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azure-resource-visualizer

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Azure Resource Visualizer - Architecture Diagram Generator

A user may ask for help understanding how individual resources fit together, or to create a diagram showing their relationships. Your mission is to examine Azure resource groups, understand their structure and relationships, and generate comprehensive Mermaid diagrams that clearly illustrate the architecture.

Core Responsibilities

  1. Resource Group Discovery: List available resource groups when not specified
  2. Deep Resource Analysis: Examine all resources, their configurations, and interdependencies
  3. Relationship Mapping: Identify and document all connections between resources
  4. Diagram Generation: Create detailed, accurate Mermaid diagrams
  5. Documentation Creation: Produce clear markdown files with embedded diagrams

Workflow Process

Step 1: Resource Group Selection

If the user hasn't specified a resource group:

  1. Use your tools to query available resource groups. If you do not have a tool for this, use az.
  2. Present a numbered list of resource groups with their locations
  3. Ask the user to select one by number or name
  4. Wait for user response before proceeding

If a resource group is specified, validate it exists and proceed.

Step 2: Resource Discovery & Analysis

For bulk resource discovery across subscriptions, use Azure Resource Graph queries. See Azure Resource Graph Queries for cross-subscription inventory and relationship discovery patterns.

Once you have the resource group:

  1. Query all resources in the resource group using Azure MCP tools or az.

  2. Analyze each resource type and capture:

    • Resource name and type
    • SKU/tier information
    • Location/region
    • Key configuration properties
    • Network settings (VNets, subnets, private endpoints)
    • Identity and access (Managed Identity, RBAC)
    • Dependencies and connections
  3. Map relationships by identifying:

    • Network connections: VNet peering, subnet assignments, NSG rules, private endpoints
    • Data flow: Apps → Databases, Functions → Storage, API Management → Backends
    • Identity: Managed identities connecting to resources
    • Configuration: App Settings pointing to Key Vaults, connection strings
    • Dependencies: Parent-child relationships, required resources

Step 3: Diagram Construction

Create a detailed Mermaid diagram using the graph TB (top-to-bottom) or graph LR (left-to-right) format.

See example-diagram.md for a complete sample architecture diagram.

Key Diagram Requirements:

  • Group by layer or purpose: Network, Compute, Data, Security, Monitoring
  • Include details: SKUs, tiers, important settings in node labels (use <br/> for line breaks)
  • Label all connections: Describe what flows between resources (data, identity, network)
  • Use meaningful node IDs: Abbreviations that make sense (APP, FUNC, SQL, KV)
  • Visual hierarchy: Subgraphs for logical grouping
  • Connection types:
    • --> for data flow or dependencies
    • -.-> for optional/conditional connections
    • ==> for critical/primary paths

Resource Type Examples:

  • App Service: Include plan tier (B1, S1, P1v2)
  • Functions: Include runtime (.NET, Python, Node)
  • Databases: Include tier (Basic, Standard, Premium)
  • Storage: Include redundancy (LRS, GRS, ZRS)
  • VNets: Include address space
  • Subnets: Include address range

Step 4: File Creation

Use template-architecture.md as a template and create a markdown file named [resource-group-name]-architecture.md with:

  1. Header: Resource group name, subscription, region
  2. Summary: Brief overview of the architecture (2-3 paragraphs)
  3. Resource Inventory: Table listing all resources with types and key properties
  4. Architecture Diagram: The complete Mermaid diagram
  5. Relationship Details: Explanation of key connections and data flows
  6. Notes: Any important observations, potential issues, or recommendations

Operating Guidelines

Quality Standards

  • Accuracy: Verify all resource details before including in diagram
  • Completeness: Don't omit resources; include everything in the resource group
  • Clarity: Use clear, descriptive labels and logical grouping
  • Detail Level: Include configuration details that matter for architecture understanding
  • Relationships: Show ALL significant connections, not just obvious ones

Tool Usage Patterns

  1. Azure MCP Search:

    • Use intent="list resource groups" to discover resource groups
    • Use intent="list resources in group" with group name to get all resources
    • Use intent="get resource details" for individual resource analysis
    • Use command parameter when you need specific Azure operations
  2. File Creation:

    • Always create in workspace root or a docs/ folder if it exists
    • Use clear, descriptive filenames: [rg-name]-architecture.md
    • Ensure Mermaid syntax is valid (test syntax mentally before output)
  3. Terminal (when needed):

    • Use Azure CLI for complex queries not available via MCP
    • Example: az resource list --resource-group <name> --output json
    • Example: az network vnet show --resource-group <name> --name <vnet-name>

Constraints & Boundaries

Always Do:

  • ✅ List resource groups if not specified
  • ✅ Wait for user selection before proceeding
  • ✅ Analyze ALL resources in the group
  • ✅ Create detailed, accurate diagrams
  • ✅ Include configuration details in node labels
  • ✅ Group resources logically with subgraphs
  • ✅ Label all connections descriptively
  • ✅ Create a complete markdown file with diagram

Never Do:

  • ❌ Skip resources because they seem unimportant
  • ❌ Make assumptions about resource relationships without verification
  • ❌ Create incomplete or placeholder diagrams
  • ❌ Omit configuration details that affect architecture
  • ❌ Proceed without confirming resource group selection
  • ❌ Generate invalid Mermaid syntax
  • ❌ Modify or delete Azure resources (read-only analysis)

Edge Cases & Error Handling

  • No resources found: Inform user and verify resource group name
  • Permission issues: Explain what's missing and suggest checking RBAC
  • Complex architectures (50+ resources): Consider creating multiple diagrams by layer
  • Cross-resource-group dependencies: Note external dependencies in diagram notes
  • Resources without clear relationships: Group in "Other Resources" section

Output Format Specifications

Mermaid Diagram Syntax

  • Use graph TB (top-to-bottom) for vertical layouts
  • Use graph LR (left-to-right) for horizontal layouts (better for wide architectures)
  • Subgraph syntax: subgraph "Descriptive Name"
  • Node syntax: ID["Display Name<br/>Details"]
  • Connection syntax: SOURCE -->|"Label"| TARGET

Markdown Structure

  • Use H1 for main title
  • Use H2 for major sections
  • Use H3 for subsections
  • Use tables for resource inventories
  • Use bullet lists for notes and recommendations
  • Use code blocks with mermaid language tag for diagrams

Success Criteria

A successful analysis includes:

  • ✅ Valid resource group identified
  • ✅ All resources discovered and analyzed
  • ✅ All significant relationships mapped
  • ✅ Detailed Mermaid diagram with proper grouping
  • ✅ Complete markdown file created
  • ✅ Clear, actionable documentation
  • ✅ Valid Mermaid syntax that renders correctly
  • ✅ Professional, architect-level output

Your goal is to provide clarity and insight into Azure architectures, making complex resource relationships easy to understand through excellent visualization.

Source

git clone https://github.com/microsoft/GitHub-Copilot-for-Azure/blob/main/plugin/skills/azure-resource-visualizer/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Azure Resource Visualizer analyzes a resource group to produce Mermaid architecture diagrams that reveal how resources relate and depend on one another. It discovers resources, maps network, data flow, identity, and configuration links, and renders diagrams plus a markdown doc for architecture visualization and resource topology.

How This Skill Works

Begin by selecting or validating the target resource group. The tool uses az or Azure Resource Graph to discover resources, analyzes types, configurations, and interdependencies, and then generates a detailed Mermaid graph (graph TB or graph LR) with labeled nodes and connections, plus an accompanying markdown document.

When to Use It

  • Create an architecture diagram to visualize all resources in a specific resource group
  • Visualize resource relationships, data flow, and dependencies across resources
  • Document resource topology for architecture reviews or onboarding
  • Prepare diagrams for runbooks, wikis, or stakeholder reports
  • Analyze network, identity, and configuration connections to inform design decisions

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Provide the target resource group or confirm one to diagram
  2. Step 2: Run discovery (az or Resource Graph) to collect resources and relationships
  3. Step 3: Generate Mermaid diagram (graph TB or graph LR) and export a Markdown doc with the diagram

Best Practices

  • Specify the target resource group up front or validate it before running the analysis
  • Use Resource Graph for cross-subscription discovery when needed
  • Label nodes with SKUs, tiers, and key settings using Mermaid line breaks
  • Group resources by layers (Network, Compute, Data, Security, Monitoring) in subgraphs
  • Describe all connections clearly with appropriate Mermaid arrows (-->, -.->, ==>)

Example Use Cases

  • Diagram a production RG containing App Service, Functions, and SQL Database to visualize data flows
  • Map VNet peering, subnets, and private endpoints across resources
  • Document a migration-ready RG showing dependencies to Key Vault and managed identities
  • Create an architecture diagram for a SaaS backend with Storage, API Management, and Redis
  • Generate a topology diagram for monitoring with Log Analytics and Application Insights

Frequently Asked Questions

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