inspec
specs
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inspec | specs | |
---|---|---|
13 | 3 | |
2,800 | 368 | |
0.9% | 0.3% | |
9.5 | 5.8 | |
2 days ago | 6 months ago | |
Ruby | SCSS | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
inspec
- Testing Terraform infra - terratest alternatives?
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Ruby: "the best" language for general automation
The course uses Chef Inspec, an open source Ruby DSL. I made a POC with this tool to automatically check repositories on GitHub, checks like if it contains a gitignore consistent with the language used, if node_modules is not present, etc.
- what tool do you use for validating hardening settings have been applied. this is for security and hardening purposes. for example, ensure that admin username is not default username, password is at least 12 characters with upper, lower and special characters, https is enabled etc
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Is there any kind of Pester Server for infrastructure tests?
https://github.com/inspec/inspec Chef Inspec is probably a great tool for what you’re trying to do. Great at building human readable test cases for validation of infrastructure deployments. At a different org I used to use PoSh, Terraform and Ansible etc. for deploying on-prem and cloud infrastructure and then Inspec for testing for successful deployments, security misconfigurations (is a port open that shouldn’t be etc).
- Checking compliance of controls? Job help
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Unit tests for hardened images
I gave it a read and nothing really stood out as being unreasonable unless you can point to specifics. Inspec is open source.
You can use something like inspec to do this.
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Automated Configuration Analysis?
If you need the monitoring for compliance reason, Chef InSpec was designed for this exact usecase.
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Terraforming in 2021 – new features, testing and compliance
Before we dive into own cloud provider compliance checking services, we want to highlight yet another open source tool, namely InSpec. It allows you to write tests in ruby, and was built on top of RSpec. If you know already awsspec, then this should feel very similar, with the advantage that InSpec also supports GCP and Azure.
specs
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Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
What are some alternatives?
terratest - Terratest is a Go library that makes it easier to write automated tests for your infrastructure code.
goss - Quick and Easy server testing/validation
awspec - RSpec tests for your AWS resources.
checkov - Prevent cloud misconfigurations and find vulnerabilities during build-time in infrastructure as code, container images and open source packages with Checkov by Bridgecrew.
container-structure-test - validate the structure of your container images
conftest - Write tests against structured configuration data using the Open Policy Agent Rego query language
OSCAL - Open Security Controls Assessment Language (OSCAL)
tfsec - Security scanner for your Terraform code [Moved to: https://github.com/aquasecurity/tfsec]
ansible-hardening - Ansible role for security hardening. Mirror of code maintained at opendev.org.
lynis - Lynis - Security auditing tool for Linux, macOS, and UNIX-based systems. Assists with compliance testing (HIPAA/ISO27001/PCI DSS) and system hardening. Agentless, and installation optional.
terraform-switcher - A command line tool to switch between different versions of terraform (install with homebrew and more)
capistrano-kemal - Capistrano integration for Kemal