Quali has added a free tier of service to its Torque platform for automating infrastructure provisioning and application workload deployments.
In addition, the company has updated the software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform to provide blueprints through which it provides tighter integration with Terraform, an open source infrastructure-as-code (IaC) tool, along with support for custom tags to make it easier to generate reports and dashboards that provide greater visibility into infrastructure costs.
Quali CEO Lior Koriat said the free tier is intended to make the Torque platform more accessible to both small teams of DevOps professionals and individual users. It includes the ability to build environments on Amazon Web Services (AWS) or the Microsoft Azure cloud in addition to providing integration with a variety of DevOps tools and platforms and access to a sample blueprint library. Support for the free tier is provided via an existing community edition of the platform.
Koriat said Torque takes IaC a step further by also making it possible to automatically deploy complete application environments on top of infrastructure provisioned as code using blueprints rather than low-level Terraform scripts. The goal is to increase developer productivity by extending Terraform so that developers can spin up environments across multiple cloud computing platforms via self-service, he added.
That approach also sharply reduces the chances a cloud platform will be misconfigured, which Koriat noted is the bane of cloud security professionals’ existence. Most developers lack the cybersecurity expertise required to ensure cloud computing environments are configured properly. Simplifying the provisioning of infrastructure is especially critical when developers employ complex platforms such as Kubernetes, added Koriat.
At the same time, Quali’s Koriat said IT leaders want more visibility into how cloud resources are being consumed as the number of workloads deployed in these environments steadily increases. Developers tend not to remember to de-provision cloud resources when no longer needed, which Koriat noted conspires to increase cloud costs unnecessarily.
It’s not clear just yet how quickly DevOps teams might be moving away from relying on lower-level tools toward automation frameworks accessed via a SaaS platform. However, as application environments become more complex, it becomes even more challenging to provision and manage IT environments—especially since many DevOps teams are still working from home to help limit the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.
One way or another, the amount of time and effort spent managing IT infrastructure needs to be reduced. After all, while application environments are increasing in both size and complexity the number of individuals that make up a DevOps team remains largely the same. The need to rely more on automation frameworks has reached a tipping point that is becoming increasingly obvious to all concerned.
As more organizations start to operate as software companies in the age of digital business transformation, it’s clear the way IT has been managed in the past is about to fundamentally change. The issue now is determining which automation framework lends itself best to enabling DevOps teams to achieve that goal.