Roadie today made generally available a tool that automatically tracks and reports how software development teams are performing against engineering standards defined by a DevOps team. The Tech Insights tool is an addition to Roadie’s implementation of the open source Backstage developer portal and is delivered via a software-as-a-service (SaaS) platform.
Roadie CEO David Tuite said Tech Insights is a proprietary tool that Roadie developed as an extension to its platform. Tech Insights provides scorecards that track software assets in the Backstage catalog and ensure they are meeting predefined quality and compliance targets.
Tech Insights comes with built-in, pre-defined data sources; alternatively, DevOps teams can define them using external application programming interfaces (APIs) or files in a repository. A rule known as a Check can then be created to validate whether a project complies with the engineering standards defined by the DevOps team. Each DevOps team can create an unlimited number of scorecards.
In addition, teams can create prompts and notifications to warn engineers when they are about to make a change that will violate an engineering standard. DevOps teams can also employ gamification techniques to show teams how their performance compares to others.
While Roadie is now adding its first proprietary tool to the platform, Tuite said the company remains committed to enabling organizations to migrate their instance of Backstage to another environment should they ever deem it necessary, he added.
Originally developed by Spotify, Backstage makes it possible to create and manage a catalog of blueprints that developers can readily consume rather than requiring them to repeatedly build these capabilities themselves. The goal is to create scaffolds that developers can consistently reuse across multiple application development projects.
Spotify has since donated Backstage to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). However, Backstage currently requires a significant amount of DevOps expertise to set up and maintain, an issue that Roadie is addressing by making it available as a SaaS platform that can be accessed by any application development team, said Tuite.
The concept of a self-service portal through which developers can address their own needs may not be new, but as an open source project, Backstage is lowering the cost of improving overall developer productivity. At the same time, many organizations are now embracing platform engineering as a means of centralizing the management of DevOps.
Ultimately, every minute developers spend on tasks other than writing code is one less minute they are spending writing the business logic that drives an application. Measuring developer productivity is, of course, an inexact science. No one knows for sure when inspiration might strike, but if developers are busy maintaining code that they created to provision infrastructure, it’s less likely they’ll be struck by a flash of brilliant insight that improves and application. The easier it is to spin up a development environment, the more likely that inspiration will one day turn into code that runs in an actual production environment.