- Project State: Active
- Issues Response SLA: 3 business days
- Pull Request Response SLA: 3 business days
For more information on project states and SLAs, see this documentation.
This is the kitchen driver for InSpec. To see the project in action, we have the following test-kitchen examples available:
Note:
kitchen-inspec ships as part of ChefDK. Installation is not necessary for DK users.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'kitchen-inspec'
And then execute:
bundle
Or install it yourself as:
gem install kitchen-inspec
In your kitchen.yml include
verifier:
name: inspec
Optionally specify sudo and sudo_command
verifier:
name: inspec
sudo: true
sudo_command: 'skittles'
You can also specify the host and port to be used by InSpec when targeting the node. Otherwise, it defaults to the hostname and port used by kitchen for converging.
verifier:
name: inspec
host: 192.168.56.40
port: 22
By default kitchen-inspec
expects test to be in test/integration/%suite%
directory structure (we use Chef as provisioner here):
.
├── Berksfile
├── Gemfile
├── README.md
├── metadata.rb
├── recipes
│ ├── default.rb
│ └── nginx.rb
└── test
└── integration
└── default
└── web_spec.rb
A complete profile is used here, including a custom InSpec resource named gordon_config
:
.
├── Berksfile
├── Gemfile
├── README.md
├── metadata.rb
├── recipes
│ ├── default.rb
│ └── nginx.rb
└── test
└── integration
└── default
├── controls
│ └── gordon.rb
├── inspec.yml
└── libraries
└── gordon_config.rb
If you need support with other testing frameworks, we recommend to place the tests in test/integration/%suite%/inspec
:
.
├── Berksfile
├── Gemfile
├── README.md
├── metadata.rb
├── recipes
│ ├── default.rb
│ └── nginx.rb
└── test
└── integration
└── default
└── inspec
└── web_spec.rb
You can enable/disable sudo and set your own custom sudo command.
verifier:
name: inspec
sudo: true
sudo_command: 'skittles'
You can also specify the host, port, and proxy settings to be used by InSpec when targeting the node. Otherwise, it defaults to the hostname and port used by kitchen for converging.
verifier:
name: inspec
host: 192.168.56.40
port: 22
proxy_command: ssh [email protected] -W %h:%p
If you want to customize the output file per platform or test suite you can use template format for your output variable. Current flags supported:
- %{platform}
- %{suite}
verifier:
name: inspec
reporter:
- cli
- junit:path/to/results/%{platform}_%{suite}_inspec.xml
You can also decide to only run specific controls, instead of a full profile. This is done by specifying a list of controls:
suites:
- name: supermarket
run_list:
- recipe[apt]
- recipe[ssh-hardening]
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- name: dev-sec/ssh-baseline
controls:
- sshd-46
...
In case you want to reuse tests across multiple cookbooks, they should become an extra artifact independent of a Chef cookbook, called InSpec profiles. Those can be easily added to existing local tests as demonstrated in previous sections. To include remote profiles, adapt the verifier
attributes in kitchen.yml
suites:
- name: default
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- name: ssh-hardening
url: https://github.com/dev-sec/tests-ssh-hardening
inspec_tests
accepts all values that inspec exec profile
would expect. We support:
- local directory eg.
path: /path/to/profile
- github url
git: https://github.com/dev-sec/tests-ssh-hardening.git
- Chef Supermarket
name: hardening/ssh-hardening
# defaults to supermarket (list all available profiles withinspec supermarket profiles
) - Chef Compliance
name: ssh
compliance: base/ssh
The following example illustrates the usage in a kitchen.yml
suites:
- name: contains_inspec
run_list:
- recipe[apt]
- recipe[yum]
- recipe[ssh-hardening]
- recipe[os-hardening]
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- path: path/to/some/local/tests
- name: ssh-hardening
url: https://github.com/dev-sec/tests-ssh-hardening/archive/master.zip
- name: os-hardening
git: https://github.com/dev-sec/tests-os-hardening.git
- name: supermarket
run_list:
- recipe[apt]
- recipe[yum]
- recipe[ssh-hardening]
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- name: hardening/ssh-hardening # name only defaults to supermarket
- name: ssh-supermarket # alternatively, you can explicitly specify that the profile is from supermarket in this way
supermarket: hardening/ssh-hardening
supermarket_url: http://supermarket.example.com
# before you are able to use the compliance plugin, you need to run
# insecure is only required if you use self-signed certificates
# $ inspec compliance login https://compliance.test --user admin --insecure --token ''
- name: compliance
run_list:
- recipe[apt]
- recipe[yum]
- recipe[ssh-hardening]
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- name: ssh
compliance: base/ssh
To run a profile with inputs defined inline, you can adapt your kitchen.yml
:
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- path: test/integration/attributes
inputs:
user: bob
password: secret
You can also define your inputs in external files. Adapt your kitchen.yml
to point to those files:
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- path: test/integration/attributes
input_files:
- test/integration/profile-attribute.yml
You can define your waivers in external files:
verifier:
inspec_tests:
- path: test/integration/attributes
input_files:
- test/integration/profile-attribute.yml
waiver_files:
- test/integration/control-waiver-01.yml
By default, the verifier loads Inspec plugins such as additional Reporter or Input plugins. This adds a small delay as the system scans for plugins. If you know you are not using special Reporters or Inputs, you can disable plugin loading:
verifier:
load_plugins: false
Some Inspec plugins allow further configuration. You can supply these settings as well with InSpec 4.26 or newer:
verifier:
plugin_config:
example_plugin_name:
example_setting: "Example value"
When using Input plugins, please be aware that input values get cached between suites. If you want to re-evaluate these values for every suite, you can deactivate the cache:
verifier:
cache_inputs: false
Chef InSpec uses a cache when executing commands and accessing files on the remote target. The cache is enabled by default. To disable the cache:
verifier:
backend_cache: false
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/inspec/kitchen-inspec.
Apache 2.0 (see LICENSE)