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Terraform module to create Azure Container Registry with optional scope-map, token, webhook, Network ACLs, encryption and Private endpoints.

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Azure Container Registry Terraform Module

The Azure container registry is Microsoft's hosting platform for Docker images. It is a private registry where you can store and manage the private Docker container images and other related artefacts. These images can then be pulled and run locally or used for container-based deployments to hosting platforms.

This Terraform module helps create Azure Container Registry with optional scope-map, token, webhook, Network ACLs, encryption and Private endpoints.

Resources supported

Module Usage

# Azurerm Provider configuration
provider "azurerm" {
  features {}
}

module "container-registry" {
  source  = "kumarvna/container-registry/azurerm"
  version = "1.0.0"

  # By default, this module will not create a resource group. Location will be same as existing RG.
  # proivde a name to use an existing resource group, specify the existing resource group name, 
  # set the argument to `create_resource_group = true` to create new resrouce group.
  resource_group_name = "rg-shared-westeurope-01"
  location            = "westeurope"

  # Azure Container Registry configuration
  # The `Classic` SKU is Deprecated and will no longer be available for new resources
  container_registry_config = {
    name          = "containerregistrydemoproject01"
    admin_enabled = true
    sku           = "Premium"
  }

  # The georeplications is only supported on new resources with the Premium SKU.
  # The georeplications list cannot contain the location where the Container Registry exists.
  georeplications = [
    {
      location                = "northeurope"
      zone_redundancy_enabled = true
    },
    {
      location                = "francecentral"
      zone_redundancy_enabled = true
    },
    {
      location                = "uksouth"
      zone_redundancy_enabled = true
    }
  ]

  # (Optional) To enable Azure Monitoring for Azure MySQL database
  # (Optional) Specify `storage_account_name` to save monitoring logs to storage. 
  log_analytics_workspace_name = "loganalytics-we-sharedtest2"

  # Adding TAG's to your Azure resources 
  tags = {
    ProjectName  = "demo-internal"
    Env          = "dev"
    Owner        = "user@example.com"
    BusinessUnit = "CORP"
    ServiceClass = "Gold"
  }
}

Module Usage examples for

Advanced Usage of the Module

network_rule_set - Restrict access using a service endpoint

Azure Virtual Network provides secure, private networking for your Azure and on-premises resources. A service endpoint allows you to secure your container registry's public IP address to only your virtual network. This endpoint gives traffic an optimal route to the resource over the Azure backbone network. The identities of the virtual network and the subnet are also transmitted with each request.

Add following to module configuration with a valid IP range and Subnet ids to implement network ACL's. Add Microsoft.ContainerRegistry to subnet's ServiceEndpoints collection before adding specific subnets.

# Azurerm Provider configuration
provider "azurerm" {
  features {}
}

module "container-registry" {
  source  = "kumarvna/container-registry/azurerm"
  version = "1.0.0"

 # .... omitted

  network_rule_set = {
    default_action = "Deny"
    ip_rule = [
      {
        ip_range = "49.204.225.49/32"
      },
    ]
    virtual_network = [
      {
        subnet_id = "/subscriptions/1e3f0eeb-0000-1111-0000-101010101010/resourceGroups/rg-shared-westeurope-01/providers/Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/vnet-shared-hub-westeurope-001/subnets/snet-appgateway"
      },
      {
        subnet_id = "/subscriptions/1e3f0eeb-0000-1111-0000-101010101010/resourceGroups/rg-shared-westeurope-01/providers/Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/vnet-shared-hub-westeurope-001/subnets/snet-management"
      }
    ]
  }

 # .... omitted
}

scope_map - Create a token with repository-scoped permissions

By creating tokens, a registry owner can provide users or services with scoped, time-limited access to repositories to pull or push images or perform other actions. A token provides more fine-grained permissions than other registry authentication options, which scope permissions to an entire registry.

Important

  • This feature is currently in preview, and some limitations apply.
  • You can't currently assign repository-scoped permissions to an Azure Active Directory identity, such as a service principal or managed identity.
  • You can't create a scope map in a registry enabled for anonymous pull access.
# Azurerm Provider configuration
provider "azurerm" {
  features {}
}

module "container-registry" {
  source  = "kumarvna/container-registry/azurerm"
  version = "1.0.0"

 # .... omitted

  scope_map = {
    example-scope-map1 = {
      actions = [
        "repo/content/read",
        "repo2/content/delete"
      ]
    },
    example-scope-map2 = {
      actions = [
        #       "content/tomcat/read",
        "repo/content/read",
        "repo2/content/delete"
      ]
    }
  }

 # .... omitted
}

container_registry_webhook - Using Azure Container Registry webhooks

An Azure container registry stores and manages private Docker container images, similar to the way Docker Hub stores public Docker images. It can also host repositories for Helm charts (preview), a packaging format to deploy applications to Kubernetes. You can use webhooks to trigger events when certain actions take place in one of your registry repositories. Webhooks can respond to events at the registry level, or they can be scoped down to a specific repository tag. With a geo-replicated registry, you configure each webhook to respond to events in a specific regional replica.

The endpoint for a webhook must be publicly accessible from the registry. You can configure registry webhook requests to authenticate to a secured endpoint. This module support webhooks creation using following object map.

# Azurerm Provider configuration
provider "azurerm" {
  features {}
}

module "container-registry" {
  source  = "kumarvna/container-registry/azurerm"
  version = "1.0.0"

 # .... omitted

  container_registry_webhooks = {
    webhook1 = {
      service_uri = "https://mywebhookreceiver.example/mytag"
      status      = "enabled"
      scope       = "mytag:*"
      actions     = ["push"]
      custom_headers = {
        "Content-Type" = "application/json"
      }
    },
    webhook2 = {
      service_uri = "https://mywebhookreceiver.example/app1"
      status      = "enabled"
      scope       = "app1:*"
      actions     = ["push"]
      custom_headers = {
        "Content-Type" = "application/json"
      }
    }
  }

 # .... omitted
}

encryption - Encrypt registry using a customer-managed key

When you store images and other artifacts in an Azure container registry, Azure automatically encrypts the registry content at rest with service-managed keys. You can supplement default encryption with an additional encryption layer using a key that you create and manage in Azure Key Vault (a customer-managed key).

This module supports encryption using customer managed key using keyvalut by adding following configuration to module. The managed identity used in encryption also needs to be part of the identity block under identity_ids.

# Azurerm Provider configuration
provider "azurerm" {
  features {}
}

resource "azurerm_user_assigned_identity" "example" {
  resource_group_name = azurerm_resource_group.example.name
  location            = azurerm_resource_group.example.location
  name                = "registry-uai"
}

data "azurerm_key_vault_key" "example" {
  name         = "super-secret"
  key_vault_id = data.azurerm_key_vault.existing.id
}

module "container-registry" {
  source  = "kumarvna/container-registry/azurerm"
  version = "1.0.0"

 # .... omitted

  identity_ids = [azurerm_user_assigned_identity.example.client_id]
  
  encryption = {
    key_vault_key_id   = data.azurerm_key_vault_key.example.id
    identity_client_id = azurerm_user_assigned_identity.example.client_id
  }

 # .... omitted
}

retention_policy - Set a retention policy for untagged manifests

Azure Container Registry gives you the option to set a retention policy for stored image manifests that don't have any associated tags (untagged manifests). When a retention policy is enabled, untagged manifests in the registry are automatically deleted after a number of days you set. This feature prevents the registry from filling up with artifacts that aren't needed and helps you save on storage costs.

The retention policy applies only to untagged manifests with timestamps after the policy is enabled. Untagged manifests in the registry with earlier timestamps aren't subject to the policy.

# Azurerm Provider configuration
provider "azurerm" {
  features {}
}

module "container-registry" {
  source  = "kumarvna/container-registry/azurerm"
  version = "1.0.0"

 # .... omitted

  # Set a retention policy with care--deleted image data is UNRECOVERABLE.
  # A retention policy for untagged manifests is currently a preview feature of Premium container registries
  # The retention policy applies only to untagged manifests with timestamps after the policy is enabled. Default is `7` days.
  retention_policy = {
    days    = 10
    enabled = true
  }

 # .... omitted
}

trust_policy - Content trust in Azure Container Registry

Azure Container Registry implements Docker's content trust model, enabling pushing and pulling of signed images. This module supports the feature and can be implemneted by setting up enable_content_trust = true.

Private Link to Azure Contaner Registry

Azure Private Endpoint is a network interface that connects you privately and securely to a service powered by Azure Private Link. Private Endpoint uses a private IP address from your VNet, effectively bringing the service into your VNet.

With Private Link, Microsoft offering the ability to associate a logical server to a specific private IP address (also known as private endpoint) within the VNet. Clients can connect to the Private endpoint from the same VNet, peered VNet in same region, or via VNet-to-VNet connection across regions. Additionally, clients can connect from on-premises using ExpressRoute, private peering, or VPN tunneling.

By default, this feature not enabled on this module. To create private link with private endpoints set the variable enable_private_endpoint to true and provide virtual_network_name, private_subnet_address_prefix with a valid values. You can also use the existing private DNS zone to create DNS records. To use this feature, set the existing_private_dns_zone with a valid existing private DNS zone name.

For more details: Connect privately to an Azure container registry using Azure Private Link

Important

Some functionality may be unavailable or require more configuration in a container registry that restricts access to private endpoints, selected subnets, or IP addresses.

  • When public network access to a registry is disabled, registry access by certain trusted services including Azure Security Center requires enabling a network setting to bypass the network rules.
  • Instances of certain Azure services including Azure DevOps Services and Azure Container Instances are currently unable to access the container registry.
  • If the registry has an approved private endpoint and public network access is disabled, repositories and tags can't be listed outside the virtual network using the Azure portal, Azure CLI, or other tools.

Recommended naming and tagging conventions

Applying tags to your Azure resources, resource groups, and subscriptions to logically organize them into a taxonomy. Each tag consists of a name and a value pair. For example, you can apply the name Environment and the value Production to all the resources in production. For recommendations on how to implement a tagging strategy, see Resource naming and tagging decision guide.

Important : Tag names are case-insensitive for operations. A tag with a tag name, regardless of the casing, is updated or retrieved. However, the resource provider might keep the casing you provide for the tag name. You'll see that casing in cost reports. Tag values are case-sensitive.

An effective naming convention assembles resource names by using important resource information as parts of a resource's name. For example, using these recommended naming conventions, a public IP resource for a production SharePoint workload is named like this: pip-sharepoint-prod-westus-001.

Requirements

Name Version
terraform >= 0.13
azurerm >= 2.59.0

Providers

Name Version
azurerm >= 2.59.0

Inputs

Name Description Type Default
create_resource_group Whether to create resource group and use it for all networking resources string "false"
resource_group_name The name of the resource group in which resources are created string ""
location The location of the resource group in which resources are created string ""
container_registry_config Manages an Azure Container Registry object({}) {}
georeplications A list of Azure locations where the container registry should be geo-replicated list(object({})) []
network_rule_set Manage network rules for Azure Container Registries object({}) null
retention_policy Set a retention policy for untagged manifests object({}) null
enable_content_trust Boolean value to enable or disable Content trust in Azure Container Registry string false
identity_ids Specifies a list of user managed identity ids to be assigned. This is required when type is set to UserAssigned or SystemAssigned, UserAssigned string null
encryption Encrypt registry using a customer-managed key object({}) null
scope_map Manages an Azure Container Registry scope map. Scope Maps are a preview feature only available in Premium SKU Container registries. map(object({})) null
container_registry_webhooks Manages an Azure Container Registry Webhook map(object({})) null
log_analytics_workspace_name The name of log analytics workspace name string null
storage_account_name The name of the storage account name string null
enable_private_endpoint Azure Private Endpoint is a network interface that connects you privately and securely to a service powered by Azure Private Link string "false"
virtual_network_name The name of the virtual network string ""
private_subnet_address_prefix A list of subnets address prefixes inside virtual network list []
existing_private_dns_zone Name of the existing private DNS zone string null
Tags A map of tags to add to all resources map {}

Outputs

Name Description
resource_group_name The name of the resource group in which resources are created
resource_group_location The location of the resource group in which resources are created
resource_group_id The id of the resource group in which resources are created
container_registry_id The ID of the Container Registry
container_registry_login_server The URL that can be used to log into the container registry
container_registry_admin_username The Username associated with the Container Registry Admin account - if the admin account is enabled
container_registry_admin_password The Username associated with the Container Registry Admin account - if the admin account is enabled
container_registry_identity_principal_id The Principal ID for the Service Principal associated with the Managed Service Identity of this Container Registry
container_registry_identity_tenant_id The Tenant ID for the Service Principal associated with the Managed Service Identity of this Container Registry
container_registry_scope_map_id The ID of the Container Registry scope map
container_registry_token_id The ID of the Container Registry token
container_registry_webhook_id The ID of the Container Registry Webhook
container_registry_private_endpoint The ID of the Azure Container Registry Private Endpoint
container_registry_private_dns_zone_domain DNS zone name of Azure Container Registry Private endpoints dns name records
container_registry_private_endpoint_ip_addresses Azure Container Registry private endpoint IPv4 Addresses
container_registry_private_endpoint_fqdn Azure Container Registry private endpoint FQDN Addresses

Resource Graph

Resource Graph

Authors

Originally created by Kumaraswamy Vithanala

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