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đź”± Guardian đź”±

Guardian is a Terraform collaboration and automation tool. Using the features of GitHub, Guardian enables teams to enforce a propose, review, and acutate process for secure modification of resources.

Important

The usage of Guardian does not increase the security posture of your cloud resources if poorly configured.

This is not an official Google product.

Support

For support related items, please open a GitHub Issue.

Releases

Guardian release announcements are done via GitHub and can be found here. You can watch the Guardian repository in order to be notified each time a release is made.

Guardian CLI

This is the underlying tool written in Golang that is enables all features. For more details and to understand how to use the cli see Guardian CLI.

Guardian Features

Note

While some features can be used independently, unless otherwise noted, all features have been designed to work with GitHub products (e.g. Pull Requests, Issues, Repositories).

Terraform Actuation

  • Show Terraform plans and applies, including outputs, in GitHub comments on Pull Requests.
  • Determines all Terraform entrypoints (e.g. where your Terraform backend configurations are) in your repository and plan/apply for each entrypoint.
  • Automatically detect changes and only plan/apply entrypoints that have changed.
  • Ensures Terraform plans are always up to date via native GitHub functionality.
  • Designed to work with any of your terraform configurations.
  • Compatible with any version of Terraform.
  • Support for administrative functionality such as one-off state rm or terraform apply commands.

For more details on the user experience for an engineer developing terraform, see Developer Workflow. For more details on the admin experience, see Guardian Admin.

For more details on how to use the Guardian CLI for terraform actuation see the relevant CLI doc:

You can get started with using Guardian for terraform actuation by Creating the Terraform Actuation GitHub Workflows.

IAM Drift Detection

  • Compatible with Google Cloud Platform.
  • Determines if there is any drift between your real IAM for Google Cloud Platform Org, Folders, Projects and your Terraform states.
  • Generates a GitHub issue if a drift is detected.
  • This issue will contain any identified click-ops changes as well as changes described in Terraform that are missing from your actual Google Cloud Platform IAM.

For more information on using iam drift detection see the IAM Drift CLI Docs.

You can get started with using Guardian for drift detection by Creating the Drift Detection GitHub Workflows.

Tip

Consider using in conjunction with Statefile Drift Detection in order to locate outdated terraform state files that may incorrectly yield IAM drift.

Statefile Drift Detection

  • Compatible with Google Cloud Platform.
  • Determines if there are any Terraform state files stored in remote state locations (GCS buckets) that are not represented in your Terraform repositories.
  • This is especially useful when paired with IAM Drift Detection as you may encounter leftover state files that are no longer used that contain IAM resources. These IAM resources will falsely indicate a drift.
  • Generates a GitHub issue if a drift is detected.
  • This issue will contain any identified state files that are
    1. Described in your GitHub repositories that are missing in your remote state locations.
    2. In remote state locations but missing from your GitHub repositories.
    3. Empty (contains no resources and can be safely deleted) and not described in your GitHub repositories.

For more information on using statefile drift detection see the Statefile Drift CLI Docs.

You can get started with using Guardian for drift detection by Creating the Drift Detection GitHub Workflows.

Guardian Terraform Best Practices

  • Design your Terraform to have many small Terraform entrypoints. This will result in small Terraform state files - large Terraform states are an anti-pattern as they take a long time to plan/apply, are difficult to refactor, and broken applies can result in blocking all future work.
  • Limit use of remote state. Remote state can be especially attractive when using many smaller Terraform entrypoints as it permits you to share configuration across entrypoints. However, remote state adds a lot of complexity to determining how your state should be planned/applied (e.g. updating entrypoint state A which is used in entrypoint state B means two separate applies - which puts the burden on the user to figure out how to manage this operation).
  • If you are going to rely on remote state, try to use state that is relatively static. For example, a good candidate for remote state would be if you have some initial resources that need to be setup once and rarely change (e.g. Configuring a Google Cloud Platform Org).

Developer workflow

  • Create a PR to propose Terraform changes

  • Guardian will run terraform plan for the configured working directories and will create a pull request comment with the plan diff for easy review

    • Guardian will store the plan file remotely in a Google Cloud Storage bucket, with a unique prefix per pull request, per Terraform working directory:

      gs://<BUCKET_NAME>/guardian-plans/<OWNER>/<REPO>/<PR_NUMBER>/<TERRAFORM_WORKING_DIRECTORY_PATH>/tfplan.binary

      gs://my-terraform-state/guardian-plans/owner/repo/20/terraform/production/tfplan.binary

  • Have your PR reviewed and approved by a CODEOWNER

  • If you need to re-run your plan, push new changes or re-run the workflow to generate new plan files

    • Use git commit --allow-empty -m "sync" && git push origin BRANCH to push an empty commit to re-trigger
  • When the PR is merged Guardian will automatically run terraform apply for the plan file created for each working directory and post the results as PR comments

  • Regardless of success or failure of apply, Guardian will delete all plan files

    • If the apply fails:
      • Another PR should be submitted to fix the failed state for the environment
      • A repository admin can run the Guardian Admin workflow to run Terraform commands to fix the state, e.g. via terraform apply

Guardian Admin

The Guardian Admin workflow can be used to run commands manually as the service account for Guardian. This process can only be done by someone with Admin permissions (may require a breakglass) and is helpful in fixing error scenarios with Terraform.

  • Navigate to the Actions tab and select Guardian Admin
  • Click the Run workflow drop down in the top right area
  • Fill out the inputs
    • BRANCH: Only works from the default branch e.g. main
    • COMMAND: The Terraform command to run e.g. apply -input=false -auto-approve
    • ENTRYPOINT: A directory to find all child directories containing Terraform configurations. If left blank, the Terraform command will run for all configured directories.

Guardian Run

The Guardian Run workflow can be used to run a limited set of Terraform commands manually as the service account for Guardian. This allows any user with write permissions for the repository to run this workflow and maintain their Terraform configurations.

  • Navigate to the Actions tab and select Guardian Run
  • Click the Run workflow drop down in the top right area
  • Fill out the inputs
    • BRANCH: Only works from the default branch e.g. main
    • COMMAND: Choose from the list of options you want to run. The default command is plan.
    • ENTRYPOINT: A directory to find all child directories containing Terraform configurations. If left blank, the Terraform command will run for all configured directories.

Security

Guardian recommends the use of pull_request_target for the Guardian Plan action. This is for two reasons:

  1. pull_request_target is run in the context head commit on the default branch (usually main), this ensures that only the approved and merged workflow is run for any given pull request.
  2. This enables the ability to restrict access to the Google Cloud Workload Identity Federation provider using the @refs/heads/main for the workflows, additionally ensuring only approved and merged workflows can impersonate the highly privileged service account. This prevents someone from copying the workflows with the pull_request trigger and using the service account however they want.

Because pull_request_target runs in the context of the head commit on the repository default branch, we need to checkout the pull request branch for Guardian to run terraform plan on the proposed changes. This has been documented as a security issue.

To make this process secure, Guardian should only be run in internal or private repositories and should disable the use of forks. This makes the pull_request_target operate with the same default behavior as pull_request but still ensures only the approved and merged workflow is being executed for the pull request.

Workload Identity Federation

Terraform service accounts have elevated privileges, following WIF Best Practices is recommended when setting up guardian to use Workload Identity Federation. Below is an example attribute configuration that can be used to set up guardian in a secure manner.

The following attribute mappings map claims from the GitHub Actions JWT to Google STS token attributes.

  • google.subject=assertion.sub
  • attribute.actor=assertion.actor
  • attribute.aud=assertion.aud
  • attribute.ref=assertion.ref
  • attribute.repository_owner_id=assertion.repository_owner_id
  • attribute.repository_id=assertion.repository_id
  • attribute.repository_visibility=assertion.repository_visibility
  • attribute.workflow_ref=assertion.workflow_ref

The following attribute condition verifies that the request is coming from your GitHub organization and repository as well as restricting access to only the guardian workflows that run on the main branch.

attribute.repository_owner_id == "<your-repository-owner-id>" &&
attribute.repository_id == "<your-repository-id>" &&
attribute.repository_visibility != "public" &&
attribute.ref == "refs/heads/main" &&
attribute.workflow_ref in [
  "<your-repository-owner-name>/<your-repository-name>/.github/workflows/guardian-admin.yml@refs/heads/main",
  "<your-repository-owner-name>/<your-repository-name>/.github/workflows/guardian-apply.yml@refs/heads/main",
  "<your-repository-owner-name>/<your-repository-name>/.github/workflows/guardian-plan.yml@refs/heads/main",
  "<your-repository-owner-name>/<your-repository-name>/.github/workflows/guardian-run.yml@refs/heads/main",
]

You can find the id and owner.id of your repository by using GitHub's REST API.

$ OWNER_NAME="owner"
$ REPO_NAME="repo"
$ curl https://api.github.com/repos/$OWNER_NAME/$REPO_NAME | jq '. | {"id": .id, "owner": { "id": .owner.id }}'
{
  "id": 12345,
  "owner": {
    "id": 9876
  }
}

Repository Setup

General

  • Ensure repository visibility is set to internal or private
  • Ensure that Allow forking is disabled, Guardian recommends the use of pull_request_target, see above

Rulesets

Rulesets are required to enable a safe and secure process. Ensuring these values are set properly prevents multiple pull requests from stepping on each other. By enabling Require branches to be up to date before merging, pull requests merged at the same time will cause one to fail and be forced to pull the changes from the default branch. This will kick of the planning process to ensure the latest changes are always merged.

  • Require a pull request before merging
    • Required approvals: minimum 1, suggested 2
    • Require review from Code Owners
    • Require conversation resolution before merging
  • Require status checks to pass before merging
    • Require branches to be up to date before merging
    • After you create your first PR, make sure you require the plan_success job status check, this is required to ensure the Require branches to be up to date before merging is enforced.
  • Require signed commits (optional)
  • Require linear history

Using Private Repositories as Modules

If you want to use Terraform modules located in private GitHub repositories then you will need to configure git with the necessary permissions in order for Guardian to access these modules.

USERNAME=user-defined-name
TOKEN=your-token-with-read-acccess
git config --global url."https://${USERNAME}:${TOKEN}@github.com".insteadOf "https://github.com"

The USERNAME variable has no functional purpose and can be an arbitrary string. It is required to be present in the URL, but GitHub will identify the user based on the token. It is recommended to provide a descriptive username and/or comment here so that developers know where this token came from (e.g. guardian-pat-token).

We recommend using github-token-minter to generate short-lived access tokens token on demand for this purpose in your GitHub Actions.

Directories

Guardian will only run Terraform commands for directories that have a Terraform backend configuration. This means if you add a new folder and you want Guardian to run the terraform plan and terraform apply commands from that directory as the root of the module, you should include a backend configuration within that directory.

Creating Terraform Actuation Workflows

To use Guardian in your repository, see the template installation instructions in the abc.templates folder.

Creating Drift Detection Workflows

To use Guardian drift detection in your repository, see the template installation instructions in the abc.templates folder.