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Amazon Inspector: Batch associate code security scan configuration from the CLI

#aws#cli#inspector#security#vulnerability
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Part 741 of AWS from Zero. This is lesson 20 in the Amazon Inspector track.

What we are learning

Use batch-associate-code-security-scan-configuration to work with one focused Amazon Inspector capability from the terminal. This lesson identifies the required input shape, saves the raw response, and keeps inspection separate from execution.

The AWS CLI operation is aws inspector2 batch-associate-code-security-scan-configuration. Required operation inputs: --associate-configuration-requests (list). The modeled top-level response contains failedAssociations, successfulAssociations.

Before you run it

aws sts get-caller-identity
REGION="${AWS_REGION:-ap-south-1}"
aws inspector2 batch-associate-code-security-scan-configuration help

Use a sandbox account or an approved learning environment. Read the operation help before supplying identifiers, ARNs, network ranges, policy documents, or customer data.

Cost note: Inspector scanning is usage-priced after any trial and can cover EC2, ECR, and Lambda.

The command

aws inspector2 batch-associate-code-security-scan-configuration \
  --generate-cli-skeleton input > part-741-request.json
 
# Edit every placeholder in part-741-request.json, then run:
aws inspector2 batch-associate-code-security-scan-configuration \
  --cli-input-json file://part-741-request.json \
  --region "$REGION" \
  --output json > part-741-response.json

The response is saved to part-741-response.json so inspection is separate from execution. Review part-741-request.json, replace every placeholder, and remove unsupported optional fields before the real call.

Inspect the result

node -e "const r=require('./part-741-response.json'); console.log(Object.keys(r))"
node -e "const r=require('./part-741-response.json'); console.log(JSON.stringify(r, null, 2))"

Compare the returned identifiers and status fields with the account, Region, and resource you intended to target. For asynchronous operations, continue with the service's matching get, list, or describe command until it reaches a terminal state.

One tiny variation

node -e "const r=require('./part-741-response.json'); console.log(JSON.stringify(r["failedAssociations"], null, 2))"

This variation changes output inspection rather than adding another infrastructure concept. Keep the raw JSON while developing a query so a narrow projection does not hide an error or unexpected field.

Common mistake

Do not treat a zero exit code as proof that the intended state is active everywhere. AWS control planes can be eventually consistent, and some operations start asynchronous work.

Cleanup

# This operation is read-only, operational, or needs resource-specific rollback.
# Re-read the command output before changing shared infrastructure.
rm -f part-741-request.json part-741-response.json part-741-payload.bin part-741-debug.log

Local request and response files may contain account IDs, ARNs, names, or service configuration. Remove them when the lab is complete and follow dependency-aware cleanup for any AWS resource you created.

Next, we will learn Security Hub: Describe action targets from the CLI.

Official AWS CLI reference