iASYS Group's BRIX platform for data management, simulation orchestration and workflow automation has achieved formal SimOps certification, validating its compliance with the Simulation Operations (SimOps) framework.
The SimOps certification process evaluates simulation platforms, global high-performance computing (HPC) infrastructures, and HPC tools against 20 core best practices derived from the analysis of 232 HPC Cloud and enterprise simulation projects conducted over the past 14 years. These best practices represent the operational patterns consistently associated with successful, scalable simulation environments and compute and data infrastructures across industries including automotive, aerospace, energy, manufacturing, and life sciences.
According to the company, the BRIX platform enables organizations to streamline end-to-end validation operations, simulation execution, manage distributed HPC resources, automate workflow governance, and create scalable simulation ecosystems that accelerate engineering innovation.
The SimOps compliance assessment measures software capabilities across five operational domains: Workflow Automation and Orchestration; Infrastructure Abstraction and Resource Optimization; Governance, Traceability, and Reproducibility; Collaboration and Process Standardization; and Integration and Extensibility.
The BRIX platform’s open architecture enables integration with commercial CAE solvers, in-house engineering codes, data management systems, and enterprise IT infrastructure. Each of BRIX’s 20 evaluated features was assigned a SimOps Compliance Level, ranging from foundational to advanced operational maturity. The assessment confirmed that BRIX achieved certification-level compliance across all benchmarked categories, with particularly strong performance in workflow automation, hybrid HPC orchestration, and simulation governance.
According to the company, this certification is significant because SimOps extends beyond traditional workflow management. Inspired by DevOps principles, SimOps defines a structured operational framework for engineering simulation: integrating people, processes, data, software, and compute resources into repeatable, scalable, and continuously improving simulation ecosystems.
Sources: Press materials received from the company and additional information gleaned from the company’s website.

DE's editors contribute news and new product announcements to Digital Engineering. Press releases may be sent to them via [email protected].
Follow DE
Join over 90,000 engineering professionals who get fresh engineering news as soon as it is published.