StackStorm

StackStorm (abbreviation: ST2) is an open source event-driven platform for runbook automation. It supports the Infrastructure as Code (IaC) approach to DevOps automation and has been compared with SaltStack and Ansible,[2] it primarily focuses on doing things or running workflows based on events. StackStorm is comparable to IFTTT[3] or Zapier in providing a way to connect many different services together in coherent applets or workflows that begin based on defined events or triggers.

StackStorm
Initial release3 November 2014 (2014-11-03)
Stable release
3.3.0 / 6 October 2020 (2020-10-06)[1]
Repositorygithub.com/StackStorm
Written inPython
Operating systemLinux, Unix-like
Available inEnglish
TypeConfiguration management and Infrastructure as Code
LicenseApache 2.0
Websitestackstorm.com

While Stackstorm has been used to automate workflows in many industries, a particularly interesting application is the Arteria project that provides components to automate analysis and data-management tasks at next-generation sequencing core-facilities.[4] It leverages a micro-service based architecture together with StackStorm to create an event-driven automation system.[5]

History

StackStorm was founded by Evan Powell, who had previous entrepreneurial successes at Clarus Systems and Nexenta[6] and Dmitri Zimine,[7] who worked on the first wave of operation automation as chief architect at Opalis (acquired by Microsoft, became System Center Orchestrator).[8] With initial funding by XSeed Capital, StackStorm came out of stealth on May 6, 2014[9] to introduce a private beta program for the company’s first product. StackStorm offered IT departments the capability to automatically trigger actions and drive behaviors across the infrastructure and separate systems with scriptable processes.[10] While StackStorm platform was initially focused on the general DevOps automation, it extended to networking after the company was acquired by Brocade in 2016.[11] In 2017 StackStorm transitioned to Extreme Networks as part of Brocade’s data center networking business acquisition.[12] StackStorm continues to be an OpenSource project, supported by Extreme Networks, which also offers the Extreme Workflow Composer as the commercial product built on top of the StackStorm platform[13]

See also

References

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