A `registry_key` resource block declares the item in the Windows registry, the path to a setting under that item, and then one (or more) name/value pairs to be tested.
Use a registry key name and path:
describe registry_key('Task Scheduler','HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\services\Schedule') do
its('Start') { should eq 2 }
end
Use only a registry key path:
describe registry_key('Task Scheduler','HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\services\Schedule') do
A Windows registry key can be used as a string in Ruby code, such as when a registry key is used as the name of a recipe. In Ruby, when a registry key is enclosed in a double-quoted string (`" "`), the same backslash character (`\`) that is used to define the registry key path separator is also used in Ruby to define an escape character. Therefore, the registry key path separators must be escaped when they are enclosed in a double-quoted string. For example, the following registry key:
For example, to get all child items for a registry key:
describe registry_key('Task Scheduler','HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet').children do
it { should_not eq [] }
end
The following example shows how find a property that may exist against multiple registry keys, and then test that property for every registry key in which that property is located:
Any name with a dot will not work as expected: <code>its('explorer.exe') { should eq 'test' }</code>. This issue is tracked in <a href="https://github.com/chef/inspec/issues/1281">https://github.com/chef/inspec/issues/1281</a>
</p>
# instead of:
# its('explorer.exe') { should eq 'test' }
# use the following solution:
it { should have_property_value('explorer.exe', :string, 'test') }