At the Ansiblefest 2022 conference today, Red Hat and its parent company IBM announced the Project Wisdom initiative to bring natural language processing (NLP) to the open source Ansible IT operations automation platform.
At the same time, Red Hat announced that the curated instances of Ansible from Red Hat are now available in the marketplaces operated by Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft.
Richard Henshall, senior manager of Ansible product management at Red Hat, said the goal is to make IT automation much more accessible to a broader range of end users and IT professionals that lack the declarative programming expertise to use YAML files to automate IT processes. Instead, Red Hat and IBM Research teams are pledging to combine their expertise to create an artificial intelligence (AI) model that would enable anyone to use natural language to automate an IT process.
Ansible has emerged as the de facto open source standard for automating a wide range of IT processes, but the number of processes that could be automated still far exceeds the number of IT processes that are currently automated. In recent years, IT automation tools have become more accessible thanks in part to the rise of low-code and no-code tools, but some level of programming expertise is still required. Project Wisdom is being launched to eliminate the need to acquire those skills before being able to automate a process.
Of course, there will still be complex processes that may require the ability to programmatically manipulate YAML files, but the number of trivial IT processes that could be automated is still incalculable. In theory, a natural language interface for Ansible would greatly reduce the time and effort required for anyone to automate an IT process regardless of their skill level.
Interest in IT automation is rising once again as the global economy continues to soften. Organizations are looking to automate as many processes as possible in their efforts to keep IT staff size as small as possible. The more time IT teams spend on manual processes the less they will be able to manage IT environments that get more complex with each passing day.
It’s not clear to what degree IT processes can be automated, but as businesses become more dependent on IT, the line between IT automation and business processes continues to blur. Natural language processing capabilities could make it simpler for organizations to greatly accelerate digital business transformation initiatives.
Regardless of the level of IT automation achieved, it’s clear the way IT is managed is about to evolve once again. The days when IT teams configured and provisioned IT resources using fragile custom scripts are coming to an end as platforms like Ansible are more widely adopted. The only issue that remains to be seen is how quickly IT processes can be automated and whether the rate of automation can keep up with the volume of applications currently being developed.