InSpec

What is InSpec?

InSpec is an open-source testing framework for infrastructure with an easy language for specifying compliance, security, and policy requirements. The project name stands for "infrastructure specification" and can be thought of as an abbreviation of "inspect".

You can use InSpec to examine any node in your infrastructure. The InSpec framework runs locally or remotely on the node being inspected. It uses test rules written in the InSpec language as input. Detected security, compliance, or policy issues are flagged in a log.

The InSpec project includes many resources that help you write audit rules quickly and easily. Here are some examples.

  • Disallow insecure protocols - In this example, the package and inetd_conf resources ensure that insecure services and protocols, such as telnet, are not used.
describe package('telnetd') do
  it { should_not be_installed }
end

describe inetd_conf do
  its("telnet") { should eq nil }
end
  • Only accept requests on secure ports - This test ensures, that a web server is only listening on well-secured ports.
describe port(80) do
  it { should_not be_listening }
end

describe port(443) do
  it { should be_listening }
  its('protocol') {should eq 'tcp'}
end
  • Use approved strong ciphers - This test ensures, that only enterprise-compliant ciphers are used for SSH servers.
describe sshd_config do
   its('Ciphers') { should eq('[email protected],aes256-ctr,aes192-ctr,aes128-ctr') }
end
  • Test your kitchen.yml file, to verify that only Vagrant is configured as the driver.
describe yaml('.kitchen.yml') do
  its('driver.name') { should eq('vagrant') }
end

Test your Server, VM, or workstation.

Small example: Write a your checks in test.rb:

describe file('/proc/cpuinfo') do
  it { should be_file }
end

describe ssh_config do
  its('Protocol') { should eq('2') }
end

Run this file locally:

inspec exec test.rb

Installation

Requires Ruby ( >1.9 ).

To simply run it without installation, you must install bundler:

bundle install
bundle exec bin/inspec help

To install it as a gem locally, run:

gem build inspec.gemspec
gem install inspec-*.gem

You should now be able to run:

inspec --help

Usage

exec

Run tests against different targets:

# run test locally
inspec exec test.rb

# run test on remote host on SSH
inspec exec test.rb -t ssh://user@hostname

# run test on remote windows host on WinRM
inspec exec test.rb -t winrm://Administrator@windowshost --password 'your-password'

# run test on docker container
inspec exec test.rb -t docker://container_id

detect

Verify your configuration and detect

id=$( docker run -dti ubuntu:14.04 /bin/bash )
inspec detect -t docker://$id

Which will provide you with:

{"family":"ubuntu","release":"14.04","arch":null}

Custom resources

You can easily create your own resources. Here is a custom resource for an application called Gordon and save it in gordon_config.rb:

require 'yaml'

class GordonConfig < Inspec.resource
  name 'gordon_config'

  def initialize
    @path = '/etc/gordon/config.yaml'
    @config = inspec.file(@path).content
    @params = YAML.load(@config)
  end

  def method_missing(name)
    @params[name.to_s]
  end
end

Include this file in your test.rb:

require_relative 'gordon_config'

Now you can start using your new resource:

describe gordon_config do
  its('Version') { should eq('1.0') }
end

Tests

We perform unit, resource and integration tests.

  • unit tests ensure the intended behaviour of the implementation
  • resource tests run against docker containers
  • integration tests run against VMs via test-kitchen and kitchen-inspec

Unit tests

Just

bundle exec rake test

as usual.

Resource tests

Make sure the backend execution layer behaves as expected. These tests will take a while, as a lot of different operating systems and configurations are being tested.

You will require:

  • docker

Run resource tests with

bundle exec rake test:resources config=test/test.yaml
bundle exec rake test:resources config=test/test-extra.yaml

Integration tests

These tests download various virtual machines, to ensure InSpec is working as expected across different operating systems.

You will require:

  • vagrant with virtualbox
  • test-kitchen

Run integration tests with

cd test/integration
bundle exec kitchen test -t .

Chef Delivery Tests

It may be informative to look at what tests Chef Delivery is running for CI.

Learn More

For more information see the InSpec documentation: https://github.com/chef/inspec/tree/master/docs

Kudos

InSpec is inspired by the wonderful Serverspec project. Kudos to mizzy and all contributors!

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

License

| Author: | Dominik Richter ([email protected])

| Author: | Christoph Hartmann ([email protected])

| Copyright: | Copyright (c) 2015 Chef Software Inc.

| Copyright: | Copyright (c) 2015 Vulcano Security GmbH.

| License: | Apache License, Version 2.0

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.