Progress announced new powerful capabilities and enhancements in the latest release of Progress® Sitefinity®.
DevOps leaders are engaged in an all-out effort to "shift left" so they can deliver better software faster and at lower cost. Much of this effort entails fairly dramatic re-engineering of the dev/test process. And, if we're honest, much of it also entails a management culture of extreme demands on the development and test team.
But while we're building our state-of-the-art DevOps toolchains and pumping our people full of Hint Kick, there may be another smart way to shift even further left:
Re-think build distribution infrastructure.
The Physics of Process
Process and management culture can't overcome the laws of physics. And if you have to share massive builds or artifacts across multiple dev and test teams worldwide—as financial institutions, game developers, and other organizations often do — physics definitely gets in your way.
That's because you have to keep shipping these massive files over the network to those multiple locations again and again as you cycle through your dev/test processes. On the typical enterprise network, that code distribution can take hours.
Consider a 10GB build distributed to five different locations from your primary facility over a 10Mbps MPLS connection. You don't have to be a network expert to do the math. If a couple of your remote locations have 5Mbps connections, it takes them 5 hours to get each build. If three of those locations have 2Mbps connections (as is likely the case in Asia), code distribution takes 12.5 hours.
So the physics of code distribution costs you a day. Repeatedly.
The irony is that the more agile and iterative you try to get in this scenario, the more you pay this distribution time-tax. Conventional code distribution is therefore a primary enemy of the Agile/DevOps "shift left" imperative.
The Shift-Enabling Alternative
The alternative to conventional ship-it-over-the-network-and-wait-a-day approach to build distribution is a hub-and-spoke model that allows you to lets you maintain a "gold copy" of your current codebase(s) in the cloud — while providing all your remote locations with their own local copies that get continuously and automatically updated with any changes as they occur.
This model eliminates network-related bottlenecks while allowing your geographically dispersed teams to collaborate without tripping over each other's work.
The result: You can shift left much more aggressively, without the constant counter-productive impediment of a network that can't deliver your builds fast enough to your entire team.
Of course, if you're leading the shift-left efforts at your company, you probably don't own your company's IT infrastructure. So you'll have to make your case to whoever does.
But it's a worthwhile effort. Hub-and-spoke code distribution gives software-intensive businesses competitive advantage by dramatically accelerating time-to-market for digital deliverables—while ensuring that test/QA rigor doesn't unnecessarily delay that delivery. It also saves infrastructure owners lots of money in storage, bandwidth costs and network acceleration hardware.
So if you want to shift left — but keep running into a chronic network bottleneck — have that conversation today. It'll be a win-win for your business and your budget!
Barry Phillips is CMO of Panzura.
Industry News
Red Hat announced the general availability of Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.5, the latest version of the enterprise Linux platform.
Securiti announced a new solution - Security for AI Copilots in SaaS apps.
Spectro Cloud completed a $75 million Series C funding round led by Growth Equity at Goldman Sachs Alternatives with participation from existing Spectro Cloud investors.
The Cloud Native Computing Foundation® (CNCF®), which builds sustainable ecosystems for cloud native software, has announced significant momentum around cloud native training and certifications with the addition of three new project-centric certifications and a series of new Platform Engineering-specific certifications:
Red Hat announced the latest version of Red Hat OpenShift AI, its artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) platform built on Red Hat OpenShift that enables enterprises to create and deliver AI-enabled applications at scale across the hybrid cloud.
Salesforce announced agentic lifecycle management tools to automate Agentforce testing, prototype agents in secure Sandbox environments, and transparently manage usage at scale.
OpenText™ unveiled Cloud Editions (CE) 24.4, presenting a suite of transformative advancements in Business Cloud, AI, and Technology to empower the future of AI-driven knowledge work.
Red Hat announced new capabilities and enhancements for Red Hat Developer Hub, Red Hat’s enterprise-grade developer portal based on the Backstage project.
Pegasystems announced the availability of new AI-driven legacy discovery capabilities in Pega GenAI Blueprint™ to accelerate the daunting task of modernizing legacy systems that hold organizations back.
Tricentis launched enhanced cloud capabilities for its flagship solution, Tricentis Tosca, bringing enterprise-ready end-to-end test automation to the cloud.
Rafay Systems announced new platform advancements that help enterprises and GPU cloud providers deliver developer-friendly consumption workflows for GPU infrastructure.
Apiiro introduced Code-to-Runtime, a new capability using Apiiro’s deep code analysis (DCA) technology to map software architecture and trace all types of software components including APIs, open source software (OSS), and containers to code owners while enriching it with business impact.
Zesty announced the launch of Kompass, its automated Kubernetes optimization platform.
MacStadium announced the launch of Orka Engine, the latest addition to its Orka product line.