Parasoft(link is external) is showcasing its latest product innovations at embedded world Exhibition, booth 4-318(link is external), including new GenAI integration with Microsoft Visual Studio Code (VS Code) to optimize test automation of safety-critical applications while reducing development time, cost, and risk.
The following are 2017 predictions for DevOps from the executive team at Electric Cloud, covering Application Release Automation, Microservices and Containers, Continuous Testing, Secure DevOps and more:
Growing DevOps Adoption
Continued momentum for the growing adoption of DevOps, particularly by large enterprises – as the software delivery pipeline and maturity of the delivery process become key differentiators in the hyper-competitive and dynamic market today, which is largely driven by software innovation. The ROI of a DevOps transformation has been established, and companies now understand that in order to stay competitive they have to get better at delivering software – where DevOps comes in.
Steve Brodie, CEO of Electric Cloud
Application Release Automation Continues to Grow
Within this growing adoption of DevOps, Application Release Automation (ARA) is the hottest category that enterprises are focusing on. This focus on Release Automation is because both businesses and analysts believe this is the area where you can really get the most bang for your buck. In a 2015 Gartner Research DevOps survey of 338 IT business leaders, when asked about what was most important to their company’s DevOps success, the number one item was, by far, ARA. In fact, 60% percent of people pointed to ARA as being the most critical factor in achieving success for their organization’s DevOps initiatives.
Automation is a key enabler for faster, more frequent, deployments , while ensuring quality and service continuity, Gartner also estimates that by 2020, 50% of global enterprises will be adopting ARA. That means in the next three years, half of global enterprises will be turning to DevOps and ARA to fuel their software delivery lifecycle. The question is, will you be amongst them?
Steve Brodie, CEO of Electric Cloud
Consolidation Becomes Critical for Scale, Compliance, Utilization
As DevOps matures, large, complex organizations will focus on finding ways to consolidate and standardize their DevOps processes, tooling and implementation -- in order to scale DevOps throughout the organization (and save costs). To enable developers and an Agile way of working, while ensuring governance, system-level visibility, and organizational control - many are implementing a shared, self-service DevOps Automation platform to enable their end-to-end pipelines. Rather than investing in each team’s software delivery as a “snowflake” set-up, they invest in converging of all teams and applications around shared configurations, pipelines, environments, tooling, processes, security test, etc. This consolidation allows for reusability, improved visibility, security, auditability, and resource utilization - while still being flexible enough to support specific teams’ needs.
Steve Brodie, CEO of Electric Cloud
Microservices and Containers Will Drive Modern Application Delivery
With all these organizations making a change towards DevOps, microservices are a uniquely aligned architecture to help achieve success. This is because microservices enable organizations to architect their solutions around a set of decoupled services — that can each be developed and released independently. Each service focuses on doing just one thing, well, and enabling more rapid time to market, with less interdependencies, to reduce risk.
Going hand in hand with microservices, containers serve as an ideal deployment vehicle. That’s because containers are designed to run one isolated process, with minimal deployment and runtime overhead. What do the stats say about this? Gartner expects that by the end of 2018 50% of enterprises will be running containers in Production.
Anders Wallgren, CTO of Electric Cloud
Continuous Testing will be a big part of DevOps 3.0
Companies adopting DevOps will need to improve their ability to test and perform test automation. As part of that, test acceleration will be a key area of investment - as you start getting more and more automated test suites. The time it takes to run those test suites can be very long, so you’ll see ways of implementing some test acceleration capabilities that can radically reduce the amount of time for some of those tests.
Mohan Dattatreya, GM, Acceleration Solutions at Electric Cloud
Secure DevOps
You are going to see more security verification and more built-in compliance validation checks happening earlier in the lifecycle that are fully integrated with the development process.
Anders Wallgren, CTO of Electric Cloud
Big Data and DevOps come together to create predictive analytics throughout your delivery cycle
One massive thing DevOps tools have accomplished is automation — automating the process as well as automating the configuration. In these pipelines, you’re suddenly creating a ton of data. When you start applying machine learning to this, you can really start to hone in on some interesting data where you can predict failures and identify areas for optimization in your pipeline.
As this emerges a further, you’ll have the ability to set up policies as well. For instance, if something's going to deviate from this policy, you can reject a pipeline run automatically.
Steve Brodie, CEO of Electric Cloud
Supporting Hybrid-Everything
In this fragmented, dynamic and evolving market, organizations need to be ready to support a continued “hybrid” complex state of existence: for their infrastructure, architectures, tooling, processes, release pipelines, and so on. This is particularly true for large, complex organizations, who will need to continue to support monolithic/legacy applications alongside microservices; on premise alongside cloud infrastructure; VMs and containers; traditional application releases alongside CD-type pipelines, etc. This continued state of “hybrid-everything” poses challenges on large-scale operations, and will put continued emphasize on DevOps solutions and patterns that are “future-ready” to support any tool, technology stack, process, or application - in this hyper-hybrid state.
Anders Wallgren, CTO of Electric Cloud
Culture truly recognized as DevOps differentiator
Enterprises sometimes use the same orchestration platform, or a lot of the same tools, but the outcomes are radically different. The differentiator usually comes down to culture. So it's the people that espouse some of these cultural tenets, the shared responsibility, the truly empowered autonomous teams, the can-do attitude, continuous learning that are going to get the best benefits.
Steve Brodie, CEO of Electric Cloud
ITIL adapted for DevOps
We're going to see it accelerate. It will be automated, and what we expect to see is that instead of a change advisory board, it's going to move much more to an auditing model and automatic approval gates, where you're checking, "Did all the automated tests go through, instead of injecting a person in the middle of that?"
Chris Fulton, Professional Services Engineer for Electric Cloud
Configuration Management discovery
Expect to see more discovery there to populate the configuration parameters. And also having the pipelines themselves actually generate the CM and CIs as part of that delivery process.
Anders Wallgren, CTO of Electric Cloud
EVOLUTION OF DEVOPS
Expect to see DevOps evolve to something that's really more Biz, Dev, Ops, Sec, and all other stakeholders in the organization. So collaborating with the business team, collaborating with the security team is going to be very important.
Steve Brodie, CEO of Electric Cloud
Industry News
JFrog announced general availability of its integration with NVIDIA NIM microservices, part of the NVIDIA AI Enterprise software platform.
CloudCasa by Catalogic announce an integration with SUSE® Rancher Prime via a new Rancher Prime Extension.
MacStadium(link is external) announced the extended availability of Orka(link is external) Cluster 3.2, establishing the market’s first enterprise-grade macOS virtualization solution available across multiple deployment options.
JFrog is partnering with Hugging Face, host of a repository of public machine learning (ML) models — the Hugging Face Hub — designed to achieve more robust security scans and analysis forevery ML model in their library.
Copado launched DevOps Automation Agent on Salesforce's AgentExchange, a global ecosystem marketplace powered by AppExchange for leading partners building new third-party agents and agent actions for Agentforce.
Harness completed its merger with Traceable, effective March 4, 2025.
JFrog released JFrog ML, an MLOps solution as part of the JFrog Platform designed to enable development teams, data scientists and ML engineers to quickly develop and deploy enterprise-ready AI applications at scale.
Progress announced the addition of Web Application Firewall (WAF) functionality to Progress® MOVEit® Cloud managed file transfer (MFT) solution.
Couchbase launched Couchbase Edge Server, an offline-first, lightweight database server and sync solution designed to provide low latency data access, consolidation, storage and processing for applications in resource-constrained edge environments.
Sonatype announced end-to-end AI Software Composition Analysis (AI SCA) capabilities that enable enterprises to harness the full potential of AI.
Aviatrix® announced the launch of the Aviatrix Kubernetes Firewall.
ScaleOps announced the general availability of their Pod Placement feature, a solution that helps companies manage Kubernetes infrastructure.
Cloudsmith raised a $23 million Series B funding round led by TCV, with participation from Insight Partners and existing investors.
IBM has completed its acquisition of HashiCorp, whose products automate and secure the infrastructure that underpins hybrid cloud applications and generative AI.