CA Technologies: 3 DevOps Predictions for 2017
The hottest trends in DevOps aren't specifically about dev or ops
December 30, 2016

Aruna Ravichandran
CA Technologies

A lot of time, resources and energy has been invested over the past few years on de-siloing development and operations. And with good reason. DevOps is enabling organizations to more aggressively increase their digital agility, while at the same time reducing digital costs and risks.

But as 2017 approaches, the hottest trends in DevOps aren’t specifically about dev or ops. They’re about testing, security, and metrics.

1. Continuous testing becomes a top topic of interest in 2017

The rapid promotion of new code into production is a noble goal, but it can also be an express ticket to digital failure. DevOps success requires not just speed, but also quality—that means the rapid promotion of really, really good code. And the only way to ensure that your code is really, really good is to test it, continuously.

We all intuitively know the value of testing. But the accelerated pace of development that comes with successful DevOps practices place increased pressure on the testing function. Leaving testing as a single phase within the software development lifecycle (SDLC) is no longer sufficient.

As the business risk associated with less-than-perfect code increases, as customer expectations regarding digital experiences continue to escalate, and competitors also become more digitally adept, good-enough testing is ceasing to be good enough. Testing has to be more rigorous, and most importantly – it needs to be pervasive across the DevOps lifecycle. Testing can longer only be the domain of QA engineers. Developers need to have the ability to test code as it’s produced—what’s known as shift left testing. Testing has to be faster and more automated. And in addition to “shift left” testing, testing and test results also have to be made available to the operations.

Testing has become the main constraint when it comes to speed with quality at scale. So expect continuous testing to be a top topic of interest in 2017.

2. The unification of development, security and operations – DevSecOps

Another great way to undermine your digital business is to rapidly promote code that perfectly fulfills all of your functional requirements, that efficiently performs at scale … and that leaves you excessively vulnerable to cyber-malice.

So success requires not just speed, but also ensuring that quality, functional requirements AND security needs are met. This means another cultural shift must happen: making sure Security is engaged early with DevOps. Given the increasing intensity and sophistication of attackers — and how rapidly digital compromises turn into bad publicity and potentially irreparable brand damage — code cannot be good without being safe and deployed within a solid security architecture.

As microservices and SDKs evolve, it will be easier for developers to build in security from the start, without taking their focus off of a great user experience. But when it comes to testing and deploying the code, security validation should be viewed as a special case of testing as the requirements of security-related code testing are highly idiosyncratic and dynamic and will likely involve experts and constituencies (e.g. governance, risk and compliance teams) not normally part of the DevOps process.

3. 2017 will bring an increasing focus on metrics

It’s no surprise that until recently, very few IT organizations have paid attention to DevOps metrics. After all, for a number or organizations, it’s been tough enough just getting basic DevOps processes, tools, and culture in place. However, you can’t improve what you can’t measure. So as agile development and DevOps processes continue to expand, expect to see some real progress on both the adoption and the standardization of DevOps success metrics.

Now that there is a critical mass of successful DevOps implementations – as well as some organizations who are starting to evolve into Continuous Delivery — organizations will look to refine practices through iterative, metrics-driven management.

Metrics can help improve digital practices in several ways. Collective metrics can help discover process bottlenecks, optimize resource allocation, and better configure DevOps toolchains. Individual metrics can help pinpoint coaching needs and replicate the behaviors of top performers.

As success measurement becomes increasingly important for DevOps, we are likely to see the industry coalesce around a common set of metrics. While 2016 has seen the industry take steps in this direction — as evidenced by the formation of the DevOps Express consortium — expect to see some real progress on both the adoption and the standardization of DevOps success metrics.

So, yes, in 2017 we will still see focus to some degree on DevOps itself. But as DevOps increases in maturity, we’ll see organizations keep pushing the envelope with more rigorous test automation, more sophisticated pre-production security controls, and great management-by-objective discipline across the DevOps lifecycle.

Aruna Ravichandran is VP, Product & Solutions Marketing, DevOps, CA Technologies
Share this

Industry News

January 30, 2025

OutSystems announced the general availability (GA) of Mentor on OutSystems Developer Cloud (ODC).

January 30, 2025

Kurrent announced availability of public internet access on its managed service, Kurrent Cloud, streamlining the connectivity process and empowering developers with ease of use.

January 29, 2025

MacStadium highlighted its major enterprise partnerships and technical innovations over the past year. This momentum underscores MacStadium’s commitment to innovation, customer success and leadership in the Apple enterprise ecosystem as the company prepares for continued expansion in the coming months.

January 29, 2025

Traefik Labs announced the integration of its Traefik Proxy with the Nutanix Kubernetes Platform® (NKP) solution.

January 28, 2025

Perforce Software announced the launch of AI Validation, a new capability within its Perfecto continuous testing platform for web and mobile applications.

January 28, 2025

Mirantis announced the launch of Rockoon, an open-source project that simplifies OpenStack management on Kubernetes.

January 28, 2025

Endor Labs announced a new feature, AI Model Discovery, enabling organizations to discover the AI models already in use across their applications, and to set and enforce security policies over which models are permitted.

January 27, 2025

Qt Group is launching Qt AI Assistant, an experimental tool for streamlining cross-platform user interface (UI) development.

January 27, 2025

Sonatype announced its integration with Buy with AWS, a new feature now available through AWS Marketplace.

January 27, 2025

Endor Labs, Aikido Security, Arnica, Amplify, Kodem, Legit, Mobb and Orca Security have launched Opengrep to ensure static code analysis remains truly open, accessible and innovative for everyone:

January 23, 2025

Progress announced the launch of Progress Data Cloud, a managed Data Platform as a Service designed to simplify enterprise data and artificial intelligence (AI) operations in the cloud.

January 23, 2025

Sonar announced the release of its latest Long-Term Active (LTA) version, SonarQube Server 2025 Release 1 (2025.1).

January 23, 2025

Idera announced the launch of Sembi, a multi-brand entity created to unify its premier software quality and security solutions under a single umbrella.

January 22, 2025

Postman announced the Postman AI Agent Builder, a suite empowering developers to quickly design, test, and deploy intelligent agents by combining LLMs, APIs, and workflows into a unified solution.

January 22, 2025

The Cloud Native Computing Foundation® (CNCF®), which builds sustainable ecosystems for cloud native software, announced the graduation of CubeFS.