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DevOps Intelligence role-based functions
Published On Apr 28, 2026 - 1:50 PM

DevOps Intelligence role-based functions

Understand the DevOps functions that drive Role Based Access Control (RBAC) built into DevOps Intelligence, enabling governance of your hybrid IT estate.
DevOps Intelligence supports four role-based functions that DevOps teams use to observe the performance of each phase of the DevOps life cycle and make necessary adjustments in your governed resources:
  • The Development Manager:
    • Requires a unified view of DevOps Intelligence pipeline, tools, containers, and application development and deployment status.
    • Checks cluster health of the application spread across multiple data centers and multiple clouds.
  • The Development Engineer:
    • Performs enterprise-level view to measure the SDLC maturity level.
    • Requires summary view of a service's core metrics spread across multiple clouds.
    • Maintains a macro view of DevOps Intelligence pipelines, tools, containers, and application development and deployment status.
    • Leads the development of pilots to test business hypotheses.
    • Advises on cost optimization opportunities by analyzing usage and utilization costs as well as asset performance.
    • Communicates frequently with stakeholders on project status.
    • Enables application developers to move at speed while optimizing cost, security, and performance positions.
    • Acts as a systems integrator when the application he is managing is a large application or is developed in waterfall method.
  • The Site Reliability Engineer:
    • Support DevOps teams in template development and use.
    • Integrate IaaS and PaaS into DevOps pipelines.
    • Perform a large amount of Automation.
    • Assist with the design and testing of end-to-end resilience.
    • Design of PaaS/IaaS service templates.
  • The Security and Compliance Officer:
    • Manage risk and compliance, and secure and protect the business's assets (employees, data, information, office locations).
    • Direct staff to assess, monitor, and develop strategies to proactively guard against information and information technology (IT) risks.
    • Respond to incidents; establish appropriate standards and controls; manage security technologies; and direct the establishment and implementation of policies and procedures.
    • Work to understand and measure the potential implications of a security breach.
    • Align audit and information-related compliance.
    • Identify, assess and prioritize enterprise-wide risks that have the potential to inflict harm on the organization (uncertainty in financial markets, project failures, legal liabilities, credit, risks, accidents, and natural disasters).
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