From 6fe5af20130ed58dc925f76293b98a06bbad7b7d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Modular Magician Date: Mon, 28 Oct 2024 22:08:30 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Fixed SecurityPolicyRule and RegionSecurityPolicyRule resources being unable to manage the policy default rule (#12054) [upstream:3715cf5f9ec3acffbde4f9ce51fd18928a09696a] Signed-off-by: Modular Magician --- .../backing_file.tf | 15 ++++ security_policy_rule_default_rule/main.tf | 32 ++++++++ security_policy_rule_default_rule/motd | 7 ++ security_policy_rule_default_rule/tutorial.md | 79 +++++++++++++++++++ 4 files changed, 133 insertions(+) create mode 100644 security_policy_rule_default_rule/backing_file.tf create mode 100644 security_policy_rule_default_rule/main.tf create mode 100644 security_policy_rule_default_rule/motd create mode 100644 security_policy_rule_default_rule/tutorial.md diff --git a/security_policy_rule_default_rule/backing_file.tf b/security_policy_rule_default_rule/backing_file.tf new file mode 100644 index 00000000..c60b1199 --- /dev/null +++ b/security_policy_rule_default_rule/backing_file.tf @@ -0,0 +1,15 @@ +# This file has some scaffolding to make sure that names are unique and that +# a region and zone are selected when you try to create your Terraform resources. + +locals { + name_suffix = "${random_pet.suffix.id}" +} + +resource "random_pet" "suffix" { + length = 2 +} + +provider "google" { + region = "us-central1" + zone = "us-central1-c" +} diff --git a/security_policy_rule_default_rule/main.tf b/security_policy_rule_default_rule/main.tf new file mode 100644 index 00000000..19e5647d --- /dev/null +++ b/security_policy_rule_default_rule/main.tf @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ +resource "google_compute_security_policy" "default" { + name = "policyruletest-${local.name_suffix}" + description = "basic global security policy" + type = "CLOUD_ARMOR" +} + +resource "google_compute_security_policy_rule" "default_rule" { + security_policy = google_compute_security_policy.default.name + description = "default rule" + action = "deny" + priority = "2147483647" + match { + versioned_expr = "SRC_IPS_V1" + config { + src_ip_ranges = ["*"] + } + } +} + +resource "google_compute_security_policy_rule" "policy_rule" { + security_policy = google_compute_security_policy.default.name + description = "new rule" + priority = 100 + match { + versioned_expr = "SRC_IPS_V1" + config { + src_ip_ranges = ["10.10.0.0/16"] + } + } + action = "allow" + preview = true +} diff --git a/security_policy_rule_default_rule/motd b/security_policy_rule_default_rule/motd new file mode 100644 index 00000000..45a906e8 --- /dev/null +++ b/security_policy_rule_default_rule/motd @@ -0,0 +1,7 @@ +=== + +These examples use real resources that will be billed to the +Google Cloud Platform project you use - so make sure that you +run "terraform destroy" before quitting! + +=== diff --git a/security_policy_rule_default_rule/tutorial.md b/security_policy_rule_default_rule/tutorial.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..4b70f9a8 --- /dev/null +++ b/security_policy_rule_default_rule/tutorial.md @@ -0,0 +1,79 @@ +# Security Policy Rule Default Rule - Terraform + +## Setup + + + +Welcome to Terraform in Google Cloud Shell! We need you to let us know what project you'd like to use with Terraform. + + + +Terraform provisions real GCP resources, so anything you create in this session will be billed against this project. + +## Terraforming! + +Let's use {{project-id}} with Terraform! Click the Cloud Shell icon below to copy the command +to your shell, and then run it from the shell by pressing Enter/Return. Terraform will pick up +the project name from the environment variable. + +```bash +export GOOGLE_CLOUD_PROJECT={{project-id}} +``` + +After that, let's get Terraform started. Run the following to pull in the providers. + +```bash +terraform init +``` + +With the providers downloaded and a project set, you're ready to use Terraform. Go ahead! + +```bash +terraform apply +``` + +Terraform will show you what it plans to do, and prompt you to accept. Type "yes" to accept the plan. + +```bash +yes +``` + + +## Post-Apply + +### Editing your config + +Now you've provisioned your resources in GCP! If you run a "plan", you should see no changes needed. + +```bash +terraform plan +``` + +So let's make a change! Try editing a number, or appending a value to the name in the editor. Then, +run a 'plan' again. + +```bash +terraform plan +``` + +Afterwards you can run an apply, which implicitly does a plan and shows you the intended changes +at the 'yes' prompt. + +```bash +terraform apply +``` + +```bash +yes +``` + +## Cleanup + +Run the following to remove the resources Terraform provisioned: + +```bash +terraform destroy +``` +```bash +yes +```