In 2025, env zero significantly advanced its platform by integrating AI-driven intelligence and streamlined workflows to tackle the growing complexity of Infrastructure as Code. Key updates include the launch of the Cloud Analyst and AI PR Summaries for better visibility, alongside the env zero MCP Server which brings infrastructure management directly into the developer’s IDE. Furthermore, the platform has strengthened its automation and governance capabilities with Instant Drift Detection, expanded remediation tools that keep code aligned with cloud changes, and Ready-to-Use Policies that provide instant guardrails for safer, more efficient deployments.
A new year and tricky economic times seemed like the perfect opportunity to gather some IaC experts for a conversation about hiring challenges, where we’re headed, and doing more with less. In case you missed our webinar (link), here’s a bit of what I learned in my conversation with Brandt Meyers, enterprise architect with MGM Resorts International, Kat Cosgrove, lead developer advocate at Dell, and Chris Short, senior developer advocate at AWS.
For any infrastructure or cloud service deployment, organizations need a way to make the entire deployment process repeatable. In this blog post, you’ll learn how to combine AWS CloudFormation and env0 to create a production-driven experience for AWS Elastic Container Service Amazon ECS.
Some art forms are not appreciated for their aesthetic value, like music, or literature and poetry. Yet, some ways of sharing such artworks are with a written document, e.g. music sheets and lyrics pages for songs. These art forms evolved as well and new genres of the written word came to be. One of those genres is code.
Feature Release: env0 has released an integration with Azure DevOps, allowing teams to automate the provisioning and management of cloud resources directly from Azure DevOps. This integration is useful for implementing gitops workflows, providing self-service provisioning for developers, and enforcing governance and compliance controls.
Terraform alone isn't enough. To ensure best practices, questions such as "How do we enforce policies?", "How do we lint our code?", and "How do we harden infrastructure security?" must be answered. Here are the top 4 essential Terraform tools that you should consider using in 2023 to enhance your infrastructure management process.
Infrastructure as Code (IaC) is widely used to deploy into clouds like AWS, Azure, and GCP. It can also be used to manage on-premises VMware vSphere infrastructure. This step-by-step walkthrough and video tutorial shows you how to use env0 with a self-hosted agent to manage on-premises VMware infrastructure directly.
In a world where infrastructure is constantly changing and evolving, it's more important than ever to have tight controls over who can make what changes. Granular RBAC allows you to give each user only the permissions they need to do their job, nothing more. This reduces the potential attack surface of your infrastructure and helps to prevent breaking changes.
In this post we’ll take a look at why auditing is necessary for Infrastructure as Code, the benefits of having an audit trail for Terraform and other IaC frameworks (such as Terragrunt, Pulumi, CloudFormation, Kubernetes, and others), and share how you can automate your audit trail easily with env0.
In this video, we'll go through some background on Atlantis and then show you how to migrate from Atlantis to env0, including using the env0 remote backend for Terraform state storage.
The rise of Infrastructure as Code has revolutionized the management of infrastructure and the way we provision and maintain platforms for application deployment. Rather than manually deploying infrastructure through a CLI or GUI, we can now treat our infrastructure in the same way we treat our applications.
In this video series, we’re looking at the most common barriers to Infrastructure as Code (IaC) adoption. We know that cloud security is a prominent concern for many organizations, so in this video Marino Wijay, Developer Advocate at Solo.io, joins us to share his take on the biggest factors impacting cloud security when implementing IaC.
In this video series, we’re looking at the most common challenges with Infrastructure as Code (IaC) adoption and scaling. In this episode, we examine the factors around extensibility and integrations when you’re looking to scale your Infrastructure as Code.
How many of you have started with Terraform and discovered you need the same code to build multiple environments? Perhaps a dev, stage, and production environment? After researching Workspaces, Branches, and Terragrunt, you aren’t completely satisfied and want to know if there is another way. If you are here, I’ll assume that’s you!
Learn more about Terraform variables, terraform module variables, and ways to DRY out your code with some examples of how to build complex variable hierarchies.
There are many reasons why teams struggle with adopting Infrastructure as Code (IaC). In this five-part series, env0 CEO Ohad Maislish and Developer Advocate Tim Davis discuss the top five reasons we see most frequently.
Workflows solve the problem of provisioning complex infrastructure resources that have dependencies, and using multiple frameworks for your infrastructure-as-code.
Let us never forget that DevOps is about culture, people, and process, not just tools or technology. Software may enable good culture and behavior. But technology brings a benefit if and only if it diminishes a limitation. And the most important limitations to address are the explicit and implicit rules that uphold the status quo, or “doing it the way we always have.”
DevOps engineers sometimes need to perform one-off commands on their Terraform code or state. For example, “terraform import” or “terraform state rm”, or any other Terraform or bash commands. The problem is that it is dangerous to allow users to work directly from a terminal.