Digger is a San Francisco-based startup building developer tooling for infrastructure, with a mission to make managing infrastructure changes as fast and safe as shipping application code. The company began life as an open-source change-management system for teams using infrastructure-as-code tools like Terraform, an origin that earned it real traction in the developer community.

That open-source foundation has been substantial: Digger has accumulated more than half a million downloads and today powers deployments for over 300 companies. This adoption gave the team deep insight into where infrastructure change management breaks down — the manual reviews, the risk of misapplied changes, and the gap between developer velocity and operational safety.

Digger's answer is Infrabase, an AI-powered DevOps agent that lives directly in the pull request. Rather than asking engineers to context-switch into separate tooling, Infrabase automates and simplifies the full lifecycle of an infrastructure change right where code review already happens. It flags risks in pull requests and shepherds changes through with the rigor, control, and visibility that enterprises demand, bringing AI assistance to one of the highest-stakes parts of the software delivery process.

The positioning is significant: as infrastructure has historically been too risky and slow to change, Digger aims to give infrastructure changes the same agility and confidence that modern teams expect from application deployments. By embedding intelligence in the PR workflow, it keeps humans in control while removing toil.

Digger raised a $3.6 million seed round led by Initialized Capital, bringing its total funding to roughly $6.9 million. The round drew a notable roster of operator-investors, including the CEO of Datadog and co-founders of Sentry and Looker. With the new capital, Digger is expanding its product and engineering efforts to scale Infrabase for enterprise infrastructure teams.