Caddy vs piku

TaglineAutomatic HTTPS web server and reverse proxy with zero config TLSNano-PaaS for tiny servers — git push to deploy on a single Pi or VPS
CategorySelf-Hosting Platforms & PaaSSelf-Hosting Platforms & PaaS
ReplacesHeroku, Netlify, RenderHeroku, Render
GitHub stars73k6.3k
LanguageGoPython
LicenseApache-2.0MIT
Self-host difficulty
3/5
Moderate
2/5
Easy
Deploy options
Docker
Docker Compose
Manual
Manual
Managed hosting
Last updated6 days ago2 months ago
View repoView repo

Where each falls short

The honest trade-offs — what you give up with each, versus the proprietary tools they replace.

Caddy
  • Not a full PaaS; no git push deploy, build pipelines, or app lifecycle management
  • No built-in CI/CD integration; needs to be combined with other tools for deployments
  • Dashboard and metrics require third-party tools (Prometheus, Grafana) — none built-in
  • No managed database provisioning or environment variable secrets management
piku
  • No Docker support — apps must run as native processes
  • No built-in secrets management or environment vault
  • No web UI; all management is via SSH and CLI

Bottom line

Choose piku if you want the lower-effort setup; choose Caddy for the larger community and ecosystem. Caddy has seen more recent development. Open each guide below for deploy steps and the full feature gap.

Caddy

Automatic HTTPS web server and reverse proxy with zero config TLS

piku

Nano-PaaS for tiny servers — git push to deploy on a single Pi or VPS