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Resolve errors for invalid template

This article describes how to resolve invalid template errors for Bicep files and Azure Resource Manager templates (ARM templates). The error occurs for several reasons, like a syntax error, invalid parameter value, or circular dependency.

Symptom

When a template is deployed, you receive an error that indicates:

Code=InvalidTemplate
Message=<varies>

The error message depends on the type of error.

Cause

This error can result from several different types of errors. They usually involve a syntax or structural error in the template.

Solution 1: Syntax error

If you receive an error message that indicates the template failed validation, you may have a syntax problem in your template.

Code=InvalidTemplate
Message=Deployment template validation failed

Syntax errors can occur because template expressions have many elements. For example, the name assignment for a storage account includes pairs of single or double quotes, curly braces, square brackets, and parentheses. Expressions also contain functions and characters like dollar signs, commas, and dots.

name: 'storage${uniqueString(resourceGroup().id)}'

When you receive this type of error, review the expression's syntax. To identify template errors, you can use Visual Studio Code with the latest Bicep extension or Azure Resource Manager Tools extension.

Solution 2: Incorrect segment lengths

Another invalid template error occurs when the resource name isn't in the correct format. To resolve that error, see Resolve errors for name and type mismatch.

Solution 3: Parameter isn't valid

You can specify a parameter's allowed values in a template. During deployment, if you provide a value that isn't an allowed value, you receive a message similar to the following error:

Code=InvalidTemplate;
Message=Deployment template validation failed: 'The provided value {parameter value}
for the template parameter {parameter name} is not valid. The parameter value is not
part of the allowed values

Check the template for the parameter's allowed values, and use an allowed value during deployment. For more information, see allowed values for Bicep or ARM templates.

Solution 4: Too many target resource groups

You may see this error in earlier deployments because you were limited to five target resource groups in a single deployment. In May 2020, that limit was increased to 800 resource groups. For more information, see how to deploy to multiple resource groups for Bicep or ARM templates.

Solution 5: Circular dependency detected

You receive this error when resources depend on each other in a way that prevents the deployment from starting. A combination of interdependencies makes two or more resources wait for other resources that are also waiting. For example, resource1 depends on resource3, resource2 depends on resource1, and resource3 depends on resource2. You can usually solve this problem by removing unnecessary dependencies.

Bicep creates an implicit dependency when one resource uses the symbolic name of another resource. An explicit dependency using dependsOn usually isn't necessary. For more information, see Bicep dependencies.

To solve a circular dependency:

  1. In your template, find the resource identified in the circular dependency.
  2. For that resource, examine the dependsOn property and any uses of the reference or resourceId functions to see which resources it depends on.
  3. Examine those resources to see which resources they depend on. Follow the dependencies until you notice a resource that depends on the original resource.
  4. For the resources involved in the circular dependency, carefully examine all uses of the dependsOn property to identify any dependencies that aren't needed. To troubleshoot the deployment, remove the circular dependencies. Rather than delete the code, you can use comments so that the code doesn't run during the next deployment. You can use single-line comments (//) or multi-line comments (/* ... */) in ARM templates or Bicep files.
  5. Redeploy the template.

Removing values from the dependsOn property can cause errors when you deploy the template. If you get an error, add the dependency back into the template. If you used comments to bypass code in your template, you can remove the comments to restore the code.

If that approach doesn't solve the circular dependency, consider moving part of your deployment logic into child resources (such as extensions or configuration settings). Configure those child resources to deploy after the resources involved in the circular dependency. For example, suppose you're deploying two virtual machines but you must set properties on each one that refer to the other. You can deploy them in the following order:

  1. vm1
  2. vm2
  3. Extension on vm1 depends on vm1 and vm2. The extension sets values on vm1 that it gets from vm2.
  4. Extension on vm2 depends on vm1 and vm2. The extension sets values on vm2 that it gets from vm1.

The same approach works for App Service apps. Consider moving configuration values into a child resource of the app resource. You can deploy two web apps in the following order:

  1. webapp1
  2. webapp2
  3. Configuration for webapp1 depends on webapp1 and webapp2. It contains app settings with values from webapp2.
  4. Configuration for webapp2 depends on webapp1 and webapp2. It contains app settings with values from webapp1.

Solution 6: Validate syntax for exported templates

After you deploy resources in Azure, you can export the ARM template JSON and modify it for other deployments. You should validate the exported template for correct syntax before you use it to deploy resources.

You can export a template from the portal, Azure CLI, or Azure PowerShell. There are recommendations whether you exported the template from the resource or resource group, or from deployment history.

After you export an ARM template, you can decompile the JSON template to Bicep. Then use best practices and the linter to validate your code.

For more information, go to the following articles: