At its swampUP event, JFrog launched a JFrog Connect platform for updating, managing, monitoring and securing remote Linux and internet of things (IoT) devices.
The JFrog Connect platform is based on a lightweight agent JFrog gained last year with the acquisition of Upswift and that has now been integrated with the JFrog Artifactory repository. DevOps teams can now use a low-code tool to build flow logic that is integrated with a Git repository in addition to triggering a rollback to ensure a device returns to its previous known software state when necessary.
DevOps teams will also be able to connect to a wide range of Linux-based IoT devices from anywhere in the world and then manage and monitor them in real-time by name, description or tags.
JFrog CTO Yoav Landman said in the near future, DevOps teams will find themselves building and deploying applications that will not only be deployed on fleets of endpoints at the network edge, but also will be continuously updated.
Historically, those endpoints have been managed mainly by operations technology (OT) teams, but it will soon be up to DevOps teams to automate the management of those platforms down to an individual container using the lightweight agent created by Upswift, he said.
The number of application workloads being deployed on edge computing platforms is rising sharply as organizations seek to process and analyze data closer to the point where it is being created and consumed. In fact, that shift is at the core of digital business transformation initiatives that depend on edge computing platforms and devices running, for example, IoT applications that process data in near-real-time.
The challenge today is in many cases organizations lack the ability to consistently deploy software on edge computing platforms, which results in the creation of a hodgepodge of homegrown tools to manually deploy software on edge computing platforms. There is a clear need to raise the DevOps bar to address edge computing requirements, said Landman.
It’s too early to say just how much software will be deployed on the edge, but there may come a day when there is more software at the edge than there is in the cloud. In the meantime, the line between edge computing and cloud computing continues to blur. Many more DevOps teams will soon find themselves managing thousands of distributed endpoints from a central cloud.
In the meantime, DevOps teams should expect to find themselves working more closely with OT teams that generally have a significantly different culture. Many of those OT teams are just now coming to terms with the implications of connecting endpoints to the internet. The need to continuously update the software on those platforms is not typically the first issue that comes to mind for them. Today much of the software running on edge computing platforms is rarely updated. In the future, however, that software is likely to be updated at a rate that many OT teams are not ready to envision much less manage.