mirror of
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5c1467dfe9
Signed-off-by: IanMadd <maddaus@protonmail.com>
240 lines
6.4 KiB
Markdown
240 lines
6.4 KiB
Markdown
# Chef InSpec profile style guide
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This is a set of recommended Chef InSpec rules you should use when writing controls.
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# Control Files
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## Place control files in `controls/` and end them with `.rb`
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Most syntax highlighters will render Chef InSpec files correctly across a wide list
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of tools.
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Avoid:
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- `controls/ssh_config`
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- `controls/ssh/config.rb`
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Use:
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- `controls/ssh_config.rb`
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- `controls/ssh_config.rb`
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## Avoid `controls`/`control` in your control filenames
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Using `controls` in the filename creates unnecessary clutter when reading it.
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Keep the names short and concise.
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Avoid:
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- `controls/ssh_controls.rb`
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Use:
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- `controls/ssh.rb`
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# Code Style
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## Avoid unnecessary parentheses in matchers
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Adding additional parentheses is not required and provides more readability if
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it is not used:
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Avoid:
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- `it { should eq(value) }`
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Use:
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- `it { should eq value }`
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The exception are matchers that require additional arguments or named arguments.
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# Controls
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## Avoid wrapping controls in conditional statements
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This will create dynamic profiles whose controls depend on the execution. The
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problem here is that we cannot render the profile or provide its information
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before scanning a system. We want to be able to inform users of the contents of
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their profiles before they run them. It is valid to skip controls that are not
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necessary for a system, as long as you do it via `only_if` conditions. Ruby's
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internal conditionals will hide parts of the profile to static analysis and
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should thus be avoided.
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Avoid:
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```ruby
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if package('..').installed?
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control "package-test1" do
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..
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end
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end
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```
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Use:
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```ruby
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control "package-test1" do
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only_if { package('..').installed? }
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end
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```
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Avoid:
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```ruby
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case inspec.platform.name
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when /centos/
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include_controls 'centos-profile'
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...
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```
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Instead use the `supports` attribute in the `inspec.yml` of the profile you
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want to include:
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```ruby
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supports:
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- platform-name: centos
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```
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Now whenever you run the base profile you can just
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`include_controls 'centos-profile'`. It will only run the included profiles is
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the platform matches the supported platform.
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## Avoid dynamic elements in the control IDs
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Control IDs are used to map test results to the tests and profiles. Dynamic
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control IDs make it impossible to map results back, since the identifier which
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connects tests and results may change in the process.
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Avoid:
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```ruby
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control "test-file-#{name}" do
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..
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end
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```
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Use:
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```ruby
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control "test-all-files" do
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..
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end
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```
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Sometimes you may create controls from a static list of elements. If this list
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stays the same no matter what system is scanned, it may be ok to do so and use
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it as a generator for static controls.
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## Avoid Ruby system calls
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Ruby code is executed on the system that runs InSpec. This allows Chef InSpec to work
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without Ruby and RubyGems being required on remote targets (servers or
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containers). System calls are often used to interact with the local OS or remote
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endpoints from a local installation.
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Chef InSpec tests, however, are designed to be universally executable on all types
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of runtimes, including local and remote execution. We want to give users the
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ability to take an OS profile and execute it remotely or locally.
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## Avoid shelling out
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Avoid:
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- `` `ls``\`
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- `system("ls")`
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- `IO.popen("ls")`
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Use:
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- `command("ls")` or `powershell("Get-ChildItem")`
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Ruby's command executors will only run locally. Imagine a test like this:
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```ruby
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describe `whoami` do
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it { should cmp "bob\n" }
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end
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```
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If you run this test on your local system and happen to be using Bob's account
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it will succeed. But if you were to run it against
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`--target alice@remote-host.com` it will still report that the user is bob
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instead of alice.
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Instead, do this:
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```ruby
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describe command('whoami') do
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its('stdout') { should cmp "bob\n" }
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end
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```
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If the profile is pointed to a remote endpoint using the `command` resource
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will run it on the remote OS.
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## Avoid Ruby IO on files
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Similar to the command interactions these files will only be read locally with
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Ruby's internal calls. If you run this test against a remote target it won't
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read the file from the remote endpoint, but from the local OS instead. Use the
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`file` resource to read files on the target system.
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Avoid:
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- `File.new("filename").read`
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- `File.read("filename")`
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- `IO.read("filename")`
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Use:
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- `file("filename")`
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In general, try to avoid Ruby's IO calls from within Chef InSpec controls and use
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Chef InSpec resources instead.
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## Avoid Ruby gem dependencies in controls
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In addition to avoiding system-level gems and modules you should also limit the
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use of external dependencies to resource packs or plugins. Gems need to be
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resolved, installed, vendored, and protected from conflicts. We aim to avoid
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exposing this complexity to users of InSpec, to make it a great tool even if you
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are not a developer.
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Plugins should declare gem dependencies in their gemspec, and then rely on the
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plugin installation facility to install and manage dependencies.
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## Avoid debugging calls (in production)
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One of the best way to develop and explore tests is the interactive debugging
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shell `pry` (see [Interactive Debugging with Pry] (https://www.inspec.io/docs/reference/dsl_inspec/#interactive-debugging-with-pry)
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at the end of this page). However, after you finish your profile make sure you
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have no interactive statements included anymore. Sometimes interactive calls are
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hidden behind conditionals (`if` statements) that are harder to reach. These
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calls can easily cause trouble when an automated profiles runs into an
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interactive `pry` call that stops the execution and waits for user input.
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Avoid:
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- `binding.pry` in production profiles
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Use:
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- Use debugging calls during development only
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Also you may find it helpful to use the Chef InSpec logging interface:
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```ruby
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Inspec::Log.info('Hi')
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```
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### 9. Favor `cmp` over `eq`
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Reason: The `cmp` matcher handles type conversions, case insensitive comparisons, converting strings to versions (e.g. '7.35.0-1ubuntu2.10'), and many other troublesome things. Unless you are wanting an exact match (if so use the `eq` matcher) then the `cmp` matcher should be used.
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For example, this:
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```ruby
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describe passwd.uids(0) do
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its('users') { should cmp 'root' }
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end
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```
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is preferred over:
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```ruby
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describe passwd.uids(0) do
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its('users') { should eq ['root'] }
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end
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```
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See the [`cmp` matcher documentation](https://www.inspec.io/docs/reference/matchers/#cmp) for more examples.
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