In advance of its ChefCon 2021 conference, Progress today unveiled a series of enhancements to its Progress Chef automation platform that includes managed services and a software-as-a-service (SaaS) edition of its offerings as well as tighter integration with cloud services and other third-party tools.
Sudhir Reddy, vice president of engineering for the Chef business at Progress, said the SaaS platform, now available in beta, combined with the managed services provided by Progress will make the automation platform much more accessible to a wider range of organizations.
Progress is now also extending the reach of its Chef Compliance Automation for Cloud Resources offering across Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud Platform (GCP) to include Chef premium content that aligns with best practices for each cloud environment in addition to providing integration with Azure Policy, a suite of tools from Microsoft that compares resources to a set of business rules that define how cloud infrastructure should be employed.
Finally, Progress has enhanced Chef Enterprise Automation Stack to provide tighter integration between compliance and infrastructure automation along with adding infrastructure operations dashboard, support for Windows patch management, integration with third-party secrets management tools, and improvements to Chef Workstation and Chef Test Kitchen to simplify testing within application development processes.
With the release of a SaaS platform and the availability of managed services, Chef is joining a long list of IT vendors that are removing responsibility for deploying and securing their platforms from internal IT operations teams. It’s clear more organizations now want to spend more time on building and deploying software than managing the platforms that automate those tasks on their behalf, said Reddy.
It’s not clear how many IT teams that have already deployed a platform might shift over to a SaaS platform or rely on an IT vendor to manage that platform on their behalf. However, in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, many IT teams continue to work from home to help combat the spread of the virus. Many of those organizations have either shifted platforms to the cloud themselves, adopted SaaS platforms or outsourced the management of IT platforms altogether. There are also many small organizations that simply don’t have the internal expertise and resources required to stand up an IT automation platform on their own.
That approach also makes it simpler to converge security, compliance and IT operations management within the context of a larger DevSecOps workflow, noted Reddy.
The great paradox of IT automation has always been the level of expertise required to achieve it. Organizations that lack the expertise required to create automated playbooks, for example, don’t derive much value from an IT automation platform. It’s only been larger companies that have mostly derived the most benefit from investments in IT automation. However, as IT automation becomes more accessible via SaaS platforms and managed services, the level of expertise required to benefit from it naturally drops. In fact, with the advent of artificial intelligence (AI) for IT operations (AIOps), many manual IT tasks are increasingly being automated.
It’s too early to say whether the IT industry as a whole is on the cusp of the next wave of automation, but the raw ingredients that make up the primordial soup needed to achieve that goal is, at this point, only awaiting a catalyst.