Neo's Integration Catalog: Give Your Agent Access to the Tools It Needs

Pulumi Neo Team Pulumi Neo Team
Neo's Integration Catalog: Give Your Agent Access to the Tools It Needs

Neo already helps your team manage Pulumi infrastructure, but no infrastructure team works inside Pulumi alone. Pages come from PagerDuty, telemetry from Datadog or Honeycomb, follow-ups from Linear or Jira. Most of the job is shuttling context between those tools.

Today we’re launching the Integration Catalog for Pulumi Neo: one place to connect Neo to the tools your team already uses, so your agent has the context it needs to help.

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Agent Sprawl Is Here. Your IaC Platform Is the Answer.

Engin Diri Engin Diri
Agent Sprawl Is Here. Your IaC Platform Is the Answer.

Somewhere in your company right now, a developer is building an AI agent. Maybe it’s a release agent that cuts tags when tests pass. Maybe it’s a cost agent that shuts down idle EC2 overnight. It’s running, it’s in production, and there’s a decent chance the platform team doesn’t know it exists.

This isn’t a thought experiment. OutSystems just surveyed 1,900 IT leaders and the numbers are rough: 96% of enterprises run AI agents in production today, 94% say the sprawl is becoming a real security problem, and only 12% have any central way to manage it. Twelve percent. You can read the full report here.

The real question is where those agents run. Inside the platform you’ve already built, or somewhere off to the side where nobody on the platform team can see them.

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Bitbucket Cloud Meets Pulumi Cloud

Luke Ward Luke Ward
Bitbucket Cloud Meets Pulumi Cloud

Pulumi Cloud now supports Bitbucket Cloud as a first-class VCS integration, joining GitHub, GitLab, and Azure DevOps. Connect your Bitbucket workspace to deploy infrastructure on every push, preview changes on pull requests, spin up ephemeral review stacks, and get AI-powered change summaries — all without an external CI/CD pipeline.

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Superpowers, GSD, and GSTACK: Picking the Right Framework for Your Coding Agent

Engin Diri Engin Diri
Superpowers, GSD, and GSTACK: Picking the Right Framework for Your Coding Agent

Three community frameworks have emerged that fix the specific ways AI coding agents break down on real projects. Superpowers enforces test-driven development. GSD prevents context rot. GSTACK adds role-based governance. All three started with Claude Code but now work across Cursor, Codex, Windsurf, Gemini CLI, and more.

Pulumi uses general-purpose programming languages to define infrastructure. TypeScript, Python, Go, C#, Java. Every framework that makes AI agents write better TypeScript also makes your pulumi up better. After spending a few weeks with each one, I have opinions about when to use which.

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Automate Azure App Secret Rotation with ESC

Sean Yeh Sean Yeh
Automate Azure App Secret Rotation with ESC

Microsoft Entra ID (formerly Azure Active Directory) is Azure’s identity and access management service. Any time your application needs to authenticate with Entra ID, you create an app registration and give it a client secret that proves its identity. But those secrets expire, and if you don’t rotate them in time, your app loses access.

If you or your team manages Azure app registrations, you know that keeping track of client secrets is a constant hassle. Forgetting to rotate them before they expire can lead to broken authentication and unexpected outages. With Pulumi ESC’s azure-app-secret rotator, you can automate client secret rotation for your Azure apps, so you never have to worry about expired credentials again.

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