Red Hat today revealed it is extending the reach of its Ansible Automation Platform for IT operations to artificial intelligence (AI) agents, in addition to making it simpler to build AI agents using existing application development tools. Announced at the Red Hat Summit conference, version 2.7 of the Ansible Automation Platform adds a technology preview of an orchestration engine for AI agents that are able to invoke capabilities via an integrated Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. Sathish Balakrishnan, vice president and general manager for Ansible at Red Hat, said these capabilities provide AI agents with a trusted execution layer through which they can automate IT operations. The overall goal is to make new and existing libraries of automation playbooks available to AI agents in a way that can be governed using a set of policies enforced via the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform, he added. As part of that effort, the Red Hat Ansible Automation Platform can now serve as an ...
Site reliability engineering (SRE) promised a better way. Born at Google and evangelized by a generation of platform engineers, SRE offered organizations a disciplined, engineering-first path from firefighting chaos to measured, sustainable operations. However, years into the mainstream adoption of SRE, various organizations find themselves spending more on SRE tooling than ever, while their on-call engineers are still drowning at 2 a.m. The pattern is consistent. Titles change. Dashboards multiply. AI-powered AIOps platforms get procured. Error budgets get defined in a spreadsheet and promptly forgotten. Six months later, the postmortems look identical to those from two years ago. What’s going wrong? After surveying dozens of engineering organizations, five mistakes surface repeatedly, and they compound each other in ways that are hard to untangle once they’re entrenched. Renaming your ops team ‘SRE’ without changing how work gets done is the organizat...