Treating Prompts Like Code: A Content Engineer's AI Workflow

Cam Soper Cam Soper
Treating Prompts Like Code: A Content Engineer's AI Workflow

Pulumi has a lot of engineers. It has marketers, solution architects, developer advocates. Everyone has something to contribute to docs and blog posts — domain expertise, hard-won lessons, real-world examples. What they don’t all have is familiarity with our Hugo setup, our style guide, our metadata conventions, or where a new document is supposed to live in the navigation tree. I joined Pulumi in July 2025 as a Senior Technical Content Engineer. A few weeks in, my sole teammate departed. The docs practice was now, functionally, me.

The problem was clear enough: how do you take one docs engineer’s accumulated knowledge and make it available to everyone who needs it, without that engineer becoming a bottleneck?

I started packaging it. Here’s what that looked like in practice.

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Now GA: Up to 20x Faster Pulumi Operations for Everyone

Thomas Gummerer Thomas Gummerer Pat Gavlin Pat Gavlin
Now GA: Up to 20x Faster Pulumi Operations for Everyone

In January, we introduced a major performance enhancement for Pulumi Cloud through a fundamental change to how Pulumi manages state that speeds up operations by up to 20x. After a staged rollout across many organizations, it is now enabled by default for every Pulumi Cloud operation. No opt-in required—just use Pulumi CLI v3.225.0+ with Pulumi Cloud. The improvement applies to pulumi up, pulumi destroy, and pulumi refresh; pulumi preview does not modify state, so it is unchanged.

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Now in Public Beta: Store Terraform State in Pulumi Cloud

Claire Gaestel Claire Gaestel
Now in Public Beta: Store Terraform State in Pulumi Cloud

Platform engineering teams managing infrastructure across Terraform and Pulumi now have a way to unify state management without rewriting a single line of HCL. Starting today, Pulumi Cloud can serve as a Terraform state backend, letting you store and manage Terraform state alongside your Pulumi stacks. Your team continues using the Terraform or OpenTofu CLI for day-to-day operations while gaining the benefits of Pulumi Cloud: AI-powered infrastructure management with Pulumi Neo — our infrastructure agent — encrypted state storage, update history, state locking, role-based access control, audit policies, and unified resource visibility through Insights.

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Token Efficiency vs Cognitive Efficiency: Choosing IaC for AI Agents

Engin Diri Engin Diri
Token Efficiency vs Cognitive Efficiency: Choosing IaC for AI Agents

When an AI agent writes infrastructure code, two things matter: how compact the output is (token efficiency) and how well the model actually reasons about what it’s writing (cognitive efficiency). HCL produces fewer tokens for the same resource. But does that make it the better choice when agents need to refactor, debug, and iterate? We ran a benchmark across Claude Opus 4.6 and GPT-5.2-Codex to find out.

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Run Pulumi Insights on Your Own Infrastructure

Levi Blackstone Levi Blackstone
Run Pulumi Insights on Your Own Infrastructure

Pulumi Insights gives you visibility and governance across your entire cloud footprint: discovery scans catalog every resource in your cloud accounts, and policy evaluations continuously enforce compliance against those resources. Until now, Insights workflows ran exclusively on Pulumi-hosted infrastructure. That works well for many teams, but enterprises with strict data residency requirements, private network constraints, or regulatory obligations need to run this work in their own environments. Today, Pulumi Insights supports customer-managed workflow runners for both SaaS Pulumi Cloud and self-hosted Pulumi Cloud installations.

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How We Built a Distributed Work Scheduling System for Pulumi Cloud

Levi Blackstone Levi Blackstone Davide Massarenti Davide Massarenti
How We Built a Distributed Work Scheduling System for Pulumi Cloud

Pulumi Cloud orchestrates a growing number of workflow types: Deployments, Insights discovery scans, and policy evaluations. Some of that work runs on Pulumi’s infrastructure, and some of it runs on yours via customer-managed workflow runners. We needed a scheduling system that could handle all of these workflow types reliably across both environments. In this post, we’ll take a look at the system we built.

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How We Load Data into Snowflake in Seconds with Pulumi

Pablo Seibelt Pablo Seibelt Lucas Crespo Lucas Crespo
How We Load Data into Snowflake in Seconds with Pulumi

When you manage dozens of data-loading pipelines, copying and pasting IaC configurations between them is a recipe for mishap. IAM policies can drift, naming conventions diverge, and every new source is a new opportunity to make a mistake — not to mention compound the problem of duplication. In this post, we’ll show you how you can identify and encapsulate common patterns into composable components and walk through the production lessons we’ve learned running 25+ pipelines for over three years.

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New in Pulumi IaC: `onError` Resource Hook

Tom Harding Tom Harding
New in Pulumi IaC: `onError` Resource Hook

You can now control what happens when a resource fails during create, update, or delete—retry with backoff, fail fast, or handle errors in custom code. Last year, Pulumi IaC introduced the resource hooks feature, allowing you to run custom code at different points in the lifecycle of resources. Today we’re adding the onError hook so you can react when operations fail.

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GitOps Best Practices I Wish I Had Known Before

Engin Diri Engin Diri
GitOps Best Practices I Wish I Had Known Before

Getting started with GitOps can feel like trying to herd cats through a YAML factory while the factory is on fire. It’s one of those things that seems like it ought to be simple (just use Git!), but in practice is much more complex — and you may not realize how much more complex until you’re weeks or more into a project. After years of running GitOps workflows in production across dozens of clusters, I’ve collected a list of best practices that I’m hoping can save you from having to make many of the mistakes I’ve made. Think of it as the GitOps cheat sheet I wish I’d had from Day 1.

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