You might think that the tires sitting on the four corners of your vehicle have not changed much in the 100-plus years since automobiles were invented. After all, they are still circular, black, and there to support the ride, just like they were in the late 1800s.
But you’d be wrong.
As the tires on your car revolve, they are also evolving. The tire is constantly adapting to meet new challenges. Innovative rubber compounds help prolong tire life, for example. New tire configurations support tremendous speed and cornering force, and reimagined tread patterns transform grip in the wet.
It’s the same story with Broadcom enterprise workload automation solutions. Like the tire, Broadcom automation solutions continually evolve to stay in front of change – especially when it comes to your cloud-first digital strategy.
Here’s why.
Pick almost any cloud provider and you’ll find they offer an automation solution in their portfolio. Everything from AWS Batch, Azure Scheduler, and Google Workflow to Azure Logic Apps and Apache Airflow is available to schedule your workloads.
These point solutions can quickly proliferate and lead you down the arduous road to “islands of automation,” deflating your scheduling strategy.
These environment-specific cloud schedulers typically lack the full features of an enterprise-class workload automation solution. And they fail to provide a holistic view of automation, such as processing dependencies and outcomes.
Point cloud automation solutions will trip you up elsewhere, too.
It doesn’t have to be this way. Enterprise automation solutions like those offered by Broadcom provide a single control point across all cloud environments you deploy.
Abstracting away the individual cloud providers’ automation capabilities creates a highly efficient operational model that delivers high-quality services with tremendous agility and avoids long-term cloud vendor lock-in. Make no mistake: the use of service orchestration and automation platforms creates a solid foundation for the future of your IT operations.
Like the tire, you don’t stay ahead by standing still. Broadcom’s workload Automation solutions are now evolving further to meet the challenging demands of today’s cloud environments, expanding AutoSys, dSeries and Automic Automation to integrate with new cloud technologies you may be adopting.
Broadcom has a wide range of integrations including for Apache Airflow, Azure Data Factory, Databricks, Google Cloud Composer, SAP on Demand, Amazon S3, and many more.
For example, Airflow has several pre-built connectors to other cloud-based applications and utilities. Still, you have to define workflows (DAGs) in Python. Although this step is not difficult for an application developer well-versed in the language, not everyone has these skills. To successfully operate these schedules in production, you need far more from an automation perspective. You have to be able to:
These and many more items are missing from the Airflow solution, and these shortcomings become obstacles to ensuring the smooth delivery of service to the business. These challenges are common across the cloud-based applications and automation capabilities cloud vendors provide. This is why extending the reach of the Broadcom enterprise-scheduling solutions is a must for our customer’s success. It is more agile, less complicated, more secure, and leaves a complete audit trail.
At Broadcom, we collaborate closely with our customers to understand their needs and respond with new integrations. We continue to build new integrations and post them to the Automation Marketplace. The Automation Marketplace provides a one-stop shop for easy download of integrations and access to related documentation.
Watch the replay of the webinar recording in which Valerie Fowler, AutoSys PM and Richard Kao, Chief Architect of the Integration Factory discuss and demonstrate plug-in extensions.