Digital.ai today unveiled the Ascension release of its namesake DevOps platform that adds pre-built metrics and best practices dashboards using a Test Lens capability to more easily employ analytics to identify software delivery bottlenecks.
In addition, the company has added autonomous testing tools that automatically generate performance and security tests for mobile applications. These tools can be run by DevOps teams, developers or business users. An enhanced Change Risk Prediction capability enables machine learning algorithms to make more extensive use of historical data.
Finally, Digital.ai has also added integrations with the open source Argo continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) platform and made available an Agility Sync tool for building custom integration with legacy application environments and opened an online marketplace for integrations.
Jeff Moloughney, chief marketing officer for Digital.ai, said the goal is to extend the reach of the company’s DevOps platform. At its core, the platform has a value stream management (VSM) and version control software originally developed by XebiaLabs and CollabNet VersionOne before the two companies merged to create Digital.ai. The combined company subsequently acquired Numerify, a provider of analytics tools infused with artificial intelligence (AI), Experitest, a set of testing tools, and Arxan, a provider of an application security platform. The company claims that its platforms are used by more than 1,500 organizations.
In general, DevOps is entering a new era as organizations realize how dependent they are on software to drive business processes, noted Moloughney. Historically, the adoption of DevOps practices has been driven from the bottom up within most organizations. Now, business and IT leaders are also looking to drive the adoption of a consistent set of DevOps best practices to gain more visibility into software delivery, he added.
That does not mean, however, that organizations can dictate what tools individual developers can use, so the DevOps platform employed has to be extensible in terms of the available integrations, said Moloughney.
At the same time, Molougney added that more DevOps processes will be automated using machine learning algorithms. Digital.ai is embedding these algorithms within its core platform to both uncover software delivery bottlenecks and automate routine tasks such as testing.
It’s not clear to what degree organizations that have already embraced DevOps might be considering replacing their existing platforms but, regardless of size, most of them are encountering issues. On the plus side, the number of organizations that are adopting DevOps practices more broadly is increasing as more digital business transformation initiatives are launched. As those practices evolve, the expectation is many of those organizations will embrace analytics in the form of VSM to better optimize their efforts.
In the meantime, the rate of DevOps adoption across enterprises will continue to vary widely. Each development team within an organization tends to define a set of DevOps practices based on their own requirements. The challenge, given all the dependencies that exist between those projects, is determining the actual rate of progress the organization is making as each of those isolated initiatives progresses.