Chef Updates Automation Platform for Cloud and Containers – SDxCentral

Posted: May 26, 2017 at 3:57 am

Chef Software added a handful of new automation features to various enterprise-focused platforms targeting the transition to cloud and use of containers. Most of the updates integrate functions across the companys various platforms.

The companys continuous automation platform (Chef Automate) directly integrateswith its compliance automation framework (InSpec). The move is said to provide a more consistent workflow for validating security requirements and compliance controls.

Chefs Automate platform also integrates with the companys application supervisor technology (Habitat). The integration extends Habitats functions for deploying and managing applications from legacy platforms to container-based, cloud-native microservices.

Continuous automationenables operations to deliver services in conjunction with developers, as a team, with Chef becoming the common language for which the teams can communicate removing roadblocks across platforms and applications, explained Edwin Yuen, analyst at Enterprise Strategy Group, in a blog post. This improves the outcomes of the developers work, with increased efficiency, speed, and reduced risk.

The Automate platform late last year gained a managed service option running through Amazon Web Services (AWS). The move provides AWS customers with access to the Chef service in a cloud or on-premise environment.

The Habitat platform gained the use of scaffolding to support faster packaging of apps built-in with new languages and frameworks. The packaged apps can then be exported to different runtimes like Docker and ACI for use on containers such as Kubernetes, OpenShift, and Mesosphere.

Habitat also gained 20 core build plans designed to allow enterprises a quicker path to packaging applications. In addition, Habitat now will automatically rebuild packages accepted and curated as core as their dependencies are updated.

Chef launched Habitat last year, with a focus on providing a new way for developers to create apps without having to decide early on a specific infrastructure.

The compliance-focused InSpec framework added incubation projects tied to AWS, Microsoft Azure, and VMware vSphere. The projects migrate compliance code to the cloud, and provide resources to test and configure the cloud platforms.

A recent enterprise cloud survey conducted by RightScale found compliance to be the second biggest challenge for companies deemed cloud focused in their use of cloud platforms.

The same survey found Chef running a close second to Docker in terms of DevOps platforms used by enterprises. However, the data also revealed that Docker had eaten into Chef usage since the same survey was conducted last year.

Yuen explained others in the space, including Red Hats Ansible product and Puppet, have their advantages and disadvantages depending on how they are being used beyond their core platforms.

There are certainly competitors in the automation arena but Chef is extremely well positioned with their technology, products, and partners, Yuen noted. I certainlysee Chef leading the way by becoming not just an automation provider used by enterprises but by becoming the enterprise wide automation platform of choice.

Dan Meyer is a Senior Editor at SDxCentral, with a focus on containers, lifecycle service orchestration, cloud automation and DevOps. Dan has been covering the telecommunications space for more than 17 years. Prior to SDxCentral, Dan was Editor-In-Chief at RCR Wireless News.

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Chef Updates Automation Platform for Cloud and Containers - SDxCentral

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