stderr logging writes all our logs to the terminal (ie, what shows up in github workflows) instead of the logging file artifact. On failures with thousands of lines of logs, this makes searching for the error source nearly impossible. This change ensures we have clean outputs in github workflows, and logs stored in artifact files for extensive review.
Corso
Corso is the first open-source tool that aims to assist IT admins with the critical task of protecting their Microsoft 365 data. It provides a reliable, secure, and efficient data protection engine. Admins decide where to store the backup data and have the flexibility to perform backups of their desired service through an intuitive interface. As Corso evolves, it can become a great building block for more complex data protection workflows.
Corso is currently in Beta.
Corso supports M365 Exchange and OneDrive with SharePoint and Teams support in active development. Coverage for more services, possibly beyond M365, will expand based on the interest and needs of the community.
Getting Started
See the Corso Quickstart on our docs page.
Building Corso
To learn more about working with the project source core and building Corso, see the Developer section of the Corso Documentation.
Roadmap
You can learn more about the Corso roadmap and how to interpret it here.
If you have feature requests, please file a GitHub issue
and attach the enhancement label to the issue.
Contribution Guidelines
Code of Conduct
It's important that our community is inclusive and respectful of everyone. We ask that all Corso users and contributors take a few minutes to review our Code of Conduct.
License
Corso is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for the full license text.