engine Redis 6 → 7
renders via Vulkan
credentials Secret Service (GNOME Keyring / KWallet)
availability Pro

What you get

  • Redis 6 and 7, standalone and managed (ElastiCache, Upstash)
  • Key browser with type-aware viewers (strings, hashes, lists, sets, streams)
  • Command console with completion and inline docs
  • SSH tunneling built in; credentials stay in the OS keychain
  • Cursor-based SCAN browsing — no blocking KEYS * footguns

Why Linux specifically

First-class Linux: Vulkan rendering, Wayland and X11, credentials in the Secret Service API (GNOME Keyring / KWallet). Not a flatpak'd afterthought.

Linux is the most underserved desktop for database GUIs — TablePlus barely ships there, DataGrip costs a JetBrains subscription, and most of the rest is Electron. A native GPU-rendered client on Linux is Zolt's home-field advantage.

Comparing options? See how Zolt stacks up against DBeaver, TablePlus, DataGrip, and Beekeeper Studio.

Common questions

Is Zolt a native Redis client on Linux?

Yes. Zolt is written end-to-end in Rust on GPUI and renders through Vulkan on Linux — no Electron, no WebView. Credentials are stored in Secret Service (GNOME Keyring / KWallet).

Does Zolt support Redis Cluster?

Zolt targets standalone and managed Redis 6–7 deployments at beta launch; cluster topology support is on the roadmap.

When can I download Zolt for Linux?

Zolt is in private pre-alpha; the public beta for macOS, Windows, and Linux is planned within roughly 12 weeks. Join the waitlist at zoltdb.com/download to get the Linux build the day it ships.

Get Zolt for Linux first.

The public beta lands in ~12 weeks. One email when the Linux build is ready.

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