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Red Hat Software Businesses Open Source IT

Report: Red Hat Buying DevOps Startup Ansible (venturebeat.com) 78

An anonymous reader writes: According to VentureBeat Red Hat Inc is about to buy the company behind the automation and orchestration software Ansible. The move is seen as a good acquisition, since Ansible, other than being almost universally expanding, is also used by Red Hat's own cloud and system platforms. It could probably use some strong backing for the extra services it wishes to offer. The question remains whether this will have consequences in the future direction of the Python-based, open source platform itself (on GitHub). It's one of the most trivial to implement (compared to cfengine, ever-changing puppet or Chef) yet very powerful, and Red Hat may want to optimize it for their own purposes. Update: 10/16 15:39 GMT by S : Red Hat has confirmed the acquisition and explained their reasons for doing so.
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Report: Red Hat Buying DevOps Startup Ansible

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  • And make it depend on systemd.
  • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Friday October 16, 2015 @10:21AM (#50743375) Journal
    Finally, the year of Linux on the Desktop, now that RH will have faster-than-light communications!
    • by Xtifr ( 1323 )

      Yeah, I admit I'm torn. On the one hand, it's cool that a term coined by Ursula K. LeGuin has gained such broad acceptance that it can even appear in a company or product name. On the other, it's bizarre that a company would use it for something that bears no resemblance to what it means. (Unless I'm missing something.)

  • This has come at a time when our company is evaluating puppet and ansible for deployment of Jboss EAP and applications. I see this as another plus on the "ansible" side, for several reasons. Firstly it will be a lot easier getting support with possible JBoss deployment issues, there will be one port of call. Secondly the large company backing is a plus. And finally there is a very strong possibility of future integration.

    I wonder if it will be integrated int Jboss Operations Network. It looks a lot slicker

  • It's interesting that they bought out another tool when they already do some of the work a configuration management tool does with their satellite server, and for a larger setup integrate/sell puppet enterprise [puppetlabs.com] (one of Ansible's main competitors).
  • I've worked with Chef and puppet for a few years each and evaluated ansible at my current company because it's the new buzzword and it's clientless. My concerns for not wanting to go with Ansible for system management was that to get the web endpoints for things like auto-scaling you have to get Tower. And if I'm going to pay $10k to setup tower, I might as well setup a Chef server which will scale FAR more than Tower will on the same hardware and will cost substantially less. Also, to really be effectiv
  • This pretty much cements the trend - Ansible has been increasingly popular over the last couple of years: http://www.google.com/trends/e... [google.com]

    Wonder if they'll soon find a good way to integrate it with Spacewalk (Satellite).

    Also, will Canonical grab SaltStack now? :)

  • I believe this implies the death of the Katello project [katello.org], something I've been looking forward to as stable.

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