# NetBox-Sync This is a tool to sync data from different sources to a NetBox instance. Available source types: * VMware vCenter Server * [bb-ricardo/check_redfish](https://github.com/bb-Ricardo/check_redfish) inventory files **IMPORTANT: READ INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY BEFORE RUNNING THIS PROGRAM** ## Thanks A BIG thank-you goes out to [Raymond Beaudoin](https://github.com/synackray) for creating [vcenter-netbox-sync](https://github.com/synackray/vcenter-netbox-sync) which served as source of a lot of ideas for this project. ## Principles > copied from [Raymond Beaudoin](https://github.com/synackray) The [NetBox documentation](https://netbox.readthedocs.io/en/stable/#serve-as-a-source-of-truth) makes it clear the tool is intended to act as a "Source of Truth". The automated import of live network state is strongly discouraged. While this is sound logic we've aimed to provide a middle-ground solution for those who desire the functionality. All objects collected from vCenter have a "lifecycle". Upon import, for supported object types, they are tagged `NetBox-synced` to note their origin and distinguish them from other objects. Using this tagging system also allows for the orphaning of objects which are no longer detected in vCenter. This ensures stale objects are removed from NetBox keeping an accurate current state. ## Requirements ### Software * python >= 3.6 * packaging * urllib3==2.2.1 * wheel * requests==2.31.0 * pyvmomi==8.0.2.0.1 * aiodns==3.0.0 * pyyaml==6.0.1 ### Environment * NetBox >= 2.9 #### Source: VMWare (if used) * VMWare vCenter >= 6.0 #### Source: check_redfish (if used) * check_redfish >= 1.2.0 # Installing * here we assume we install in ```/opt``` ## RedHat based OS * on RedHat/CentOS 7 you need to install python3.6 and pip from EPEL first * on RedHat/CentOS 8 systems the package name changed to `python3-pip` ```shell yum install python36-pip ``` ## Ubuntu 18.04 & 20.04 && 22.04 ```shell apt-get update && apt-get install python3-venv ``` ## Clone repo and install dependencies * If you need to use python 3.6 then you would need `requirements_3.6.txt` to install requirements * download and setup of virtual environment ```shell cd /opt git clone https://github.com/bb-Ricardo/netbox-sync.git cd netbox-sync python3 -m venv .venv . .venv/bin/activate pip3 install --upgrade pip || pip install --upgrade pip pip3 install wheel || pip install wheel pip3 install -r requirements.txt || pip install -r requirements.txt ``` ### VMware tag sync (if necessary) The `vsphere-automation-sdk` must be installed if tags should be synced from vCenter to NetBox * assuming we are still in an activated virtual env ```shell pip install --upgrade git+https://github.com/vmware/vsphere-automation-sdk-python.git ``` ## NetBox API token In order to updated data in NetBox you need a NetBox API token. * API token with all permissions (read, write) except: * auth * secrets * users A short description can be found [here](https://docs.netbox.dev/en/stable/integrations/rest-api/#authentication) # Running the script ``` usage: netbox-sync.py [-h] [-c settings.ini [settings.ini ...]] [-g] [-l {DEBUG3,DEBUG2,DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR}] [-n] [-p] Sync objects from various sources to NetBox Version: 1.8.0 (2025-03-07) Project URL: https://github.com/bb-ricardo/netbox-sync options: -h, --help show this help message and exit -c settings.ini [settings.ini ...], --config settings.ini [settings.ini ...] points to the config file to read config data from which is not installed under the default path './settings.ini' -g, --generate_config generates default config file. -l {DEBUG3,DEBUG2,DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR}, --log_level {DEBUG3,DEBUG2,DEBUG,INFO,WARNING,ERROR} set log level (overrides config) -n, --dry_run Operate as usual but don't change anything in NetBox. Great if you want to test and see what would be changed. -p, --purge Remove (almost) all synced objects which were create by this script. This is helpful if you want to start fresh or stop using this script. ``` ## TESTING It is recommended to set log level to `DEBUG2` this way the program should tell you what is happening and why. Also use the dry run option `-n` at the beginning to avoid changes directly in NetBox. ## Configuration There are two ways to define configuration. Any combination of config file(s) and environment variables is possible. * config files (the [default config](https://github.com/bb-Ricardo/netbox-sync/blob/main/settings-example.ini) file name is set to `./settings.ini`.) * environment variables The config from the environment variables will have precedence over the config file definitions. ### Config files Following config file types are supported: * ini * yaml There is also more than one config file permitted. Example (config file names are also just examples): ```bash /opt/netbox-sync/netbox-sync.py -c common.ini all-sources.yaml additional-config.yaml ``` All files are parsed in order of the definition and options will overwrite the same options if defined in a previous config file. To get config file examples which include descriptions and all default values, the `-g` can be used: ```bash # this will create an ini example /opt/netbox-sync/netbox-sync.py -g -c settings-example.ini # and this will create an example config file in yaml format /opt/netbox-sync/netbox-sync.py -g -c settings-example.yaml ``` ### Environment variables Each setting which can be defined in a config file can also be defined using an environment variable. The prefix for all environment variables to be used in netbox-sync is: `NBS` For configuration in the `common` and `netbox` section a variable is defined like this ``` __=value ``` Following example represents the same configuration: ```yaml # yaml config example common: log_level: DEBUG2 netbox: host_fqdn: netbox-host.example.com prune_enabled: true ``` ```bash # this variable definition is equal to the yaml config sample above NBS_COMMON_LOG_LEVEL="DEBUG2" NBS_netbox_host_fqdn="netbox-host.example.com" NBS_NETBOX_PRUNE_ENABLED="true" ``` This way it is possible to expose for example the `NBS_NETBOX_API_KEY` only via an env variable. The config definitions for `sources` need to be defined using an index. Following conditions apply: * a single source needs to use the same index * the index can be number or a name (but contain any special characters to support env var parsing) * the source needs to be named with `_NAME` variable Example of defining a source with config and environment variables. ```ini ; example for a source [source/example-vcenter] enabled = True type = vmware host_fqdn = vcenter.example.com username = vcenter-readonly ``` ```bash # define the password on command line # here we use '1' as index NBS_SOURCE_1_NAME="example-vcenter" NBS_SOURCE_1_PASSWORD="super-secret-and-not-saved-to-the-config-file" NBS_SOURCE_1_custom_dns_servers="10.0.23.23, 10.0.42.42" ``` Even to just define one source variable like `NBS_SOURCE_1_PASSWORD` the `NBS_SOURCE_1_NAME` needs to be defined as to associate to the according source definition. ## Cron job In Order to sync all items regularly you can add a cron job like this one ``` # NetBox Sync 23 */2 * * * /opt/netbox-sync/.venv/bin/python3 /opt/netbox-sync/netbox-sync.py >/dev/null 2>&1 ``` ## Docker Run the application in a docker container. You can build it yourself or use the ones from docker hub. Available here: [bbricardo/netbox-sync](https://hub.docker.com/r/bbricardo/netbox-sync) * The application working directory is ```/app``` * Required to mount your ```settings.ini``` To build it by yourself just run: ```shell docker build -t bbricardo/netbox-sync:latest . ``` To start the container just use: ```shell docker run --rm -it -v $(pwd)/settings.ini:/app/settings.ini bbricardo/netbox-sync:latest ``` ## Kubernetes Run the containerized application in a kubernetes cluster * Create a config map with the default settings * Create a secret witch only contains the credentials needed * Adjust the provided [cronjob resource](https://github.com/bb-Ricardo/netbox-sync/blob/main/k8s-netbox-sync-cronjob.yaml) to your needs * Deploy the manifest to your k8s cluster and check the job is running config example saved as `settings.yaml` ```yaml netbox: host_fqdn: netbox.example.com source: my-vcenter-example: type: vmware host_fqdn: vcenter.example.com permitted_subnets: 172.16.0.0/12, 10.0.0.0/8, 192.168.0.0/16, fd00::/8 cluster_site_relation: Cluster_NYC = New York, Cluster_FFM.* = Frankfurt, Datacenter_TOKIO/.* = Tokio ``` secrets example saved as `secrets.yaml` ```yaml netbox: api_token: XYZXYZXYZXYZXYZXYZXYZXYZ source: my-vcenter-example: username: vcenter-readonly password: super-secret ``` Create resource in your k8s cluster ```shell kubectl create configmap netbox-sync-config --from-file=settings.yaml kubectl create secret generic netbox-sync-secrets --from-file=secrets.yaml kubectl apply -f k8s-netbox-sync-cronjob.yaml ``` # How it works **READ CAREFULLY** ## Basic structure The program operates mainly like this 1. parsing and validating config 2. instantiating all sources and setting up connection to NetBox 3. read current data from NetBox 4. read data from all sources and add/update objects in memory 5. Update data in NetBox based on data from sources 6. Prune old objects ## NetBox connection Request all current NetBox objects. Use caching whenever possible. Objects must provide "last_updated" attribute to support caching for this object type. Actually perform the request and retry x times if request times out. Program will exit if all retries failed! ## Supported sources Check out the documentations for the different sources * [vmware](https://github.com/bb-Ricardo/netbox-sync/blob/main/docs/source_vmware.md) * [check_redfish](https://github.com/bb-Ricardo/netbox-sync/blob/main/docs/source_check_redfish.md) If you have multiple vCenter instances or check_redfish folders just add another source with the same type in the **same** file. Example: ```ini [source/vcenter-BLN] enabled = True host_fqdn = vcenter1.berlin.example.com [source/vcenter-NYC] enabled = True host_fqdn = vcenter2.new-york.example.com [source/redfish-hardware] type = check_redfish inventory_file_path = /opt/redfish_inventory ``` If different sources overwrite the same attribute for ex. a host then the order of the sources should be considered. The last source in order from top to bottom will prevail. ## Pruning Prune objects in NetBox if they are no longer present in any source. First they will be marked as Orphaned and after X (config option) days they will be deleted from NetBox. Objects subjected to pruning: * devices * VMs * device interfaces * VM interfaces * IP addresses All other objects created (i.e.: VLANs, cluster, manufacturers) will keep the source tag but will not be deleted. Theses are "shared" objects might be used by different NetBox objects # License >You can check out the full license [here](https://github.com/bb-Ricardo/netbox-sync/blob/main/LICENSE.txt) This project is licensed under the terms of the **MIT** license.