
SaltStack announced today it has integrated its automation framework with a variety of third-party security platforms to further the adoption of best DevSecOps processes.
Mehul Revankar, director of product management for SaltStack, said version 6.3 of SaltStack Enterprise provides integration with offerings from Splunk, Tenable, Qualys, Rapid7 and Kenna Security. Data generated from vulnerability scans conducted using tools from Tenable, Qualys and Rapid7 can be directly imported into SaltStack Enterprise to inform automated DevSecOps processes, while integration with Kenna Security makes it easier to automate and prioritize vulnerability remediation based on the level of risk.
Revankar said that latter capability is crucial because remediation efforts should not be prioritized based on the severity of a vulnerability alone. For example, a vulnerability may be discovered in an application that sits behind a firewall, but if that application doesn’t provide access to the web an organization may decide to not patch that vulnerability immediately regardless of its severity because the risk of a breach is still relatively low, he said.
These capabilities will enable SaltStack Enterprise to serve as a foundation for providing security orchestration, automation and response (SOAR) capabilities within the context of a DevSecOps process by making it easier to incorporate cybersecurity within the context of a larger playbook for automating the management of IT, he added.
Most of those playbooks will be developed by DevOps teams in collaboration with cybersecurity professionals, noted Revankar.
In addition to improving DevSecOps processes, SaltStack hopes to make it easier for external applications such as Splunk and Datadog to consume data generated by its framework by providing compatibility with Prometheus, an open source IT monitoring tool developed under the auspices of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). A SaltStack Enterprise Splunk add-on tool has been added to the Splunkbase repository.
SaltStack is also making available a performance and health dashboard to enable DevOps teams to track 25 SaltStack Enterprise metrics that are surfaced using the Prometheus data format.
The open source Salt framework on which SaltStack Enterprise is based has emerged as a popular option for automating IT processes. Because it is based on Python, the barrier to adoption for Salt in terms of programming expertise is comparatively low to other programming languages. As such, more IT operations teams have been inclined to learn Python to leverage Salt to automate processes.
Like most vendors that have adopted open source business model, SaltStack extends the capabilities of Salt via an enterprise edition that it both extends and provides commercial support.
Interest in IT automation is on the rise as organizations of all sizes look to maximize what limited cybersecurity resources they have and cut costs. IT automation in the form of SOAR presents an opportunity to consistently apply cybersecurity policies more broadly without having to increase the size of the IT organization.
The challenge, of course, is having the expertise required to build a playbook. In the case of open source frameworks, many of those playbooks are shared among the members of a community such as Salt. Regardless of how those playbooks are acquired, it’s clear that as IT becomes increasingly more complex most IT organizations are not going to be to do without them.