Route tables must use standard naming

May 26, 2025 ยท View on GitHub

SYNOPSIS

Route tables without a standard naming convention may be difficult to identify and manage.

DESCRIPTION

An effective naming convention allows operators to quickly identify resources, related systems, and their purpose. Identifying resources easily is important to improve operational efficiency, reduce the time to respond to incidents, and minimize the risk of human error.

Some of the benefits of using standardized tagging and naming conventions are:

  • They provide consistency and clarity for resource identification and discovery across the Azure Portal, CLIs, and APIs.
  • They enable filtering and grouping of resources for billing, monitoring, security, and compliance purposes.
  • They support resource lifecycle management, such as provisioning, decommissioning, backup, and recovery.

For example, if you come upon a security incident, it's critical to quickly identify affected systems, the functions that those systems support, and the potential business impact.

For route tables, the Cloud Adoption Framework (CAF) recommends using the rt- prefix.

Requirements for route table names:

  • At least 1 character, but no more than 80.
  • Can include alphanumeric, underscore, hyphen, period characters.
  • Can only start with a letter or number, and end with a letter, number or underscore.
  • Route table names must be unique within a resource group.

RECOMMENDATION

Consider creating route tables with a standard name. Additionally consider using Azure Policy to only permit creation using a standard naming convention.

EXAMPLES

Configure with Bicep

To deploy Route Tables that pass this rule:

  • Set the name property to a string that matches the naming requirements.
  • Optionally, consider constraining name parameters with minLength and maxLength attributes.

For example:

@minLength(1)
@maxLength(80)
@description('The name of the resource.')
param name string

@description('The location resources will be deployed.')
param location string = resourceGroup().location

resource routeTable 'Microsoft.Network/routeTables@2024-05-01' = {
  name: name
  location: location
  properties: {
    disableBgpRoutePropagation: false
    routes: []
  }
}

Configure with Azure template

To deploy Route Tables that pass this rule:

  • Set the name property to a string that matches the naming requirements.
  • Optionally, consider constraining name parameters with minLength and maxLength attributes.

For example:

{
  "$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2019-04-01/deploymentTemplate.json#",
  "contentVersion": "1.0.0.0",
  "metadata": {
    "_generator": {
      "name": "bicep",
      "version": "0.34.44.8038",
      "templateHash": "12779212299580018014"
    }
  },
  "parameters": {
    "name": {
      "type": "string",
      "minLength": 1,
      "maxLength": 80,
      "metadata": {
        "description": "The name of the resource."
      }
    },
    "location": {
      "type": "string",
      "defaultValue": "[resourceGroup().location]",
      "metadata": {
        "description": "The location resources will be deployed."
      }
    }
  },
  "resources": [
    {
      "type": "Microsoft.Network/routeTables",
      "apiVersion": "2024-05-01",
      "name": "[parameters('name')]",
      "location": "[parameters('location')]",
      "properties": {
        "disableBgpRoutePropagation": false,
        "routes": []
      }
    }
  ]
}

NOTES

This rule does not check if route table names are unique.

Rule configuration

To configure this rule set the AZURE_ROUTE_TABLE_NAME_FORMAT configuration to a regular expression that matches the required format.

For example:

configuration:
  AZURE_ROUTE_TABLE_NAME_FORMAT: '^rt-'