Signed-off-by: kagarmoe <kgarmoe@chef.io>
10 KiB
title |
---|
About the azure_virtual_machine Resource |
azure_virtual_machine
Use the azure_virtual_machine
InSpec audit resource to ensure that a Virtual Machine has been provisionned correctly.
References
Syntax
The name of the machine and the resourece group are required as properties to the resource.
describe azure_virtual_machine(group_name: 'MyResourceGroup', name: 'MyVM') do
its('property') { should eq 'value' }
end
where
- Resource Parameters
MyVm
is the name of the virtual machine as seen in Azure. (It is not the hostname of the machine)MyResourceGroup
is the name of the resource group that the machine is in.
property
is one oftype
location
name
publisher
offer
sku
os_type
os_disk_name
have_managed_osdisk
caching
create_option
disk_size_gb
have_data_disks
data_disk_count
storage_account_type
vm_size
computer_name
admin_username
have_nics
nic_count
connected_nics
have_password_authentication
password_authentication?
have_custom_data
custom_data?
have_ssh_keys
ssh_keys?
ssh_key_count
ssh_keys
have_boot_diagnostics
boot_diagnostics_storage_uri
value
is the expected output from the matcher
The options that can be passed to the resource are as follows.
Name | Description | Required | Example |
---|---|---|---|
group_name: | Azure Resource Group to be tested | yes | MyResourceGroup |
name: | Name of the Azure resource to test | no | MyVM |
apiversion: | API Version to use when interrogating the resource. If not set then the latest version for the resoure type is used | no | 2017-10-9 |
These options can also be set using the environment variables:
AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME
AZURE_RESOURCE_NAME
AZURE_RESOURCE_API_VERSION
When the options have been set as well as the environment variables, the environment variables take priority.
For example:
describe azure_virtual_machine(group_name: 'Inspec-Azure', name: 'Linux-Internal-VM') do
its('os_type') { should eq 'Linux' }
it { should have_boot_diagnostics }
end
Testers
There are a number of built in comparison operrtors that are available to test the result with an expected value.
For information on all that are available please refer to the Inspec Matchers Reference page.
Properties
This InSpec audit resource has the following properties that can be tested:
type
THe Azure Resource type. For a virtual machine this will always return Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines
location
Where the machine is located
its('location') { should eq 'westeurope' }
name
Name of the Virtual Machine in Azure. Be aware that this is not the computer name or hostname, rather the name of the machine when seen in the Azure Portal.
publisher
The publisher of the image from which this machine was built.
This will be nil
if the machine was created from a custom image.
offer
The offer from the publisher of the build image.
This will be nil
if the machine was created from a custom image.
sku
The item from the publisher that was used to create the image.
This will be nil
if the machine was created from a custom image.
os_type
Test that returns the classification in Azure of the operating system type. Ostensibly this will be either Linux
or Windows
.
os_disk_name
Return the name of the operating system disk attached to the machine.
have_managed_osdisk
Determine if the operating system disk is a Managed Disks or not.
This test can be used in the following way:
it { should have_managed_osdisk }
caching
Returns the type of caching that has been set on the operating system disk.
create_option
When the operating system disk is created, how it was created is set as an property. This property returns how the disk was created.
disk_size_gb
Returns the size of the operating system disk.
have_data_disks
Denotes if the machine has data disks attached to it or not.
it { should have_data_disks }
data_disk_count
Return the number of data disks that are attached to the machine
storage_account_type
This provides the storage account type for a machine that is using managed disks for the operating system disk.
vm_size
The size of the machine in Azure
its('vm_size') { should eq 'Standard_DS2_v2' }
computer_name
The name of the machine. This is what was assigned to the machine during deployment and is what should be returned by the hostname
command.
admin_username
The admin username that was assigned to the machine
NOTE: Azure does not allow the use of Administrator
as the admin username on a Windows machine
have_nics
Returns a boolean to state if the machine has NICs connected or not.
This has can be used in the following way:
it { should have_nics }
nic_count
The number of network interface cards that have been attached to the machine
connected_nics
This returns an array of the NIC ids that are connected to the machine. This means that it possible to check that the machine has the correct NIC(s) attached and thus on the correct subnet.
its('connected_nics') { should include /Inspec-NIC-1/ }
Note the use of the regular expression here. This is because the NIC id is a long string that contains the subscription id, resource group, machine id as well as other things. By using the regular expression the NIC can be checked withouth breaking this string up. It also means that other tests can be performed.
An example of the id string is /subscriptions/1e0b427a-d58b-494e-ae4f-ee558463ebbf/resourceGroups/Inspec-Azure/providers/Microsoft.Network/networkInterfaces/Inspec-NIC-1
have_password_authentication
Returns a boolean to denote if the machine is accessible using a password.
it { should have_password_authentication }
password_authentication?
Boolean to state of password authentication is enabled or not for the admin user.
its('password_authentication?') { should be false }
This only applies to Linux machines and will always return true
on Windows.
have_custom_data
Returns a boolean stating if the machine has custom data assigned to it.
it { should have_custom_data }
custom_data?
Boolean to state if the machine has custom data or not
its('custom_data') { should be true }
have_ssh_keys
Boolean to state if the machine has SSH keys assigned to it
it { should have_ssh_keys }
For a Windows machine this will always be false.
ssh_keys?
Boolean to state of the machine is accessible using SSH keys
its('ssh_keys?') { should be true }
### ssh_key_count
Returns how many SSH keys have been applied to the machine.
This only applies to Linux machines and will always return 0
on Windows.
ssh_keys
Returns an array of the keys that are assigned to the machine. This is check if the correct keys are assigned.
Most SSH public keys have a signature at the end of them that can be tested. For example:
its('ssh_keys') { should include /azure@inspec.local/ }
boot_diagnostics?
Boolean test to see if boot diagnostics have been enabled on the machine
it { should have_boot_diagnostics }
boot_diagnostics_storage_uri
If boot diagnostics are enabled for the machine they will be saved in a storage account. This method returns the URI for the storage account.
its('boot_diagnostics_storage_uri') { should match 'ghjgjhgjg' }
Tags
It is possible to test the tags that have been assigned to the resource. There are a number of properties that can be called to check that it has tags, that it has the correct number and that the correct ones are assigned.
have_tags
This is a simple test to see if the machine has tags assigned to it or not.
it { should have_tags }
tag_count
Returns the number of tags that are assigned to the resource
its ('tag_count') { should eq 2 }
tags
It is possible to check if a specific tag has been set on the resource.
its('tags') { should include 'Owner' }
xxx_tag
To get the value of the tag, a number of tests have been craeted from the tags that are set.
For example, if the following tag is set on a resource:
Tag Name | Value |
---|---|
Owner | Russell Seymour |
Then a test is available called Owner_tag
.
its('Owner_tag') { should cmp 'Russell Seymour' }
Note: The tag name is case sensitive which makes the test case sensitive. E.g. owner_tag
does not equal Owner_tag
.
Examples
The following examples show how to use this InSpec audit resource.
Please refer the integration tests for more in depth examples:
Test that the machine was built from a Windows image
describe azure_virtual_machine(name: 'Windows-Internal-VM', group_name: 'Inspec-Azure') do
its('publisher') { should eq 'MicrosoftWindowsServer' }
its('offer') { should eq 'WindowsServer' }
its('sku') { should eq '2012-R2-Datacenter' }
end
Ensure the machine is in the correct location
describe azure_virtual_machine(name: 'Linux-Internal-VM', resource_group: 'Inspec-Azure') do
its('location') { should eq 'westeurope' }
end