LitmusChaos Q4 2025 update: community, contributions, and project progress
Link⚡ TL;DR
📝 Summary
About LitmusChaos Project Updates & Releases Release 3.24.0 (December 2025) Release 3.23.0 (November 2025) Release 3.22.0 (October 2025) Innovation Spotlight: LitmusChaos MCP Server What is the LitmusChaos MCP Server? Hacktoberfest 2025 (The Month of Open Source) In-Person Meetup Events LitmusChaos x Hacktoberfest Meetup – Bangalore (October 4) Hacktoberfest Hyderabad Meetup (October 11) Resilience and Chaos Testing Meetup (December 6) Latest from the LitmusChaos Community User Stories: Community Content Monthly Community Meetings Monthly Contributors Meetings Videos and Blogs: Closing Thoughts Connect with LitmusChaos Posted on January 22, 2026 by Pritesh Kiri, Community Manager for LitmusChaos CNCF projects highlighted in this post As we enter the new year, we’re excited to share the Q4 updates from the LitmusChaos community. Over the past few months, the chaos engineering ecosystem and the LitmusChaos community have continued to grow steadily, driven by strong participation, thoughtful contributions, and meaningful collaboration across the globe. This blog captures the highlights from October, November, and December , bringing together key project updates, community initiatives, contributor activities, and ecosystem developments around LitmusChaos. Our goal is to keep the community informed, celebrate the work happening across the project, and reflect on the collective progress made during the quarter. LitmusChaos is an open source chaos engineering platform that helps teams identify weaknesses and potential outages in their infrastructure by running controlled chaos experiments. Built on cloud-native principles, LitmusChaos enables teams to validate system resilience and proactively strengthen their DevOps pipelines against real-world software and infrastructure failures. Started in late 2017 with a focus on simple chaos jobs for Kubernetes, LitmusChaos became a CNCF Sandbox project in 2020 and was promoted to a CNCF Incubating project in January 2022. Today, the project is maintained by contributors from multiple organizations across cloud-native vendors, solution providers, and end users. LitmusChaos is used in production by organizations worldwide, including companies such as Adidas, FIS, iFood, Cyren, Intuit, Lenskart, Orange, as well as technology leaders like Red Hat and VMware. The latest release introduces significant enhancements to user experience and system stability. For more details, check out the release. Enhanced experiment management with editable step names in fault settings, giving users better control over their chaos experiments Improved ChaosHub customization capabilities, allowing teams to better tailor their chaos engineering workflows Fixed critical UI issues, including blank page rendering in experiment run history and caching problems in the overview page Added Kubernetes branding updates and refined the visual interface by removing deprecated elements Enhanced image registry flexibility with support for empty registry names New Contributors: @LipsaDas0710, @Kamalesh-Seervi, @Poswark, @1spyral, @SharanRP A security-focused release that also brought significant documentation improvements and UI enhancements.