Quali has added a bevy of capabilities to its Torque platform for provisioning IT environments, including an AI copilot and a Cloud Curate tool that can be used to create infrastructure-as-code (IaC) based on existing configurations it discovers in cloud services.
At the same time, Quali has added an ability to visually track deployments of IT environments and an Operations Hub to manage those environments by, for example, applying rules that limit where they can be deployed.
David Williams, senior vice president for market strategy at Quali, said the overall goal is to increase developer productivity by enabling DevOps or platform engineering teams to create self-service portals that developers can use to spin up environments.
The Cloud Curate capability extends that capability to include legacy cloud deployments that were originally provisioned without using any type of IaC tool. The Quali Torque platform can now automatically create Terraform files based on the configurations discovered in a cloud environment, which then makes it possible to use those files to create reusable IT environments that can be stored in a Git repository.
Currently able to support Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure clouds, Quali also plans to shortly extend the reach of Cloud Curate to Google Cloud Platform (GCP). Additionally, Quali plans to add support for OpenTofu, an open-source fork of Terraform that is being advanced under the auspices of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF).
Quali has for several years now been making a case for an environment-as-a-service approach to managing IT. That approach is based on a set of triggers for controlling infrastructure via a software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform that can be invoked either via an application programming interface (API) or a graphical user interface (GUI). That capability makes it simpler to unify the management of fragile DevOps pipelines that today are too fragmented to effectively manage at scale, said Wiliams.
In addition to now providing access to an AI Copilot that makes it simpler to generate the code needed to set up those environments using natural language prompts, Torque also provides a set of infrastructure provisioning guardrails that prevent mistakes from being made. That makes it possible to automatically deploy complete application environments on top of infrastructure provisioned as code using blueprints it creates. Role-based access controls and governance policies ensure that developers only provision infrastructure within their guardrails for configurations, security, compliance and cost efficiency.
Those capabilities eliminate a skills gap among developers that often leads to misconfigurations that cybercriminals will then use to compromise a software supply chain, noted Williams.
With the rise of platform engineering as a methodology for centralizing the management of DevOps workflows, interest in automating the software development lifecycle has sharply increased. The challenge now is getting all the various DevOps that have adopted multiple tools and platforms to agree to standardize on a common set of tools and platforms as part of a larger effort to improve developer productivity.
Regardless of how that goal is achieved, the one thing that is clear heading in 2025 is that software engineering teams are now under more pressure than ever to reduce the amount of error-prone boilerplate code that is being created by developers who should be spending more of their time creating business logic that provides value to the business.