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Sync NetBox to Infrahub

This tutorial is for people getting started with Infrahub: it starts from a blank page, with no existing Infrahub instance or schema required. We will use Infrahub Sync to copy data from the public NetBox demo into Infrahub, installing and configuring everything we need along the way. This tutorial covers the fundamental work needed to get started; more advanced topics will be covered in subsequent guides.

Already running Infrahub?

If you already have an Infrahub instance running, you can skip straight to the NetBox adapter documentation.

By the end of this tutorial, you will know how to:

  • run Infrahub in a Docker container
  • install Infrahub Sync
  • load a schema into Infrahub
  • create a NetBox → Infrahub sync project
  • synchronize NetBox objects into Infrahub
  • review the import in a branch and open a proposed change

Time: ~30 minutes

What you will build: A running Infrahub instance with a production-grade schema covering the same core domains as NetBox (locations, devices, interfaces, IPAM, and organizations), populated with data synchronized from the public NetBox demo into a branch, ready to review as a proposed change.

Prerequisites:

  • Docker installed and running (Docker Desktop or OrbStack)
  • uv (Python package manager)
  • Python 3.11+
Public demo data

The NetBox demo instance is public and resets regularly. Object counts, names, and sample data may differ from the examples in this tutorial. Because anyone can edit it, it can also contain malformed or unexpected data that breaks the sync — see Troubleshooting if you run into errors.

Create a project

Copier is a project scaffolding tool. Use it to create a new Infrahub project from the official template, which includes the standard file structure, task definitions, and a schemas/ folder:

  1. Run the following command to create a new project directory:
uv tool run --from 'copier' copier copy https://github.com/opsmill/infrahub-template infrahub-automation

When prompted, enter a project name (for example, infrahub-automation), then press Enter to accept the default for every remaining prompt (they all default to No).

  1. Navigate to the project directory:
cd infrahub-automation
  1. Open the project in your IDE. If you have Visual Studio Code installed, you can run:
code .
Verification

Run ls in the project directory. You should see files including pyproject.toml, tasks.py, and a schemas/ folder.

Start Infrahub

The project template includes Invoke tasks that wrap Docker Compose commands.

  1. Start all Infrahub services with a single command:
uv run invoke start

The first run takes a few minutes while Docker downloads the container images.

  1. Open your browser and go to http://localhost:8000.

  2. Log in from the bottom-left corner using the default credentials:

    • Username: admin
    • Password: infrahub
Verification

You should see the Infrahub web interface with a navigation menu on the left side.

Install infrahub-sync

  1. Install the Python dependencies with uv:
uv add "infrahub-sync==2.0.0" pynetbox

This installs the infrahub-sync command. pynetbox is required by the NetBox adapter.

  1. Verify infrahub-sync command is available:
uv run infrahub-sync --help

For more about supported adapters and their Python requirements, see the NetBox adapter documentation.

Load a schema into Infrahub

Infrahub stores data according to its schema. Before we can import any data, we need Infrahub to know the kinds of objects that the sync will create.

We provide a production-grade Infrahub schema covering DCIM and IPAM features similar to NetBox's. It is not a one-to-one port of NetBox's own data model, and that's intentional.

info

This is a production-grade Infrahub schema, not a copy of NetBox's data model. Infrahub gives you a flexible graph model, so a real migration can preserve the parts of NetBox that matter to you while adapting the model to your own workflows.

This collection of schemas is still a work in progress; eventually it will be available through the marketplace. For now, download the files directly:

BRANCH="bgi-schema-library-v2"
DEST="schemas"
BASE_URL="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/opsmill/schema-library/${BRANCH}"

FILES=(
"base/dcim.yml"
"base/location.yml"
"base/ipam.yml"
"base/organization.yml"
"extensions/aggregate/aggregate.yml"
"extensions/cable/cable.yml"
"extensions/circuit/circuit.yml"
"extensions/compute/compute.yml"
"extensions/cluster/cluster.yml"
"extensions/hosting_cluster/hosting_cluster.yml"
"extensions/lag/lag.yml"
"extensions/location_site/location_site.yml"
"extensions/vlan/vlan.yml"
"extensions/qinq/qinq.yml"
"extensions/rack/rack.yml"
"extensions/vrf/vrf.yml"
)

for f in "${FILES[@]}"; do
curl -sSL --create-dirs -o "${DEST}/${f}" "${BASE_URL}/${f}"
done

Export the local Infrahub address and API token. Infrahub Sync will need them later to authenticate against your instance:

export INFRAHUB_ADDRESS="http://localhost:8000"
export INFRAHUB_API_TOKEN="06438eb2-8019-4776-878c-0941b1f1d1ec"

This is the default admin token that the project's Docker Compose stack seeds automatically, and it matches the default already configured in infrahubctl.toml. Do not reuse it for an internet-facing or shared Infrahub instance.

Then load the schema into Infrahub using the project's load-schema task:

uv run invoke load-schema

Refresh the local Infrahub web interface. You should see additional schema objects in the left navigation. You can also open the schema view in the UI to explore the kinds and relationships that were loaded.

Create a NetBox API token

Create a token in the public NetBox demo instance so Infrahub Sync can read data from NetBox.

  1. Open the public NetBox demo.
  2. Log in with username admin and password admin.
  3. Open your user profile.
  4. Create an API token.
  5. Copy the complete generated token value.

Export the token locally:

export NETBOX_URL="https://demo.netbox.dev"
export NETBOX_TOKEN="nbt_..."

Export the complete nbt_... token value. Do not include an authorization prefix such as Bearer, and do not copy only the short Key field.

Create the sync project

A sync project is a directory containing a config.yml file. The configuration names the source and destination adapters, maps source fields to destination fields, and includes references that let Infrahub Sync compute write order.

From your project directory (infrahub-automation), create a sync project directory and download the example NetBox to Infrahub configuration.

mkdir -p sync-projects/netbox-demo
curl -L \
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/opsmill/infrahub-sync/refs/heads/main/examples/netbox_to_infrahub/config.yml \
-o sync-projects/netbox-demo/config.yml

The downloaded configuration is named netbox-demo-to-infrahub. It maps selected NetBox objects onto the Infrahub schema.

Open sync-projects/netbox-demo/config.yml in an editor and scan the top-level keys:

  • name identifies the sync project.
  • source configures the NetBox adapter.
  • destination configures the Infrahub adapter.
  • schema_mapping defines how NetBox API resources become Infrahub objects.

The configuration includes default endpoint values, but the environment variables exported above take precedence for tokens and URLs.

The example configuration comments also mention apply, --run-id, and --parallel. This tutorial uses the beginner path: preview with diff, then write with sync --diff. See Run a sync for cached plans and parallel execution.

For a fuller explanation of this file, see Create a sync project and the schema mapping reference.

Generate the sync code

Generate the Python models and adapter code for this sync project.

uv run infrahub-sync generate --name netbox-demo-to-infrahub --directory sync-projects

The generate command reads the sync configuration and the destination schema, then writes the Python code used at runtime. Run generate again any time you edit config.yml.

For more about the command flow, see Run a sync.

Create a branch

Infrahub tracks changes through branches, so you can review a batch of imported data as a proposed change before it lands on main. Create a branch to hold this import:

uv run infrahubctl branch create netbox-import

The rest of this tutorial runs diff and sync against this branch with --branch netbox-import, so the import can be reviewed before merging. For more about branches and proposed changes, see Infrahub version control.

Preview the changes

Run a dry-run diff against the netbox-import branch before writing any data to Infrahub.

uv run infrahub-sync diff --name netbox-demo-to-infrahub --directory sync-projects --branch netbox-import

The diff command loads data from NetBox and Infrahub, compares both sides, and prints the planned changes. It also writes a cached plan under .infrahub-sync-cache/netbox-demo-to-infrahub/<run-id>/plan.parquet.

Review the output before continuing. On a first run against an empty branch, most planned changes should be creates. Exact counts depend on the current public NetBox demo data.

Sync the data

After reviewing the diff, run the sync against the same branch.

uv run infrahub-sync sync --name netbox-demo-to-infrahub --directory sync-projects --branch netbox-import --diff

The --diff option prints the diff before applying the changes. The first sync can take a few minutes because it writes the imported objects and relationships into the netbox-import branch — main is untouched until you merge the resulting proposed change. Because this configuration omits order:, Infrahub Sync derives the write order from the mapping references.

Verify the imported data

The imported data lives on the netbox-import branch, not on main. Open the local Infrahub web interface:

  1. Use the branch selector in the top-left corner to switch from main to netbox-import.

  2. Browse the left navigation for imported objects from the NetBox demo. Depending on the current demo data and the example mapping, you may see objects such as:

    • tags and organizations (manufacturers, providers, RIRs)
    • sites and racks
    • devices and interfaces
    • VRFs, VLANs, and VLAN groups
    • prefixes, IP addresses, and aggregates
    • circuits
  3. Once you're happy with the data, open a proposed change from netbox-import toward main so the import can be reviewed before it's merged.

If you switch back to main, none of this data is there yet — that's expected, since it's still isolated in the branch.

What happened

You used Infrahub Sync to move data from NetBox into Infrahub in a controlled sequence:

  1. Infrahub provided the destination graph and schema.
  2. NetBox provided the source data.
  3. A branch isolated the import from main so it could be reviewed first.
  4. config.yml described the adapters, field mappings, references, filters, and Transformations.
  5. generate converted the configuration into runnable sync code.
  6. diff compared the source and destination without writing changes.
  7. sync applied the reviewed changes to the branch.

The same pattern applies to larger migrations: start with a clear schema, map a small set of objects, condition source data where needed, review the diff inside a branch, and then synchronize before opening a proposed change toward main.

Stop the local Infrahub instance

When you are finished, stop the Docker Compose stack.

uv run invoke stop

Troubleshooting

infrahub-sync fails with Both url and token must be specified

ERROR | infrahub_sync.cli | Failed to initialize the Sync Instance: Error initializing InfrahubAdapter: Both url and token must be specified!

The NetBox and/or Infrahub adapter can't find credentials. generate, diff, sync, and apply all read them from the environment, not from config.yml, so make sure every variable is exported in the shell you're running the command from:

export NETBOX_URL="https://demo.netbox.dev"
export NETBOX_TOKEN="<your-netbox-token>"
export INFRAHUB_ADDRESS="http://localhost:8000"
export INFRAHUB_API_TOKEN="06438eb2-8019-4776-878c-0941b1f1d1ec"

This error names whichever adapter (NetBox or Infrahub) is missing its variables — the same message is raised for either one.

infrahub-sync fails with Object ... already present

ValueError: An error occurred while loading Netbox: ('Object 172.16.0.2/24__Alpha already present', IpamIPAddress "172.16.0.2/24__Alpha")

Two source objects map to the same identifier — here, two IP addresses sharing an address and VRF. Delete one of the duplicates in NetBox (IPAM > IP Addresses, search the address from the message), then re-run the command.

Next steps

Now that you have completed a first sync, you have covered some of the basic objects in NetBox.

This is only the first step. You will likely want to bring in the parts that are unique to your own NetBox instance (for example, roles or custom fields).

Other guides will soon be available to cover:

  • How to sync locations/regions
  • How to deal with VLAN/Prefix/Device roles
  • How to cover custom attributes / relationships
  • Migrate configuration context