The Progress Chef team continues to innovate, introducing a suite of new releases that set the stage for a modern, efficient and reliable approach to infrastructure automation. This blog post explores the latest advancements in Infra Client 19, Habitat 2.0, Hab-based Workstation and InSpec 7, focusing on the shift towards Hab-based builds, the reasons behind this transition and the tangible benefits for technical users. Whether you're managing infrastructure, developing applications or maintaining compliance, these updates are designed to simplify processes and enhance user experience. Infra Client 19, InSpec 7 and Habitat 2.0 are long-term supported (LTS) products from Progress. LTS provides predictability to your upgrade cycles.
Infra Client 19 marks a significant step forward in configuration management. The new release introduces several high-level changes:
These changes make Infra Client 19 easier to install, upgrade and maintain, particularly in complex infrastructure landscapes.
For technical users, these changes mean:
Habitat 2.0 is the cornerstone of the new Chef build strategy. Key enhancements include:
Habitat's evolution underpins the move to Hab-based builds, supporting both infrastructure and application automation.
The Chef Workstation is now distributed as a Hab-based package. This transition brings:
This change maintains the same reliability and simplicity that Workstation users benefit from as other Chef products.
InSpec 7 delivers a range of significant enhancements designed to modernize compliance workflows and improve user experience:
These improvements result in faster updates, easier maintenance for the Chef platform, greater control over resource packs and a more robust compliance solution.
The shift to Hab-based builds is a deliberate move to modernise the Chef ecosystem. The primary reasons include:
For technical users, this means less troubleshooting, quicker deployments and greater confidence in system reliability. However, because we are shipping more dependencies and more versions of those dependencies, the disk space requirements and download size have increased. Post-release, this is one of our key areas of optimization.
We’re introducing updates to our licensing enforcement aimed at streamlining your software experience. Moving forward, licence enforcement will no longer occur during runtime for agent or client software downloaded directly from our Download Portal or via Hab distribution. Instead, a licence key will only be necessary at the point of downloading the software.
For software obtained from non-official sources—such as public Ruby gems or channels outside of our official Hab and Download Portal—a valid licence will now be required to execute the software.
Additionally, our agent software will soon include the capability to add a licence after installation, providing greater flexibility. Please note that workflows which install packages at runtime (for example, knife bootstrap or kitchen converge) will also require a licence key to proceed if you are downloading the binaries from Chef APIs. Should you be using your own source to download binaries during knife bootstrap or kitchen converge, we will not enforce the need of a license.
These changes are designed to make the licensing process easier to use and straightforward while maintaining compliance across all distribution channels.
Installation and upgrade processes are simplified with Hab-based packages:
These improvements reduce downtime and risk, making it easier to keep systems up to date.
From a user perspective, the new releases offer:
Technical teams can focus on delivering value rather than managing infrastructure complexity.
The Chef team is adopting a phased strategy for releasing updates to its client tools, ensuring each component is thoroughly tested and optimized for its target platforms before broader rollout. At present, Chef Infra Client 19 has reached general availability for Windows and Linux x86 systems. The immediate priority is the release of Workstation 26.x, which will provide seamless compatibility with Client 19. Workstation 26.x will initially be available for Linux and Windows x86 machines.
This staged approach allows users to benefit from the latest features and improvements as soon as available, while enabling Chef to expand support to additional platforms in subsequent phases.
| Release Item | Tentative timelines |
|---|---|
| Workstation 26.x | Mar 2026 |
| Habitat 2.0 (Linux ARM support) | Mar 2026 |
| Chef Infra Client 19 (Linux ARM support) | Apr 2026 |
| Workstation 26.x on Linux ARM | Apr 2026 |
| InSpec 7 native installers | Apr 2026 |
| Habitat 2.1 (MacOS support) | May 2026 |
| Chef infra client 19 (MacOS) | June 2026 |
| InSpec 7 on Linux ARM and MacOS | Aug 2026 |
| Workstation 26.x on MacOS | Aug 2026 |
| Agentless support for test kitchen | Aug 2026 |
| Chef Infra Client 19 (AIX and Solaris) | Aug 2026 |
With this roadmap, the Chef team is committed to expanding compatibility and delivering a reliable, modern client tool suite for diverse environments.
The new Chef releases represent a significant leap forward for infrastructure automation, compliance and application delivery. The move to Hab-based builds is a strategic response to the challenges of modern IT environments, offering consistency, portability and ease of maintenance. Infra Client 19, Habitat 2.0, Hab-based Workstation and InSpec 7 deliver tangible benefits for technical users, from installation to ongoing usage while promising predictability by providing long-term support. As the Chef platform continues to evolve, users can expect even greater integration, reliability and simplicity in the tools they depend on.