
What changed in v1.0
Calcote described v1.0 as a maturity milestone rather than a feature release. “It’s a polishing of the work that we’ve been doing for years,” he said.
Two structural changes accompany the v1.0 release. Meshery restructured its GitHub footprint into two organizations: github.com/meshery for the core platform, including Meshery Operator and MeshSync, and github.com/meshery-extensions for the 300-plus integrations and adapters. The separation allows the extension community to iterate independently without affecting core platform stability.
Layer5 also launched the Certified Meshery Contributor program alongside v1.0, which the project describes as the first contributor certification in the CNCF. The free program includes five exams covering Meshery’s server, CLI, UI, models and extensibility domains. It is aimed at practitioners working in Go, React and OpenAPI.
What comes next
The primary post-1.0 roadmap item is a bring-your-own LLM integration. Currently the OPA policy engine operates deterministically. The planned integration will let users direct infrastructure queries to an LLM of their choice.
“Since Meshery is looking at your actively running infrastructure, you may want to ask any number of questions about optimization, about configuration changes that you might like to do,” Calcote said.
A parallel workstream will give users the option to choose between the existing deterministic ruleset and LLM-based assessment for the same governance tasks the policy engine handles today, including evaluating cost, security and resiliency tradeoffs.




















