Incorrect case used in paragraph to describe interactive debugging with Pry. Obvious fix.
6.1 KiB
Using Ruby in InSpec
The InSpec DSL is a Ruby based DSL for writing audit controls, which
includes audit resources that you can invoke. Core and custom resources
are written as regular Ruby classes which inherit from
Inspec.resource
.
Assuming we have a JSON file like this on the node to be tested:
{
"keys":[
{"username":"john", "key":"/opt/keys/johnd.key"},
{"username":"jane", "key":"/opt/keys/janed.key"},
{"username":"sunny ", "key":"/opt/keys/sunnym.key"}
]
}
The following example shows how you can use pure Ruby code(variables, loops, conditionals, regular expressions, etc) to run a few tests against the above JSON file:
control 'check-interns' do
# use the json inspec resource to get the file
json_obj = json('/opt/keys/interns.json')
describe json_obj do
its('keys') { should_not eq nil }
end
if json_obj['keys']
# loop over the keys array
json_obj['keys'].each do |intern|
username = intern['username'].strip
# check for white spaces chars in usernames
describe username do
it { should_not match(/\s/) }
end
# check key file owners and permissions
describe file(intern['key']) do
it { should be_owned_by username }
its('mode') { should cmp '0600' }
end
end
end
end
Execution
It's important to understand that Ruby code used in custom resources and controls DSL is executed on the system that runs InSpec. This allows InSpec to work without Ruby and rubygems being required on remote targets(servers or containers).
For example, using `ls
` or system('ls')
will result in the ls
command being run locally and not on the target(remote) system. In order
to process the output of ls
executed on the target system, use
inspec.command('ls')
or inspec.powershell('ls')
Similarly, use inspec.file(PATH)
to access files or directories from
remote systems in your tests or custom resources.
Using rubygems
Ruby gems are self-contained programs and libraries. If you create a custom resource please vendor gems into the library. This ensures that all resources are self-contained and complete and don't need any resolution at runtime. We vendor resources and requirements through dependency resolution, which is independent of programming languages and their resolver mechanisms.
Interactive Debugging with Pry
Here's a sample InSpec control that users Ruby variables to instantiate an InSpec resource once and use the content in multiple tests.
control 'check-perl' do
impact 0.3
title 'Check perl compiled options and permissions'
perl_out = command('perl -V')
#require 'pry'; binding.pry;
describe perl_out do
its('exit_status') { should eq 0 }
its('stdout') { should match (/USE_64_BIT_ALL/) }
its('stdout') { should match (/useposix=true/) }
its('stdout') { should match (/-fstack-protector/) }
end
# extract an array of include directories
perl_inc = perl_out.stdout.partition('@INC:').last.strip.split("\n")
# ensure include directories are only writable by 'owner'
perl_inc.each do |path|
describe directory(path.strip) do
it { should_not be_writable.by('group') }
it { should_not be_writable.by('other') }
end
end
end
An advanced but very useful Ruby tip. In the previous example, I
commented out the require 'pry'; binding.pry;
line. If you remove the
#
prefix and run the control, the execution will stop at that line and
give you a pry
shell. Use that to troubleshoot, print variables, see
methods available, etc. For the above example:
[1] pry> perl_out.exit_status
=> 0
[2] pry> perl_out.stderr
=> ""
[3] pry> ls perl_out
Inspec::Plugins::Resource#methods: inspect
Inspec::Resources::Cmd#methods: command exist? exit_status result stderr stdout to_s
Inspec::Resource::Registry::Command#methods: inspec
instance variables: @__backend_runner__ @__resource_name__ @command @result
[4] pry> perl_out.stdout.partition('@INC:').last.strip.split("\n")
=> ["/Library/Perl/5.18/darwin-thread-multi-2level",
" /Library/Perl/5.18",
...REDACTED...
[5] pry> exit # or abort
You can use pry
inside both the controls DSL and resources. Similarly,
for dev and test, you can use inspec shell
which is based on pry
,
for example:
$ inspec shell
Welcome to the interactive InSpec Shell
To find out how to use it, type: help
inspec> command('ls /home/gordon/git/inspec/docs').stdout
=> "ctl_inspec.rst\ndsl_inspec.rst\ndsl_resource.rst\n"
inspec> command('ls').stdout.split("\n")
=> ["ctl_inspec.rst", "dsl_inspec.rst", "dsl_resource.rst"]
inspec> help command
Name: command
Description:
Use the command InSpec audit resource to test an arbitrary command that is run on the system.
Example:
describe command('ls -al /') do
it { should exist }
its('stdout') { should match /bin/ }
its('stderr') { should eq '' }
its('exit_status') { should eq 0 }
end
Shelling out in tests
When writing tests you can not use standard ruby methods to shellout as it tries to execute those commands locally.
However, the command
resource has a .stdout
method that will allow you to manipulate the results.
Using the above example, you could check the writes on several subdirectories.
Example 1:
$ inspec shell
Welcome to the interactive InSpec Shell
To find out how to use it, type: help
inspec> output=command('echo test').stdout
=> "test\n"
inspec> describe command('echo test') do
inspec> its('stdout') { should eq output }
inspec> end
Profile: inspec-shell
Version: (not specified)
Command echo
✔ test stdout should eq "test\n"
Test Summary: 1 successful, 0 failures, 0 skipped
Example 2:
$ inspec shell
Welcome to the interactive InSpec Shell
To find out how to use it, type: help
inspec> dirs = command('ls -d /home/gordon/git/inspec/docs').stdout.split("\n")
=> ["/home/gordon/git/inspec/docs"]
inspec> dirs.each do |dir|
inspec> describe directory(dir) do
inspec> its('mode') { should cmp '0775' }
inspec> end
inspec> end
Profile: inspec-shell
Version: (not specified)
File /home/gordon/git/inspec/docs/
✔ mode should cmp == "0775"
Test Summary: 1 successful, 0 failures, 0 skipped