safer under 
real production pressure. Disk-usage thresholds and a query **memory 
protector** were added as guardrails, and the operational toolbox matured with 
snapshot/backup/restore utilitie [...]
+
+Just as importantly, 0.8.0 started filling in the missing pieces of a full 
platform: native property storage and lifecycle-related capabilities that later 
enabled stronger HA and stage-based deployment patterns.
+
+**BanyanDB 0.9.0** was the “production features” milestone. It introduced the 
**Trace** data model as a first-class citizen, which unlocked much deeper trace 
storage and query capabilities. On the reliability and scaling side, the 
release brought configurable replicas, liaison-side improvements (including 
load balancing and moving some TopN flow), and broader correctness work such as 
migrations, version compatibility checks, and access logs.
+
+It also made long-term operations more cloud-friendly with backup/restore 
support for AWS S3, GCS, and Azure Blob Storage, and added authentication 
primitives needed in shared environments. In short, 0.9.0 is where BanyanDB 
clearly moved beyond a “fast storage engine” into a “production platform”.
+
+## SkyWalking APM: BanyanDB becomes the default path
+
+With **APM 10.2.0**, the project made the strategic shift official: H2 was 
removed permanently, and BanyanDB 0.8.0 became the default path that SkyWalking 
invests in. A lot of the work here was not flashy, but essential — refining OAP 
behavior (group settings, index model changes, Progressive TTL, query limits, 
and more) so running BanyanDB in production felt stable and predictable.
+
+With **APM 10.3.0**, SkyWalking and BanyanDB moved forward together: BanyanDB 
0.9.0’s new trace model was adopted end-to-end, reducing inefficient query 
round-trips and enabling new query views that significantly lowered page 
latency. The integration also expanded into lifecycle-aware operations with 
hot/warm/cold stage configuration (including TTL and query support), and added 
BanyanDB **self-monitoring** through OAP and the UI — the kind of end-to-end 
polish that turns a storage backen [...]
+
+If you’d like this review to cover **APM 10.4.x** as well, please point me to 
the corresponding release content in this repo (I didn’t find an APM 10.4.0 
release announcement in the current checkout).
+
+## Packaging and deployment ecosystem (Helm)
+
+BanyanDB’s production readiness is not only server features — it also depends 
on deployment maturity.
+
+- Helm charts:
+  - SkyWalking Kubernetes Helm Chart 4.8.0 improved BanyanDB deployment 
defaults by updating the bundled BanyanDB Helm dependency, fixing an init-job 
volume-mount mismatch, and aligning OAP/UI images with the APM 10.3.0 line.
+  - BanyanDB Helm 0.4.0 added backup/restore sidecars and a default volume for 
property storage.
+  - BanyanDB Helm 0.5.0 introduced stage-aware patterns (hot/warm/cold), 
improved lifecycle-sidecar scheduling, moved liaison to StatefulSet, refined 
internal networking, and expanded configuration options.
+  - BanyanDB Helm 0.5.1 refined liaison configuration and fixed restore-init 
environment issues.
+  - BanyanDB Helm 0.5.3 fixed a liaison/data-node port issue.
+
+## The rest of the community: agents and tooling kept moving
+
+While storage was the “main storyline”, the community shipped releases across 
agents, clients, and surrounding components throughout 2025.
+
+Below is a consolidated view of the other releases, grouped by project, with 
the most important notes.
+
+- **SkyWalking Java Agent**
+  - **9.4.0**: agent self-observability; async-profiler support; broader 
plugin improvements.
+  - **9.5.0**: virtual thread executor plugin; compatibility and stability 
fixes; dependency upgrades.
+
+- **SkyWalking Go**
+  - **0.6.0**: richer manual APIs (events/logs/metrics, set span error); 
goframev2 plugin; bug fixes including Redis cluster mode.
+
+- **SkyWalking for NodeJS**
+  - **0.8.0**: Express 4/5 compatibility, keep-alive HTTP trace fix, and 
test/dependency maintenance.
+
+- **SkyWalking Python**
+  - **1.2.0**: sampling service, `sw_grpc` plugin, async/profiling stability 
fixes, Python 3.13 support, and dropping Python 3.7.
+
+- **SkyWalking PHP**
+  - **1.0.0**: reach 1.0; add PSR-3 log reporting; upgrade 
toolchain/dependencies.
+
+- **SkyWalking Rust**
+  - **0.9.0**: migrate to Rust edition 2024 and upgrade dependencies.
+  - **0.10.0**: Kafka client configuration refactor, `rdkafka` upgrade, CI 
maintenance.
+
+- **SkyWalking Ruby**
+  - **0.1.0**: initialize agent core and e2e tests; add plugins for Sinatra, 
redis-rb, net-http, memcached, and Elasticsearch.
+
+- **SkyWalking Client JS**
+  - **1.0.0**: add Core Web Vitals and static resource metrics; fix 
fetch/resource error handling; dependency and e2e/test improvements.
+
+- **SkyWalking Satellite**
+  - **1.3.0**: support native eBPF Access Log protocol and async-profiler 
protocol; upgrade Go toolchain.
+
+- **SkyWalking Eyes**
+  - **0.7.0**: improve installation/docs, respect gitignore behavior, upgrade 
Go, and simplify release steps.
+  - **0.8.0**: add Elixir support and stronger dependency-license scanning 
(notably Ruby via Gemfile.lock), plus stability fixes.
+
+## Looking ahead: possible directions in 2026
+
+2025 was about making BanyanDB ready for production. In 2026, the community is 
exploring the next set of improvements that could make the whole stack simpler 
to operate, more stable under stress, and easier to integrate into broader 
observability ecosystems.
+
+Possible areas include:
+
+- **BanyanDB: remove the etcd dependency**: the direction under discussion is 
to move away from etcd (given ecosystem activity and maintenance concerns) and 
rely more on DNS-based discovery plus BanyanDB’s native property capabilities.
+- **BanyanDB: stronger stability testing**: more systematic testing, including 
chaos testing, to validate behavior under failures and noisy conditions.
+- **BanyanDB: better observability export**: introducing First Occurrence Data 
Collection (FODC) as a sidecar and proxy server to provide a unified stream of 
observability data to third-party systems.
+- **SkyWalking APM: broader runtime and query capabilities**: cold-stage data 
query support, a newer Java runtime (Java 25), and consideration of TraceQL 
protocol (Temper) support.
+
+## Closing
+
+Thanks to everyone who contributed to SkyWalking in 2025. Every contribution 
is high-value — code, documentation, reviews, testing, issue triage, and 
operational experience — and each of them helped move the project forward.
+
+We also want to say a special thank you to the countless end users across 
global companies. Many of the most valuable improvements don’t start from a 
pull request: they start from real-world use cases, performance investigations, 
production feedback, bug reports, and the patience to help us reproduce and 
validate fixes.
+
+As another milestone, SkyWalking reached **968 GitHub contributors** globally, 
and we expect the **1000th** contributor milestone to arrive soon in 2026. But 
the community is much larger than the number suggests, and SkyWalking’s 
progress has always been driven by collaboration between contributors, 
adopters, and maintainers.
+
+Apache SkyWalking was originally created by Sheng Wu as a personal project in 
May 2015. It would never have grown into what it is today without the whole 
community — and it will keep moving forward because of the community.
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