DSC Resource manifest validate property schema reference
Synopsis
Indicates how to call a group resource to test whether nested instances are valid.
Metadata
SchemaDialect: https://json-schema.org/draft/2020-12/schema
SchemaID: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/PowerShell/DSC/main/schemas/2024/04/resource/manifest.validate.json
Type: object
Description
DSC Group Resources must define the validate
property in their DSC Resource manifest. This
property defines how DSC can call the group resource to test whether instances in the group
have valid definitions.
Always define the validate
property for group resources in the DSC Resource manifest.
DSC sends data to the command in three ways:
- When
input
isstdin
, DSC sends the data as a string representing the data as a compressed JSON object without spaces or newlines between the object properties. - When
input
isenv
, DSC sends the data as environment variables. It creates an environment variable for each property in the input data object, using the name and value of the property. - When the
args
array includes a JSON input argument definition, DSC sends the data as a string representing the data as a compressed JSON object to the specified argument.
If you don't define the input
property and don't define a JSON input argument, DSC can't pass the
input JSON to the resource. You can only define one JSON input argument for a command.
You must define the input
property, one JSON input argument in the args
property array, or
both.
Examples
Example 1 - Full definition
This example is from the DSC/AssertionGroup
DSC Group Resource.
"validate": {
"executable": "dsc",
"args": [
"config",
"validate"
]
}
It defines the executable as dsc
with the arguments config
and validate
. The validate
method always sends the method's input as a JSON blob over stdin
.
With this definition, DSC calls the validate
method for this DSC Group Resource by running:
{ ... } | dsc config validate
Required Properties
The validate
definition must include these properties:
Properties
executable
The executable
property defines the name of the command to run. The value must be the name of a
command discoverable in the system's PATH
environment variable or the full path to the command. A
file extension is only required when the command isn't recognizable by the operating system as an
executable.
Type: string
Required: true
args
The args
property defines the list of arguments to pass to the command. The arguments can be any
number of strings. If you want to pass the JSON object representing the property bag for the
resource to an argument, you can define a single item in the array as a [JSON object], indicating the
name of the argument with the jsonInputArg
string property and whether the argument is mandatory
for the command with the mandatory
boolean property.
Type: array
Required: false
Default: []
Type: [string, object(JSON Input Argument)]
String arguments
Any item in the argument array can be a string representing a static argument to pass to the
command, like config
or --format
.
Type: string
JSON input argument
Defines an argument for the command that accepts the JSON input object as a string. DSC passes the JSON input to the named argument when available. A JSON input argument is defined as a JSON object with the following properties:
jsonInputArg
(required) - the argument to pass the JSON data to for the command, like--input
.mandatory
(optional) - Indicate whether DSC should always pass the argument to the command, even when there's no JSON input for the command. In that case, DSC passes an empty string to the JSON input argument.
You can only define one JSON input argument per arguments array.
If you define a JSON input argument and an input
kind for a command, DSC sends the JSON data both
ways:
- If you define
input
asenv
and a JSON input argument, DSC sets an environment variable for each property in the JSON input and passes the JSON input object as a string to the defined argument. - If you define
input
asstdin
and a JSON input argument, DSC passes the JSON input over stdin and as a string to the defined argument. - If you define a JSON input argument without defining the
input
property, DSC only passes the JSON input as a string to the defined argument.
If you don't define the input
property and don't define a JSON input argument, DSC can't pass the
input JSON to the resource. This makes the manifest invalid. You must define the input
property,
a JSON input argument in the args
property array, or both.
Type: object
RequiredProperties: [jsonInputArg]
input
The input
property defines how to pass input to the resource. If this property isn't defined, DSC
doesn't send any input to the resource when invoking the validate
operation.
The value of this property must be one of the following strings:
env
- Indicates that the resource expects the properties of an instance to be specified as environment variables with the same names and casing.This option only supports the following data types for instance properties:
boolean
integer
number
string
array
ofinteger
valuesarray
ofnumber
valuesarray
ofstring
values
For non-array values, DSC sets the environment variable to the specified value as-is. When the data type is an array of values, DSC sets the environment variable as a comma-delimited string. For example, the property
foo
with a value of[1, 2, 3]
is saved in thefoo
environment variable as"1,2,3"
.If the resource needs to support complex properties with an
object
value or multi-type arrays, set this tostdin
instead.stdin
- Indicates that the resource expects a JSON blob representing an instance fromstdin
. The JSON must adhere to the instance schema for the resource.
Type: string
Required: false
ValidValues: [env, stdin]