Red Hat this week announced that a private preview of the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform is now available on the Microsoft Azure Cloud.
Tom Anderson, vice president of Red Hat Ansible automation, said making the Red Hat instance of the open source automation framework available on Azure is the first step toward making it possible for IT teams to use the IT automation framework across multiple clouds.
The goal is to make it simpler for IT teams to bridge multiple IT environments using a common framework to automatically configure everything from operating systems to security platforms across a hybrid cloud computing environment.
Ansible is emerging as a de facto standard for automating IT environments largely because it provides an IT team with a declarative approach to automating IT processes. An IT team can write a playbook that describes their desired state for a platform without having to know anything about its current state.
Interest in IT automation has soared as the number of workloads being deployed in the cloud and on-premises IT environments have steadily increased. The simple truth is that many organizations can’t keep pace with the rate at which applications are built and deployed because they are unable to hire and retain enough IT staff. The challenge is that writing a playbook to automate any IT process requires a fair amount of expertise that many organizations lack. There are, however, now large numbers of existing templates that organizations can reuse.
Anderson also noted that security concerns will also force the IT automation issue. Many of the application workloads running in cloud computing environments are misconfigured because they were provisioned by developers that have little to no security expertise. A playbook greatly reduces the chances an application workload will be misconfigured in the cloud without having to turn every developer into a security expert, Anderson explained.
Ultimately, IT automation frameworks reduce the level of friction that often exists between developers and the rest of the IT operations team in a way that actually serves to increase developer productivity, added Anderson.
Regardless of how IT organizations automate IT processes, it’s now a question of the rate at which that goal will be achieved rather than if. DevOps teams, of course, have always been at the forefront of automation, but now it’s clear that as IT environments become more complex, IT organizations are embracing automation more aggressively. Most of those initial efforts are focused on repetitive, tedious and manual IT tasks, but the potential to automate IT processes at levels of unprecedented scale has never been greater.
In fact, many organizations may soon discover it’s difficult to retain IT professionals without investing in automation. After all, the most talented IT professionals will not want to work for an organization that requires them to always manually configure IT resources. Many IT teams might also discover that automation frameworks like Ansible are the gateway to embracing additional DevOps best practices. The challenge, of course, is finding the time to get started automating processes when there are so many immediate issues that IT teams can’t ignore.