
bicep-diagrams
Generates architecture diagrams from Azure Bicep files. Use when user has .bicep files or asks to visualize Bicep infrastructure.
'Generates architecture diagrams from Azure Bicep files. Use when user has .bicep files or asks to visualize Bicep infrastructure.'
Bicep Diagram Generator
Generates architecture diagrams directly from Azure Bicep files. Bicep is a domain-specific language (DSL) for deploying Azure resources declaratively.
When to Use
Activate this skill when:
- User has Bicep files (
.bicep) and wants to visualize the infrastructure - User asks to "diagram my Bicep" or "visualize this Bicep infrastructure"
- User mentions Bicep or Azure Bicep
- User wants to see the architecture of their Bicep-deployed resources
How It Works
This skill generates Bicep-specific diagrams by parsing Bicep code and calling the Eraser API directly:
- Parse Bicep Files: Identify resource declarations, modules, parameters, and outputs
- Extract Relationships: Map dependencies, resource references, and module hierarchies
- Generate Eraser DSL: Create Eraser DSL code from Bicep resources
- Call Eraser API: Use
/api/render/elementswithdiagramType: "cloud-architecture-diagram"
Instructions
When the user provides Bicep code:
-
Parse the Bicep
- Identify all
resourcedeclarations (Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines, etc.) - Extract
moduledeclarations and their configurations - Note
paramandoutputdefinitions - Identify
varvariables and their usage
- Identify all
-
Map Relationships
- Track resource dependencies (e.g.,
dependsOnor implicit dependencies) - Group resources by type (compute, networking, storage, etc.)
- Identify VNets as containers for subnets and resources
- Note Network Security Groups, Key Vaults, and other security resources
- Track resource dependencies (e.g.,
-
Generate Eraser DSL Convert Bicep resources to Eraser DSL:
- CRITICAL: Label Formatting Rules
- Labels MUST be on a single line - NEVER use newlines inside label attributes
- Keep labels simple and readable - prefer separate labels over concatenating too much metadata
- Format DSL with proper line breaks (one node/group per line, but labels stay on single lines)
- If including metadata like CIDR blocks or VM sizes, include them in the same quoted label string:
[label: "VNet 10.0.0.0/16"]
Example:
myVNet [label: "VNet 10.0.0.0/16"] { subnet1 [label: "Subnet 1"] { myVM [icon: azure-vm, label: "Virtual Machine"] gateway [icon: azure-app-gateway] } subnet2 [label: "Subnet 2"] { database [icon: azure-sql] } } storage [icon: azure-storage] myVNet -> myVM myVM -> database - CRITICAL: Label Formatting Rules
-
Make the HTTP Request
IMPORTANT: You MUST execute this curl command after generating the DSL. Never stop after generating DSL without making the API call.
CRITICAL: In the
X-Skill-Sourceheader below, you MUST replace the value with your AI agent name:- If you are Claude (Anthropic), use:
claude - If you are running in Cursor, use:
cursor - If you are ChatGPT (OpenAI), use:
chatgpt - If you are Gemini (Google), use:
gemini - Otherwise, use your model/agent name in lowercase
curl -X POST https://app.eraser.io/api/render/elements \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ -H "X-Skill-Source: eraser-skill" \ -H "Authorization: Bearer ${ERASER_API_KEY}" \ -d '{ "elements": [{ "type": "diagram", "id": "diagram-1", "code": "<your generated DSL>", "diagramType": "cloud-architecture-diagram" }], "scale": 2, "theme": "${ERASER_THEME:-dark}", "background": true }' - If you are Claude (Anthropic), use:
-
Track Sources During Analysis
As you analyze Bicep files and resources to generate the diagram, track:
- Internal files: Record each Bicep file path you read and what resources were extracted (e.g.,
infra/main.bicep- VNet and subnet definitions,infra/sql.bicep- SQL Database configuration) - External references: Note any documentation, examples, or URLs consulted (e.g., Azure Bicep documentation, Azure architecture best practices)
- Annotations: For each source, note what it contributed to the diagram
- Internal files: Record each Bicep file path you read and what resources were extracted (e.g.,
-
Handle the Response
CRITICAL: Minimal Output Format
Your response MUST always include these elements with clear headers:
-
Diagram Preview: Display with a header
## Diagram Use the ACTUAL
imageUrlfrom the API response. -
Editor Link: Display with a header
## Open in Eraser [Edit this diagram in the Eraser editor]({createEraserFileUrl})Use the ACTUAL URL from the API response.
-
Sources section: Brief list of files/resources analyzed (if applicable)
## Sources - `path/to/file` - What was extracted -
Diagram Code section: The Eraser DSL in a code block with
eraserlanguage tag## Diagram Code ```eraser {DSL code here} -
Learn More link:
You can learn more about Eraser at https://docs.eraser.io/docs/using-ai-agent-integrations
Additional content rules:
- If the user ONLY asked for a diagram, include NOTHING beyond the 5 elements above
- If the user explicitly asked for more (e.g., "explain the architecture", "suggest improvements"), you may include that additional content
- Never add unrequested sections like Overview, Security Considerations, Testing, etc.
The default output should be SHORT. The diagram image speaks for itself.
-
-
Handle Modules
- If modules are used, show module boundaries
- Include module parameters and outputs
- Show how modules connect to main resources
Bicep-Specific Tips
- Show Resource Groups: Bicep deployments target resource groups
- VNets as Containers: Show VNets containing subnets and resources
- Include Dependencies: Show
dependsOnrelationships - Module Structure: If modules are used, show their boundaries
- Parameters: Note key parameters that affect resource configuration
- Use Azure Icons: Request Azure-specific styling
Example: Bicep with Parameters and Modules
User Input
@description('The name of the Virtual Network')
param vnetName string = 'myVNet'
@description('The address prefix for the VNet')
param vnetAddressPrefix string = '10.0.0.0/16'
@description('The address prefix for the subnet')
param subnetAddressPrefix string = '10.0.1.0/24'
@description('VM size')
param vmSize string = 'Standard_B1s'
// Main VNet resource
resource virtualNetwork 'Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks@2021-05-01' = {
name: vnetName
location: resourceGroup().location
properties: {
addressSpace: {
addressPrefixes: [vnetAddressPrefix]
}
subnets: [
{
name: 'subnet1'
properties: {
addressPrefix: subnetAddressPrefix
}
}
]
}
}
// VM resource with dependsOn
resource virtualMachine 'Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachines@2021-11-01' = {
name: 'myVM'
location: resourceGroup().location
properties: {
hardwareProfile: {
vmSize: vmSize
}
}
dependsOn: [virtualNetwork]
}
// Module usage
module storageModule './modules/storage.bicep' = {
name: 'storage'
params: {
location: resourceGroup().location
}
}
Expected Behavior
-
Parses Bicep:
- Parameters: vnetName, vnetAddressPrefix, subnetAddressPrefix, vmSize
- Resources: VNet with subnet, VM with dependsOn relationship
- Module: Storage module with parameters
-
Generates DSL showing Bicep-specific features:
myVNet [label: "VNet 10.0.0.0/16"] { subnet1 [label: "Subnet 1 10.0.1.0/24"] { myVM [icon: azure-vm, label: "VM Standard_B1s"] } } storage-module [label: "Storage Module"] { storage-account [icon: azure-storage] } myVNet -> myVMImportant: All label text must be on a single line within quotes. Bicep-specific: Show modules as containers, include
dependsOnrelationships, note parameter usage in resource configuration. -
Calls
/api/render/elementswithdiagramType: "cloud-architecture-diagram" -
Calls
/api/render/elementswithdiagramType: "cloud-architecture-diagram"
Result
User receives a diagram showing:
- VNet as a container
- Subnet nested inside VNet
- VM in the subnet
- Dependency relationship shown
- Proper Azure styling
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