Compute instances should be launched with Shielded VM enabled
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Description
To defend against advanced threats and ensure that the boot loader and firmware on your VMs are signed and untampered, Datadog recommends launching compute instances with Shielded VM enabled.
Rationale
Shielded VMs are virtual machines on the Google Cloud Platform that are hardened by a set of security controls and help defend against rootkits and bootkits. Shielded VM offers verifiable integrity of your Compute Engine VM instances through Secure Boot, a virtual trusted platform module (vTPM)-enabled measured boot, and integrity monitoring. This ensures your instances are not compromised by boot- or kernel-level malware, or rootkits.
Shielded VM instances run firmware which is signed and verified using Google’s Certificate Authority, ensuring that the instance’s firmware is unmodified and establishes trust for Secure Boot.
Integrity monitoring helps you understand and make decisions about the state of your VM instances and the Shielded VM vTPM enables Measured Boot by performing the measurements needed to create a known good boot baseline, also known as the integrity policy baseline. The integrity policy baseline is used to compare measurements from subsequent VM boots to determine if anything has changed.
Secure Boot helps ensure that the system only runs authentic software by verifying the digital signature of all boot components, and halts the boot process if signature verification fails.
To turn on Shielded VM on an instance, your instance must use an image with Shielded VM support.
From the console
- In the Google Cloud Console, navigate to VM Instances page, which lists all instances in your project.
- Click on the instance name to see a VM Instance Details page.
- Click Stop to stop the instance.
- When the instance has stopped, click Edit.
- In the Shielded VM section, select Turn on vTPM and Turn on Integrity Monitoring.
- Optionally, if you do not use any custom or unsigned drivers on the instance, also select Turn on Secure Boot.
- Click the Save button to modify the instance and click Start to restart it.
From the command line
You can only enable Shielded VM options on instances that have Shielded VM support. For a list of Shielded VM public images, run the gcloud compute images list command with the following flags:
gcloud compute images list --project gce-uefi-images --no-standard-images
- Stop the instance using
gcloud compute instances stop <INSTANCE_NAME>
. - Update the instance using
gcloud compute instances update <INSTANCE_NAME> --shielded-vtpm --shielded-vm-integrity-monitoring
. - Optionally, if you do not use any custom or unsigned drivers on the instance, also turn on Secure Boot using
gcloud compute instances update <INSTANCE_NAME> --shielded-vm-secure-boot
. - Restart the instance using
gcloud compute instances start <INSTANCE_NAME>
.
Prevention
To ensure that all new VMs are created with Shielded VM enabled, create an Organization Policy for Shielded VM in the Organization Policies page.
For more information, see the Google Cloud documentation.
Default Value
By default, Compute Instances do not have Shielded VM enabled.
References
- https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/instances/modifying-shielded-vm
- https://cloud.google.com/shielded-vm
- https://cloud.google.com/security/shielded-cloud/shielded-vm#organization-policy-constraint
You can only set the canIpForward
field at instance creation time. After an instance is created, the field becomes read-only.
CIS Controls
Version 8 - 4.4: Implement and Manage a Firewall on Servers
- Implement and manage a firewall on servers, where supported. Example
implementations include a virtual firewall, operating system firewall, or a third-party
firewall agent.
Version 8 - 4.5: Implement and Manage a Firewall on End-User Devices
- Implement and manage a host-based firewall or port-filtering tool on end-user
devices, with a default-deny rule that drops all traffic except those services and ports
that are explicitly allowed.
Version 7 - 11.1 Maintain Standard Security Configurations for Network
Devices
- Maintain standard, documented security configuration standards for all authorized
network devices.
Version 7 - 11.2 Document Traffic Configuration Rules
- All configuration rules that allow traffic to flow through network devices should be
documented in a configuration management system with a specific business reason for
each rule, a specific individual’s name responsible for that business need, and an
expected duration of the need.