bond resource
Use the bond
Chef InSpec audit resource to test a logical, bonded network interface (i.e. “two or more network interfaces aggregated into a single, logical network interface”). On Linux platforms, any value in the /proc/net/bonding
directory may be tested.
Availability
Installation
This resource is distributed along with Chef InSpec itself. You can use it automatically.
Version
This resource first became available in v1.0.0 of InSpec.
Syntax
A bond
resource block declares a bonded network interface, and then specifies the properties of that bonded network interface to be tested:
describe bond('name') do
it { should exist }
end
where
'name'
is the name of the bonded network interface{ should exist }
is a valid matcher for this resource
Property Examples
The following examples show how to use this Chef InSpec audit resource.
content
The content
matcher tests if contents in the file that defines the bonded network interface match the value specified in the test. The values of the content
matcher are arbitrary.
its('content') { should match('value') }
interfaces
The interfaces
matcher tests if the named secondary interfaces are available.
its('interfaces') { should eq ['eth0', 'eth1', ...] }
mode
The mode
matcher tests the Bonding Mode.
its('mode') { should eq 'IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic link aggregation' }
params
The params
matcher tests arbitrary parameters for the bonded network interface.
its('params') { should eq 'value' }
Test if eth0 is a secondary interface for bond0
describe bond('bond0') do
it { should exist }
it { should have_interface 'eth0' }
end
Test parameters for bond0
describe bond('bond0') do
its('mode') { should eq 'IEEE 802.3ad Dynamic link aggregation' }
its('Transmit Hash Policy') { should eq 'layer3+4 (1)' }
its('MII Status') { should eq 'up' }
its('MII Polling Interval (ms)') { should eq '100' }
its('Up Delay (ms)') { should eq '0' }
its('Down Delay (ms)') { should eq '0' }
end
Matchers
For a full list of available matchers, please visit our matchers page.
exist
The exist
matcher tests if the bonded network interface is available:
it { should exist }
have_interface
The have_interface
matcher tests if the bonded network interface has one (or more) secondary interfaces:
it { should have_interface }
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