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inspect-azure-vhd Build Status

This repo currently contains sample code that allows you to download individual files from an EXT2/3/4 Linux VHD in Azure. The code is still pretty rough and very much a partial implementation where it comes to reading EXT4. I've only tested this with a couple of CentOS images, so YMMV. PR's welcome and please do create issues for things you'll want to see.

Usage

You can either download the binary or compile from source (see below). Assuming that the binary is in your path, you can do:

inspect-azure-vhd "https://youraccount.blob.core.windows.net/container/path/to/blob.vhd?<shared access signature>"

The tool wants a url that is can read without knowing your storage keys, so you'll need to create a shared access signature to append to your uri (see below for instructions). The reason for this is that the tool is purpose-built for technical support personnel that you may not want to share your storage account keys with.

The output will look something like this:

Reading partition table...
Inspecting ext4 filesystem on first partition...
Inode count:     1905008
Block count:     32676386073483008
Block size:      4096
Cluster size:    4
Blocks/group:    32768
Clusters/group:  32768
Inode/group:     8176
Magic:           61267
State:           1
FeatureCompat:   HasJournal|ExtAttr|ResizeInodes|DirIndex(0x0000003c)
FeatureIncompat: Filetype|Extents|64Bit|FlexBG(0x000002c2)
FeatureROCompat: SparseSuper|LargeFile|HugeFile|GDTCsum|DirNlink|ExtraIsize(0x0000007b)
Downloading interesting files...
   /etc/ssh/sshd_config (File) 
     \-> downloading 4443 bytes
   /etc/ssh/moduli (File) 
     \-> downloading 242153 bytes
   /etc/ssh/ssh_config (File) 
     \-> downloading 2208 bytes
   /etc/ssh/sshd_config.rpmnew (File) 
     \-> downloading 4361 bytes
   /etc/fstab (File) 
     \-> downloading 313 bytes
WARN: failed to resolve symlink /etc/mtab: DirEntry not found: /proc/self/mounts
   /etc/waagent.conf (File) 
     \-> downloading 1505 bytes
   /var/log/messages (File) 
     \-> downloading 1161694 bytes
   /var/log/boot.log (File) 
     \-> downloading 5909 bytes
   /var/log/dmesg (File) 
     \-> downloading 41794 bytes

Creating a SAS (shared access signature) uri for your VHD

A Shared Access Signature (SAS) token is just a bunch of uri parameters like se=2015-04-28T13%3A00%3A00Z&sp=r&sv=2014-02-14&sr=b&sig=40bLaEqFin6mYgskDyEv5Su61aZ%2FjgGynp3lVTkwQ7w%3D. You can concatenate that to your blob uri, just make sure there is a ? in between the URI and the token. Note that the token contains ampersands and percent signs, so you need to surround your url with qoutes when you pass it on a command line. You can use PowerShell or the Azure cross platform command-line interface (xplat CLI) to create a SAS token.

Using Azure CLI

One way you can do this is using the Azure cross platfrom CLI. The CLI is installed as a node module, so to install it you need to do something like sudo apt-get install npm && sudo npm install -g azure-cli (for Ubuntu, similar for other distro's). Once this is installed, you can use the snippet below to create a SAS token for the URI to your VHD blob.

# make sure you have fresh credentials and are in 'Service Management' mode
azure login
azure config mode asm
# if you have multiple subscriptions, select the correct one
azure account list
azure account set <subscription id or name>
# then get a key for your storage, either primary or secondary is fine
azure storage account keys list <storage account name>
# finally, create the signature. The expiry date/time at the end is in UTC
azure storage blob sas create -a <storage account name> -k <key> <containername> <blob path within container> r 2015-09-01T13:00:00

Using PowerShell

If you have Azure Powershell installed, you can use that to create a SAS token. Assuming you have already logged in and connected to the right subscription (see link in previous sentence), these are the steps to create a SAS token:

$keys = Get-AzureStorageKey $storage_account_name
$ctx = New-AzureStorageContext $storage_account_name $keys.Primary
$sastoken = New-AzureStorageBlobSASToken -Context $ctx -Container $container -Blob $blob_path_within_container -Permission r -ExpiryTime 2015-09-01T13:00:00

Note that the expiry date/time at the end is in UTC.

Building from source

Assuming you have go 1.4 toolset installed and have your $GOBIN in your path:

go get github.com/paulmey/inspect-azure-vhd

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Sample of how to read ext4 fs on Azure VHD

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