I've been in my current company for 2 years now and recently embarked on a new project and a new team within the company, this is a "big data" shop but the current focus seems to be on "platform provisioning" and devops.
Our manager has been tasked with coming up with new "standards", tools and processes for everything.The team has been divided and a new "leadership" team has been formed and the existing developers have been sort of left out, one of the things that really bothers me is the over complexity and artificial constraints being enforced, it's not that I'm not open to change but as I've grown older and experienced (and I have to admit, cynical) whenever I see unnecesary complexity I run away screaming.
Just to give you an example of what I'm talking about:
The deployment, provisioning and packaging workflow that these guys have come up with is an absolute nightmare form my point of view, consisting of multiple ansible & gradle scripts, packaging everything as RPM files, convoluted code review processes using crucible, and git branching strategy based on jira tickets, etc, etc this is a standard that must be followed for EVERYTHING, have a simple 3 line bash script? oh you have to write a gradle build file, "tests" and ansible scripts to provision it.
I have to admit I absolutely loath devops but this seems to me like it will be extremely difficult to maintain in the long run, we are also now being forced to use python (we are/were mainly a scala shop) so we cannot leverage existing code as everything we've done before is considered "garbage" or using the more politically correct term, "legacy". What really pisses me off is that we keep getting shut down, and everytime we raise a concern we keep getting told that we are not "real" software engineers and that we must skill up.
Since I am NOT an ansible/devops guy I have to ask before I rage quit:
Am I being unreasonable? am I taking this too personally?.
It sounds like the culture is shifting in a direction that doesn't fit with the way you'd like to work. Time to move on, simple as that.