In my azure portal I have 6 separate applications, I have to list all of the employed resources using Azure Resource Graph query, but some of the applications' resources have no app_id tag. Therefore, when I filter the query based on app_id tag, the result of the query does not retrieve all of the resources. For example, if I have total 100 resources in those 6 applications, it brings 80 of them which have app_id tag. In this case, my question is that what would be the best approach to bring all of the resources belonging my applications using Azure Resource Graph query.

I am new to using ASC and looking around to get help using resource graph explorer. I have reviewed this link: ( -Security-Center/tree/master/ARG%20queries/Starter%20Kit%20-%20ASC%20R...) on getting some information setup on a dashboard for easier viewing. As I said, still learning this and I am surely missing something simple I gather to build a dashboard to look like this (see image). I know that I need to keep tweaking the query to display the right information, but what I have not been able to "stumble across" is a way to view the data from a dashboard that lists all the vulnerability findings to dig into? The only way I have been able to gather this information is by going into each resource (ie. VMs) and viewing this under security checks or using the Recommendations section and navigating into the same information, using a different path.


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@Bob_Toler Just wanted to provide an update on this subject. I was able to get at least one graph working to show the severity counts, which is a good start. I am unable to get a list of the resources listed showing the count for that, which is a great next step. The best option here is to show each resource with the severity counts associated to that single resource.

But how is that different from using tools such as Resource Explorer or resources.azure.com ? These are great tools. You can navigate to the individual resources and find the JSON configuration for that resource. Or even enable Read-Write view, and execute REST API operations from there.

When you get the results, you can see it as a table. That can be the best view if you are listing specific resources or looking for properties. To make it easier to visualize large amounts of data, you can also use graphical representation and create charts and graphs.

I have an Azure dashboard tile with some date from the resource: Resource Graph explorer.

If I want to export this data to a csv to save the data there is some kind of glitch in the portal or I am just doing it wrong.

Hey. AFAIK there is no direct way to visualize data from resource graph in Power BI. The data needs to be collected through the resource graph api and then stored to be collectable by Power BI. But as I said, not 100% if there is a simpler way to do this.

The graph is available in the Azure portal, as well as through the Azure CLI and Azure PowerShell. Let me show you a quick demo of the resource graph in the portal. To see the graph explorer, you can look for resource graph in the Azure search bar.

A nice simple example of how to utilize azure resource graph from a logic app. In this case we have a use case from some of our alerting definitions to be able to work out from a resource id value of a virtual machine if that machine is running Linux or windows (as there is some further processing based on that)

01 Run graph query command (Windows/macOS/Linux) to describe the configuration information for each Azure cloud resource with the SKU set to Basic or Consumption, available within the selected Azure subscription: e24fc04721

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