changelog

What's new in CoreBit

CoreBit ships continuously. The latest releases are below, newest first — the same notes you'll see in the in-app release feed.

1.0.0, b670 stable
  • This release adds flexible device documentation and a much more powerful Device Inventory.
  • New
  • Custom fields: define your own device fields with a name and type (Text, Number, Yes/No, Date, URL, or a Select list). A field is global — define it once and it applies to every device, so it stays consistent in search. Add one directly from a device, or manage them in Settings → Custom Fields.
  • Per-device address: each device now has Address, City, Postal code and Country fields in its Site & Location section — handy when every device sits at a different address.
  • Tags: simple grouping labels on devices (for example, to separate devices from different owners at a shared site).
  • Device Inventory now searches and filters across all of it: device type, tags, address (city/country) and custom-field values.
  • Improvements & fixes
  • Restore now shows a clear message when a reverse proxy (e.g. nginx) rejects a large backup upload as "too large" (HTTP 413), instead of raw server output.
  • Fixed a case where two app instances started on the same port could serve inconsistent data.
  • The Enterprise preview badge now states these features are free for everyone (Free and Pro) through the end of August 2026.
1.0.0, b669 stable
  • Fixed: The security scanners (nmap, testssl.sh, nikto, nuclei) could show as "missing" on some servers even when installed — testssl in particular is now detected whether it's named "testssl.sh" or "testssl".
  • Fixed: The installer now adds each security scanner individually, so one unavailable package can no longer stop the others from installing.
1.0.0, b668 stable
  • CoreBit now has a built-in AI assistant, AI-generated reports, and an AI-driven security scanner.
  • New
  • AI assistant ("Ask your network"): ask about your network in plain language and get answers from live data. It investigates across devices, runs read-only checks (ping, traceroute, port checks, SNMP, live probes), knows the map you're viewing, reads each device's documentation notes, and links straight to the devices it mentions.
  • AI Reports: have the assistant write and save reports — security summaries, work plans (for example, steps to replace a server), or a write-up of what it found. Reports are kept on each device and on a new Reports page, and can be printed or saved as PDF.
  • Security Testing: run an authorized, non-destructive security scan of a device. It checks open ports, exposed databases and admin services, TLS/certificates, web issues, and known vulnerabilities — with links straight to the security advisory — then saves the findings as a report. Choose a full assessment or a custom request such as "scan port 80". Detection only: it never brute-forces, logs in, or changes the device.
  • Enterprise preview
  • Reports and Security Testing are planned Enterprise features. They are free for everyone (Free and Pro) through the end of August 2026. Any Pro license activated before then keeps access to these features after the Enterprise version launches.
  • Improvements & fixes
  • The security scanner now checks every open web port (including plain HTTP on port 80), not just HTTPS.
  • Clearer message when the AI assistant hasn't been set up yet.
  • Reports and the security scan windows now scroll correctly, and print/PDF renders the formatted report.
  • Long reports now save reliably.
Older releases are on the GitHub wiki Full changelog
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install.sh
curl -fsSL https://licensing.corebit.ease.dk/install.sh | sudo bash -s