In the world of open source, many forks struggle to establish themselves as legitimate alternatives, often overshadowed by the success of their progenitors. However, OpenTofu, a community-driven fork of Terraform, is defying expectations and forging its own path. Born out of HashiCorp’s licensing changes in early 2024, OpenTofu has evolved from a hopeful project into a thriving, self-sustaining initiative under the Linux Foundation. With robust community support, notable corporate backing, and an increasing number of contributions, OpenTofu has become a formidable force in the infrastructure-as-code landscape.
The transformation of OpenTofu has been rapid and impressive. Originally, there were doubts about its ability to compete with Terraform, especially given its lack of major cloud provider backing and the question of whether it could maintain momentum. However, as OpenTofu celebrated its first year, the project demonstrated notable growth in both contributor engagement and feature development. It has surpassed early expectations, now boasting a growing community of developers and supporters. This is not just a success in terms of enthusiasm but also in concrete metrics, such as code contributions and corporate sponsorship.
Looking at the metrics on GitHub, it’s clear that OpenTofu is not just another fork. While Terraform still leads in stars—boasting around 45,000 compared to OpenTofu’s 23,000—the real story lies in the engagement levels. OpenTofu has nearly tripled its contributor base to more than 160 developers since its stable launch in January 2024. Each new release draws a passionate and active group of contributors, with version 1.9 alone seeing 49 contributors submit over 200 pull requests. In contrast, Terraform’s contributor base has remained large, but the influx of new contributors has significantly slowed. The change in Terraform’s licensing model, shifting to the Business Source License (BSL), saw a sharp drop in community contributions, highlighting the shifting dynamics between the two projects.
OpenTofu’s issue tracker is another example of its growing success in the open-source world. Over a four-month period in late 2024, more than 150 issues were opened and over 200 pull requests were submitted. The speed at which the community addresses and resolves issues is a testament to the project’s collaborative spirit. Meanwhile, Terraform’s issues are still being actively managed, but the conversations now largely occur internally, driven by HashiCorp’s own engineers rather than a vibrant, community-led initiative. This shift marks a turning point, as OpenTofu becomes a beacon of open-source collaboration and community-driven growth, while Terraform, once the poster child for open-source success, now struggles with reduced community engagement.
With IBM’s acquisition of HashiCorp now complete, this could be OpenTofu’s time to shine. While the road ahead is still long, OpenTofu has demonstrated that, in open source, community enthusiasm, contributions, and collaboration can be the true drivers of success. The future of OpenTofu looks bright, and it may just become the new standard in infrastructure management tools.