ESSENTIAL SERVICES
Software you can call your own
Sovrium is a configuration-driven platform for building internal tools. You host it, you control the data, and you are never locked in.
Why Sovrium Exists
I spent years building internal tools for organizations -- with no-code, low-code, and code. I shipped fast. The tools worked. Clients were happy, at first.
Over time, the cracks showed. Vendors changed APIs without warning. Costs grew unpredictably. Making five tools talk to each other became a maintenance burden of its own. There was no versioning, no tests, no clean way to collaborate. The organizations I worked with had limited visibility into how their systems actually worked, and limited ability to change course.
Sovrium is my attempt to solve that problem. One platform that combines the speed of no-code with the flexibility of code. Configuration-driven, self-hosted, fully versionable, and testable -- designed to give teams real control over the tools they depend on.
What We Stand For
Five principles that guide every decision, from architecture to community.
Data Ownership
Your data stays on your infrastructure. No third-party analytics, no usage tracking, no surprise changes to how your information is stored or shared.
Transparency
The source code is available. The roadmap is public. Pricing is straightforward. If something changes, you will know about it before it affects you.
Simplicity
Business applications should be configured, not programmed. One config file, one command, one platform. Choose your format, get a complete app in seconds.
Minimal Dependencies
One runtime (Bun), one database (PostgreSQL), zero vendor SDKs. Fewer moving parts means fewer things that can break.
Full Ownership
Everything we build belongs to you. Full source access, full data portability, and configuration templates that become reusable organizational assets.
Source-Available
Sovrium is licensed under the Business Source License 1.1 (BSL 1.1). You can read, fork, and self-host the code freely for internal use. It automatically converts to Apache 2.0 on January 1, 2029.
