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Type definitions in ARM templates

This article describes how to create and use definitions in your Azure Resource Manager template (ARM template). By defining your own types, you can reuse these types. Type definitions can only be used with languageVersion 2.0.

Note

The current release of the Azure Resource Manager Tools extension for Visual Studio Code does not recognize the enhancements made in languageVersion 2.0.

Tip

We recommend Bicep because it offers the same capabilities as ARM templates and the syntax is easier to use. To learn more, see User-defined data types in Bicep.

Minimal declaration

At a minimum, every type definition needs a name and either a type or a $ref.

"definitions": {
  "demoStringType": {
    "type": "string"
  },
  "demoIntType": {
    "type": "int"
  },
  "demoBoolType": {
    "type": "bool"
  },
  "demoObjectType": {
    "type": "object"
  },
  "demoArrayType": {
    "type": "array"
  }
}

Allowed values

You can define allowed values for a type definition. You provide the allowed values in an array. The deployment fails during validation if a value is passed in for the type definition that isn't one of the allowed values.

"definitions": {
  "demoEnumType": {
    "type": "string",
    "allowedValues": [
      "one",
      "two"
    ]
  }
}

Length constraints

You can specify minimum and maximum lengths for string and array type definitions. You can set one or both constraints. For strings, the length indicates the number of characters. For arrays, the length indicates the number of items in the array.

The following example declares two type definitions. One type definition is for a storage account name that must have 3-24 characters. The other type definition is an array that must have from 1-5 items.

"definitions": {
  "storageAccountNameType": {
    "type": "string",
    "minLength": 3,
    "maxLength": 24
  },
  "appNameType": {
    "type": "array",
    "minLength": 1,
    "maxLength": 5
  }
}

Integer constraints

You can set minimum and maximum values for integer type definitions. You can set one or both constraints.

"definitions": {
  "monthType": {
    "type": "int",
    "minValue": 1,
    "maxValue": 12
  }
}

Object constraints

Properties

The value of properties is a map of property name => type definition.

The following example would accept {"foo": "string", "bar": 1}, but reject {"foo": "string", "bar": -1}, {"foo": "", "bar": 1}, or any object without a foo or bar property.

"definitions": {
  "objectDefinition": {
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
      "foo": {
        "type": "string",
        "minLength": 3
      },
      "bar": {
        "type": "int",
        "minValue": 0
      }
    }
  }
},
"parameters": {
  "objectParameter": {
    "$ref": "#/definitions/objectDefinition",
  }
}

All properties are required unless the property’s type definition has the "nullable": true constraint. To make both properties in the preceding example optional, it would look like:

"definitions": {
  "objectDefinition": {
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
      "foo": {
        "type": "string",
        "minLength": 3,
        "nullable": true
      },
      "bar": {
        "type": "int",
        "minValue": 0,
        "nullable": true
      }
    }
  }
}

additionalProperties

The value of additionalProperties is a type definition or a boolean value. If no additionalProperties constraint is defined, the default value is true.

If value is a type definition, the value describes the schema that is applied to all properties not mentioned in the properties constraint. The following example would accept {"fizz": "buzz", "foo": "bar"} but reject {"property": 1}.

"definitions": {
  "dictionaryDefinition": {
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
      "foo": {
        "type": "string",
        "minLength": 3,
        "nullable": true
      },
      "bar": {
        "type": "int",
        "minValue": 0,
        "nullable": true
      }
    },
    "additionalProperties": {
      "type": "string"
    }
  }
}

If the value is false, no properties beyond those defined in the properties constraint may be supplied. The following example would accept {"foo": "string", "bar": 1}, but reject {"foo": "string", "bar": 1, "fizz": "buzz"}.

"definitions": {
  "dictionaryDefinition": {
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
      "foo": {
        "type": "string",
        "minLength": 3
      },
      "bar": {
        "type": "int",
        "minValue": 0
      }
    },
    "additionalProperties": false
  }
}

If the value is true, any property not defined in the properties constraint accepts any value. The following example would accept {"foo": "string", "bar": 1, "fizz": "buzz"}.

"definitions": {
  "dictionaryDefinition": {
    "type": "object",
    "properties": {
      "foo": {
        "type": "string",
        "minLength": 3
      },
      "bar": {
        "type": "int",
        "minValue": 0
      }
    },
    "additionalProperties": true
  }
}

discriminator

The value discriminator defines what schema to apply based on a discriminator property. The following example would accept either {"type": "ints", "foo": 1, "bar": 2} or {"type": "strings", "fizz": "buzz", "pop": "goes", "the": "weasel"}, but reject {"type": "ints", "fizz": "buzz"}.

"definitions": {
  "taggedUnionDefinition": {
    "type": "object",
    "discriminator": {
      "propertyName": "type",
      "mapping": {
        "ints": {
          "type": "object",
          "additionalProperties": {"type": "int"}
        },
        "strings": {
          "type": "object",
          "additionalProperties": {"type": "string"}
          }
      }
    }
  }
}

Array constraints

prefixItems

The value of prefixItems is an array of type definitions. Each type definition in the value is the schema to be used to validate the element of an array at the same index. The following example would accept [1, true] but reject [1, "string"] or [1]:

"definitions": {
  "tupleDefinition": {
    "type": "array",
    "prefixItems": [
      { "type": "int" },
      { "type": "bool" }
    ]
  }
},
"parameters": {
  "tupleParameter": {
    "$ref": "#/definitions/tupleDefinition"
  }
}

items

The value of items is a type definition or a boolean. If no items constraint is defined, the default value is true.

If value is a type definition, the value describes the schema that is applied to all elements of the array whose index is greater than the largest index of the prefixItems constraint. The following example would accept [1, true, 1] or [1, true, 1, 1] but reject [1, true, "foo"]:

"definitions": {
  "tupleDefinition": {
    "type": "array",
    "prefixItems": [
      { "type": "int" },
      { "type": "bool" }
    ],
    "items": { "type": "int" }
  }
},
"parameters": {
  "tupleParameter": {
    "$ref": "#/definitions/tupleDefinition"
  }
}

You can use items without using prefixItems. The following example would accept [1, 2] or [1] but reject ["foo"]:

"definitions": {
  "intArrayDefinition": {
    "type": "array",
    "items": { "type": "int" }
  }
},
"parameters": {
  "intArrayParameter": {
    "$ref": "#/definitions/intArrayDefinition"
  }
}

If the value is false, the validated array must be the exact same length as the prefixItems constraint. The following example would accept [1, true], but reject [1, true, 1], and [1, true, false, "foo", "bar"].

"definitions": {
  "tupleDefinition": {
    "type": "array",
    "prefixItems": [
      {"type": "int"},
      {"type": "bool"}
    ]
  },
  "items": false
}

If the value is true, elements of the array whose index is greater than the largest index of the prefixItems constraint accept any value. The following examples would accept [1, true], [1, true, 1] and [1, true, false, "foo", "bar"].

"definitions": {
  "tupleDefinition": {
    "type": "array",
    "prefixItems": [
      {"type": "int"},
      {"type": "bool"}
    ]
  }
}
"definitions": {
  "tupleDefinition": {
    "type": "array",
    "prefixItems": [
      {"type": "int"},
      {"type": "bool"}
    ]
  },
  "items": true
}

nullable constraint

The nullable constraint indicates that the value may be null or omitted. See Properties for an example.

Description

You can add a description to a type definition to help users of your template understand the value to provide.

"definitions": {
  "virtualMachineSize": {
    "type": "string",
    "metadata": {
      "description": "Must be at least Standard_A3 to support 2 NICs."
    },
    "defaultValue": "Standard_DS1_v2"
  }
}

Use definition

To reference a type definition, use the following syntax:

"$ref": "#/definitions/<definition-name>"

The following example shows how to reference a type definition from parameters and outputs:

{
  "$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2019-04-01/deploymentTemplate.json#",
  "contentVersion": "1.0.0.0",
  "languageVersion": "2.0",

  "definitions": {
    "naturalNumber": {
      "type": "int",
      "minValue": 1
    }
  },
  "parameters": {
    "numberParam": {
      "$ref": "#/definitions/naturalNumber",
      "defaultValue": 0
    }
  },
  "resources": {},
  "outputs": {
    "output1": {
      "$ref": "#/definitions/naturalNumber",
      "value": "[parameters('numberParam')]"
    }
  }
}

Next steps