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Sample ARM Bicep file to deploy vNet/Subnet without dropping Subnet during re-deployment

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Virtual Network Bicep deployment

The vnet deployment used to fully deploy a network in one pass. Currently this is problematic due to the complexities of the NSG/RT requirements of the special networks.

Script

The script to deploy a network is Deploy-Network.ps1. This is a resource group based deployment and deploys all vnets within a single RG. This script reads a vnetParam.json file that has a definition of the vnets as a JSON file

.\Deploy-Network.ps1 -ValidateOnly
.\Deploy-Network.ps1 -SaveParameterFile  #Does not delete the Temp PARAM file

vNet Parameters

The ARM template takes two complex parameters

VNetArray

The vNet array is a JSON array of a flat vNet object - note that extra fields are ignored

[
  {
    "vNetName": "vnet00",
    "vNetRG": "rgNetworking",
    "vNetLocation": "centralUs",
    "NetworkType": "Hub",
    "vNetAddressSpace": "10.200.0.0/24",
    "subnetArray": "..."
  },
  {
    "vNetName": "vnet01",
    "vNetLocation": "centralUs",
    "NetworkType": "Spoke",
    "vNetAddressSpace": "10.200.1.0/24",
    "subnetArray": "..."
  }
]

SubnetArray

The subnetArray is all the subnets for all vnets. Note that the serviceEndpoints, securityRules and routes are arrays of the actual required ARM objects

[
  {
    "vNetName": "vnet00",
    "subnetName": "GatewaySubnet",
    "SubnetAddressSpace": "10.200.0.0/27",
    "serviceEndpoints": [],
    "securityRules": [],
    "routes": []
  },
  {
    "vNetName": "vnet00",
    "subnetName": "AzureBastionSubnet",
    "SubnetAddressSpace": "10.200.0.32/27",
    "serviceEndpoints": [],
    "securityRules": [],
    "routes": []
  },
...
  {
    "vNetName": "vnet01",
    "subnetName": "adtier",
    "SubnetAddressSpace": "10.200.1.192/26",
    "serviceEndpoints": [],
    "securityRules": [],
    "routes": []
  }
]

These objects are generated from the vnetParam.json file.

Routes

The routes object is an array of route table entries

[
  {
    "name": "DefaultRoute",
    "properties": {
      "addressPrefix" : "0.0.0.0/0'",
      "nextHopType" : "VirtualAppliance",
      "nextHopIpAddress" : "10.0.0.1"
    }
  }
]

networkSecurityGroups

The securityRules object is an array of rules

[
  {
    "name" : "default-allow-rdp",
    "properties" : {
      "priority": 1010,
      "access": "Allow",
      "direction": "Inbound",
      "protocol": "Tcp",
      "sourcePortRange": "*",
      "sourceAddressPrefix": "VirtualNetwork",
      "destinationAddressPrefix": "*",
      "destinationPortRange": "3389"
    }
  }
]

ServiceEndPoints

The serviceEndPoints object is an array of service

[
  {
    "locations": [
      "centralus",
      "eastus2"
    ],
    "service": "Microsoft.Sql"
  },
  {
    "locations": [
      "centralus",
      "eastus2"
    ],
    "service": "Microsoft.Storage"
  },
  {
    "locations": [
      "centralus",
      "eastus2"
    ],
    "service": "Microsoft.KeyVault"
  }
]

NOTES

Even though this is an incremental deployment, it is a disruptive deployment of a vNet in Azure.

This deployment keeps the subnets but drops the RouteTable, NSG and Service Endpoints from the subnet and re-adds them back later. It will also drop any subnet delegations since this code doesn't support that at this time.

Another thing to note is that this does allow for resizing of the base vNet and subnets. The base vnet can grow and shrink as long as none of the subnets are out of the new range. Subnets can be resized within the vNet, but can't cause overlaps and cannot be resized if they have any resources attached to them (NICs, PaaS Services etc). This fundamentally restricts the usability of any vNet code for CI/CD IaC processes if there is an address space change needed to a subnet that has attached objects.

See this link: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-resource-manager/templates/deployment-modes#incremental-mode for further details.

Bicep Notes

There are some tricks that are used in the bicep files to work with this.

Subnet Modules

There are four subnet modules based on the NSG/RT requirements. This is required because the route/NSG fields will not take a null or '' for the resource id.

routeTable: {
      id: ""       <-- Causes errors
}

-or-

routeTable:  null() <-- Causes errors

This requires four subnet modules (subnet-rt, subnet-nsg, subnet-both and subnet-none).

RouteTable and NetworkSecurityGroup modules

There are also modules for the RT's and NSG's that can be used to create blank tables or full tables if the appropriate arrays of objects are passed to them.

The details of the object requirements are documented in each file, and are driven by the object formats here:

Loops

The main vNet.Bicep file runs a series of loops to build out each type of object.

The vNet loop is pretty simple with vnet name and address. There is a section that minimally defines the subnets for the vnet with address space only. This prevents the subnets from being dropped on re-deployments, but will remove all route tables and NSG tables from the subnets until they are reattached later in the deployment.

The secondary rt/nsg/subnet loops use conditionals to determine what type of subnet to deploy for the special subnets. Because ARM evaluates loops before conditionals, each of these loops runs through the entire subnetArray and only gets processed for the special subnets that require the particular configuration via the conditional. You should note that the names of the loops are fully qualified ("loop-vnet-subnet-index") to ensure uniqueness at the resource name level for deployment.

All in all this process would be much simpler if ARM allowed a null reference for a route table or NSG ID.

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Sample ARM Bicep file to deploy vNet/Subnet without dropping Subnet during re-deployment

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