Red Hat, its online AnsibleFest 2020 conference today, announced an on-premises edition of Ansible Automation Platform dubbed Private Automation Hub and previewed technology to connect the Ansible Automation Platform managed as a cloud service by Red Hat and the on-premises edition.
In addition, Red Hat is making available more pre-integrated workflows to its certified Ansible Content Collections service for Red Hat OpenShift, Kubernetes Core and the VMware vSphere REST application programming interface (API).
Finally, the company previewed integration between Ansible Automation Platform and Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management, a tool originally developed by parent company IBM for managing Kubernetes clusters at scale. As part of that effort, Red Hat will integrate its implementation of Kubernetes Operators tools for deploying applications on the Red Hat OpenShift platform, which is built on top of Kubernetes, with a Resource Operator for Red Hat Advanced Cluster Management that will enable Ansible Automation Platform to execute tasks outside of the Kubernetes cluster when required.
Joe Fitzgerald, vice president of management for Red Hat, said there are now more than 60 Ansible Content Collections available that can be deployed on-premises or in a cloud service managed by Red Hat. The connectors will make it easier for IT teams to access workflow content curated by Red Hat and its partners while continuing to create automated playbooks for their own unique IT environments that are stored locally, he said.
As the number of IT domains to which a declarative IT automation framework can be applied continues to expand, Fitzgerald said the playbooks an IT team can create are becoming more comprehensive. Unlike other IT automation platforms, however, Ansible doesn’t require the IT operations team to learn how to code. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and most employees working from home, the number of workflows that IT teams are trying to automate has increased substantially, he said.
That framework can now also be applied to both legacy IT environments as well as Kubernetes clusters upon which the cloud-native technologies are being deployed. During AnsibleFest, Red Hat will be showing proofs of concept of support for Knative, open source middleware developed by Google that integrates serverless computing frameworks with Kubernetes clusters.
While there are still DevOps teams that have adopted programmable frameworks to manage IT as code, many traditional IT administrators are embracing Ansible as a means to automate increasingly complex IT environments. Rather than acquiring and deploying automation tools for each platform in the IT environment, Ansible provides a common framework through which IT teams can automate the provisioning of servers, virtual machines, clusters, switches, routers and storage systems. With vendors such as Cisco Systems supporting Ansible, the number of workflows capable of spanning multiple IT domains continues to expand as internal IT teams share the playbooks either they created or had crafted for them by an IT services firm.
Regardless of how an internal IT gains access to those playbooks, it’s probable that no matter what the automation requirement is, there is now somewhere a playbook written in Ansible to address it.