GitLab today made available to a limited number of customers a single-tenant version of the software-as-a-service (SaaS) edition of its continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) platform.
David DeSanto, vice president of product at GitLab, said the GitLab Dedicated option provides all the benefits of a cloud platform without running afoul of any potential compliance issues.
Designed to be deployed on a cloud platform selected by the customer, DeSanto said the single-tenant edition of the platform makes sure that all the data stored in the cloud is isolated. In addition, the access to GitLab Dedicated is provided via a private network connection, he added.
Initially, GitLab Dedicated is being made available on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud with support for other cloud platforms planned for 2023 once it becomes generally available.
GitLab is, in effect, trying to strike a balance between a lower-cost multitenant edition of the platform or, alternatively, requiring organizations to deploy an on-premises edition of the platform themselves, DeSanto said.
In general, GitLab expects this latest version of the platform to appeal most to organizations that operate in highly regulated industries. However, the number of organizations looking to isolate their data in a private cloud to better protect their software supply chains is expanding, he noted.
In the wake of a series of high-profile breaches and vulnerability disclosures, the number of organizations that are reviewing their software supply chains has increased. Less clear is the degree to which organizations will look to lock down their existing CI/CD platform versus replacing it with a more secure modern alternative that can be more easily accessed via the cloud.
The challenge, of course, is replacing a CI/CD environment is not trivial, so organizations will need to consider the time and effort made over the years to customize their CI/CD environment. In some instances, that customization provides a meaningful competitive advantage. In other cases, however, the weight of maintaining all those customizations has become more troublesome than it’s worth.
Each individual organization will need to decide to what degree they will want to manage the DevOps platforms used to construct applications. More organizations are deciding they prefer to devote as much of their resources as possible to writing code instead of managing the underlying CI/CD platform used to create their applications, said DeSanto.
Regardless of approach, the number of organizations adopting DevOps best practices to build and deploy applications faster continues to increase. A CI/CD platform accessed via the cloud lowers the barrier to entry for smaller organizations that typically don’t have the skills and resources required to manage DevOps platforms.
In the meantime, SaaS-based approaches should significantly increase the number of applications being constructed using DevOps workflows. The level of DevOps adoption will naturally vary by organization. However, the total number of custom applications being used to drive, for example, digital business transformation initiatives should considerably expand in the months and years ahead as more applications are built and deployed at incredible speed.