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Azure Resource Manager template specs

A template spec is a resource type for storing an Azure Resource Manager template (ARM template) in Azure for later deployment. This resource type enables you to share ARM templates with other users in your organization. Just like any other Azure resource, you can use Azure role-based access control (Azure RBAC) to share the template spec.

Microsoft.Resources/templateSpecs is the resource type for template specs. It consists of a main template and any number of linked templates. Azure securely stores template specs in resource groups. Template Specs support versioning.

To deploy the template spec, you use standard Azure tools like PowerShell, Azure CLI, Azure portal, REST, and other supported SDKs and clients. You use the same commands as you would for the template.

Note

To use template spec with Azure PowerShell, you must install version 5.0.0 or later. To use it with Azure CLI, use version 2.14.2 or later.

When designing your deployment, always consider the lifecycle of the resources and group the resources that share similar lifecycle into a single template spec. For example, your deployments include multiple instances of Azure Cosmos DB, with each instance containing its own databases and containers. Given the databases and the containers don't change much, you want to create one template spec to include a Cosmos DB instance and its underlying databases and containers. You can then use conditional statements in your templates along with copy loops to create multiple instances of these resources.

Training resources

To learn more about template specs, and for hands-on guidance, see Publish libraries of reusable infrastructure code by using template specs.

Tip

We recommend Bicep because it offers the same capabilities as ARM templates and the syntax is easier to use. To learn more, see Azure Resource Manager template specs in Bicep.

Why use template specs?

Template specs provide the following benefits:

  • You use standard ARM templates for your template spec.
  • You manage access through Azure RBAC, rather than SAS tokens.
  • Users can deploy the template spec without having write access to the template.
  • You can integrate the template spec into existing deployment process, such as PowerShell script or DevOps pipeline.

Template specs enable you to create canonical templates and share them with teams in your organization. The template specs are secure because they're available to Azure Resource Manager for deployment, but not accessible to users without the correct permission. Users only need read access to the template spec to deploy its template, so you can share the template without allowing others to modify it.

If you currently have your templates in a GitHub repo or storage account, you run into several challenges when trying to share and use the templates. To deploy the template, you need to either make the template publicly accessible or manage access with SAS tokens. To get around this limitation, users might create local copies, which eventually diverge from your original template. Template specs simplify sharing templates.

The templates you include in a template spec should be verified by administrators in your organization to follow the organization's requirements and guidance.

Required permissions

There are two Azure build-in roles defined for template spec:

In addition, you also need the permissions for deploying a Bicep file. See Deploy - CLI or Deploy - PowerShell.

Create template spec

The following example shows a simple template for creating a storage account in Azure.

{
  "$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2019-04-01/deploymentTemplate.json#",
  "contentVersion": "1.0.0.0",
  "parameters": {
    "storageAccountType": {
      "type": "string",
      "defaultValue": "Standard_LRS",
      "allowedValues": [
        "Standard_LRS",
        "Standard_GRS",
        "Standard_ZRS",
        "Premium_LRS"
      ]
    }
  },
  "resources": [
    {
      "type": "Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts",
      "apiVersion": "2019-06-01",
      "name": "[concat('store', uniquestring(resourceGroup().id))]",
      "location": "[resourceGroup().location]",
      "kind": "StorageV2",
      "sku": {
        "name": "[parameters('storageAccountType')]"
      }
    }
  ]
}

When you create the template spec, the PowerShell or CLI commands are passed the main template file. If the main template references linked templates, the commands will find and package them to create the template spec. To learn more, see Create a template spec with linked templates.

Create a template spec by using:

New-AzTemplateSpec -Name storageSpec -Version 1.0a -ResourceGroupName templateSpecsRg -Location westus2 -TemplateFile ./mainTemplate.json

You can also create template specs by using ARM templates. The following template creates a template spec to deploy a storage account:

{
  "$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2019-04-01/deploymentTemplate.json#",
  "contentVersion": "1.0.0.0",
  "parameters": {
    "templateSpecName": {
      "type": "string",
      "defaultValue": "CreateStorageAccount"
    },
    "templateSpecVersionName": {
      "type": "string",
      "defaultValue": "0.1"
    },
    "location": {
      "type": "string",
      "defaultValue": "[resourceGroup().location]"
    }
  },
  "resources": [
    {
      "type": "Microsoft.Resources/templateSpecs",
      "apiVersion": "2021-05-01",
      "name": "[parameters('templateSpecName')]",
      "location": "[parameters('location')]",
      "properties": {
        "description": "A basic templateSpec - creates a storage account.",
        "displayName": "Storage account (Standard_LRS)"
      }
    },
    {
      "type": "Microsoft.Resources/templateSpecs/versions",
      "apiVersion": "2021-05-01",
      "name": "[format('{0}/{1}', parameters('templateSpecName'), parameters('templateSpecVersionName'))]",
      "location": "[parameters('location')]",
      "dependsOn": [
        "[resourceId('Microsoft.Resources/templateSpecs', parameters('templateSpecName'))]"
      ],
      "properties": {
        "mainTemplate": {
          "$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2019-04-01/deploymentTemplate.json#",
          "contentVersion": "1.0.0.0",
          "parameters": {
            "storageAccountType": {
              "type": "string",
              "defaultValue": "Standard_LRS",
              "allowedValues": [
                "Standard_LRS",
                "Standard_GRS",
                "Standard_ZRS",
                "Premium_LRS"
              ]
            }
          },
          "resources": [
            {
              "type": "Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts",
              "apiVersion": "2019-06-01",
              "name": "[concat('store', uniquestring(resourceGroup().id))]",
              "location": "[resourceGroup().location]",
              "kind": "StorageV2",
              "sku": {
                "name": "[parameters('storageAccountType')]"
              }
            }
          ]
        }
      }
    }
  ]
}

The size of a template spec is limited to approximated 2 MB. If a template spec size exceeds the limit, you will get the TemplateSpecTooLarge error code. The error message says:

The size of the template spec content exceeds the maximum limit. For large template specs with many artifacts, the recommended course of action is to split it into multiple template specs and reference them modularly via TemplateLinks.

You can view all template specs in your subscription by using:

Get-AzTemplateSpec

You can view details of a template spec, including its versions with:

Get-AzTemplateSpec -ResourceGroupName templateSpecsRG -Name storageSpec

Deploy template spec

After you've created the template spec, users with the template spec reader role can deploy it. In addition, you also need the permissions for deploying an ARM template. See Deploy - CLI or Deploy - PowerShell.

Template specs can be deployed through the portal, PowerShell, Azure CLI, or as a linked template in a larger template deployment. Users in an organization can deploy a template spec to any scope in Azure (resource group, subscription, management group, or tenant).

Instead of passing in a path or URI for a template, you deploy a template spec by providing its resource ID. The resource ID has the following format:

/subscriptions/{subscription-id}/resourceGroups/{resource-group}/providers/Microsoft.Resources/templateSpecs/{template-spec-name}/versions/{template-spec-version}

Notice that the resource ID includes a version name for the template spec.

For example, you deploy a template spec with the following command.

$id = "/subscriptions/aaaa0a0a-bb1b-cc2c-dd3d-eeeeee4e4e4e/resourceGroups/templateSpecsRG/providers/Microsoft.Resources/templateSpecs/storageSpec/versions/1.0a"

New-AzResourceGroupDeployment `
  -TemplateSpecId $id `
  -ResourceGroupName demoRG

In practice, you'll typically run Get-AzTemplateSpec or az ts show to get the ID of the template spec you want to deploy.

$id = (Get-AzTemplateSpec -Name storageSpec -ResourceGroupName templateSpecsRg -Version 1.0a).Versions.Id

New-AzResourceGroupDeployment `
  -ResourceGroupName demoRG `
  -TemplateSpecId $id

You can also open a URL in the following format to deploy a template spec:

https://portal.azure.com/#create/Microsoft.Template/templateSpecVersionId/%2fsubscriptions%2f{subscription-id}%2fresourceGroups%2f{resource-group-name}%2fproviders%2fMicrosoft.Resources%2ftemplateSpecs%2f{template-spec-name}%2fversions%2f{template-spec-version}

Parameters

Passing in parameters to template spec is exactly like passing parameters to an ARM template. Add the parameter values either inline or in a parameter file.

To pass a parameter inline, use:

New-AzResourceGroupDeployment `
  -TemplateSpecId $id `
  -ResourceGroupName demoRG `
  -StorageAccountType Standard_GRS

To create a local parameter file, use:

{
  "$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2019-04-01/deploymentParameters.json#",
  "contentVersion": "1.0.0.0",
  "parameters": {
    "StorageAccountType": {
      "value": "Standard_GRS"
    }
  }
}

And, pass that parameter file with:

New-AzResourceGroupDeployment `
  -TemplateSpecId $id `
  -ResourceGroupName demoRG `
  -TemplateParameterFile ./mainTemplate.parameters.json

Versioning

When you create a template spec, you provide a version name for it. As you iterate on the template code, you can either update an existing version (for hotfixes) or publish a new version. The version is a text string. You can choose to follow any versioning system, including semantic versioning. Users of the template spec can provide the version name they want to use when deploying it. You can have an unlimit number of versions.

Use tags

Tags help you logically organize your resources. You can add tags to template specs by using Azure PowerShell and Azure CLI:

New-AzTemplateSpec `
  -Name storageSpec `
  -Version 1.0a `
  -ResourceGroupName templateSpecsRg `
  -Location westus2 `
  -TemplateFile ./mainTemplate.json `
  -Tag @{Dept="Finance";Environment="Production"}
Set-AzTemplateSpec `
  -Name storageSpec `
  -Version 1.0a `
  -ResourceGroupName templateSpecsRg `
  -Location westus2 `
  -TemplateFile ./mainTemplate.json `
  -Tag @{Dept="Finance";Environment="Production"}

When creating or modifying a template spec with the version parameter specified, but without the tag/tags parameter:

  • If the template spec exists and has tags, but the version doesn't exist, the new version inherits the same tags as the existing template spec.

When creating or modifying a template spec with both the tag/tags parameter and the version parameter specified:

  • If both the template spec and the version don't exist, the tags are added to both the new template spec and the new version.
  • If the template spec exists, but the version doesn't exist, the tags are only added to the new version.
  • If both the template spec and the version exist, the tags only apply to the version.

When modifying a template with the tag/tags parameter specified but without the version parameter specified, the tags is only added to the template spec.

Create a template spec with linked templates

If the main template for your template spec references linked templates, the PowerShell and CLI commands can automatically find and package the linked templates from your local drive. You don't need to manually configure storage accounts or repositories to host the template specs - everything is self-contained in the template spec resource.

The following example consists of a main template with two linked templates. The example is only an excerpt of the template. Notice that it uses a property named relativePath to link to the other templates. You must use apiVersion of 2020-06-01 or later for the deployments resource.

{
  "$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2019-04-01/deploymentTemplate.json#",
  ...
  "resources": [
    {
      "type": "Microsoft.Resources/deployments",
      "apiVersion": "2020-06-01",
      ...
      "properties": {
        "mode": "Incremental",
        "templateLink": {
          "relativePath": "artifacts/webapp.json"
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "type": "Microsoft.Resources/deployments",
      "apiVersion": "2020-06-01",
      ...
      "properties": {
        "mode": "Incremental",
        "templateLink": {
          "relativePath": "artifacts/database.json"
        }
      }
    }
  ],
  "outputs": {}
}

When the PowerShell or CLI command to create the template spec is executed for the preceding example, the command finds three files - the main template, the web app template (webapp.json), and the database template (database.json) - and packages them into the template spec.

For more information, see Tutorial: Create a template spec with linked templates.

Deploy template spec as a linked template

Once you've created a template spec, it's easy to reuse it from an ARM template or another template spec. You link to a template spec by adding its resource ID to your template. The linked template spec is automatically deployed when you deploy the main template. This behavior lets you develop modular template specs, and reuse them as needed.

For example, you can create a template spec that deploys networking resources, and another template spec that deploys storage resources. In ARM templates, you link to these two template specs anytime you need to configure networking or storage resources.

The following example is similar to the earlier example, but you use the id property to link to a template spec rather than the relativePath property to link to a local template. Use 2020-06-01 for API version for the deployments resource. In the example, the template specs are in a resource group named templateSpecsRG.

{
  "$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2019-04-01/deploymentTemplate.json#",
  ...
  "resources": [
    {
      "type": "Microsoft.Resources/deployments",
      "apiVersion": "2020-06-01",
      "name": "networkingDeployment",
      ...
      "properties": {
        "mode": "Incremental",
        "templateLink": {
          "id": "[resourceId('templateSpecsRG', 'Microsoft.Resources/templateSpecs/versions', 'networkingSpec', '1.0a')]"
        }
      }
    },
    {
      "type": "Microsoft.Resources/deployments",
      "apiVersion": "2020-06-01",
      "name": "storageDeployment",
      ...
      "properties": {
        "mode": "Incremental",
        "templateLink": {
          "id": "[resourceId('templateSpecsRG', 'Microsoft.Resources/templateSpecs/versions', 'storageSpec', '1.0a')]"
        }
      }
    }
  ],
  "outputs": {}
}

For more information about linking template specs, see Tutorial: Deploy a template spec as a linked template.

Next steps