Google Cloud Organization Policy gives you centralized, programmatic control over your organization's resources. As the organization policy administrator, you can define an organization policy, which is a set of restrictions called constraints that apply to Google Cloud resources and descendants of those resources in the Google Cloud resource hierarchy. You can enforce organization policies at the organization, folder, or project level.
Organization Policy provides predefined constraints for various Google Cloud services. However, if you want more granular, customizable control over the specific fields that are restricted in your organization policies, you can also create custom organization policies.
Benefits
You can use a custom organization policy to allow or deny creation of Dataflow jobs with conditions based on supported resource attributes, such as job name, type, and service options.
Policy inheritance
By default, organization policies are inherited by the descendants of the resources on which you enforce the policy. For example, if you enforce a policy on a folder, Google Cloud enforces the policy on all projects in the folder. To learn more about this behavior and how to change it, see Hierarchy evaluation rules.
Pricing
The Organization Policy Service, including predefined and custom organization policies, is offered at no charge.
Limitations
Custom constraints for Dataflow
Job
resources can only be set up by using the Google Cloud console or Google Cloud CLI.Custom constraints can only be enforced on the
CREATE
method for DataflowJob
resources.Newly enforced custom constraints don't apply to existing resources.
Before you begin
For more information about what organization policies and constraints are and how they work, see the Introduction to the Organization Policy Service.
Required roles
To get the permissions that you need to manage organization policies,
ask your administrator to grant you the
Organization policy administrator (roles/orgpolicy.policyAdmin
) IAM role on the organization.
For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.
This predefined role contains the permissions required to manage organization policies. To see the exact permissions that are required, expand the Required permissions section:
Required permissions
The following permissions are required to manage organization policies:
-
orgpolicy.constraints.list
-
orgpolicy.policies.create
-
orgpolicy.policies.delete
-
orgpolicy.policies.list
-
orgpolicy.policies.update
-
orgpolicy.policy.get
-
orgpolicy.policy.set
You might also be able to get these permissions with custom roles or other predefined roles.
Create a custom constraint
A custom constraint is defined in a YAML file by the resources, methods, conditions, and actions that are supported by the service on which you are enforcing the organization policy. Conditions for your custom constraints are defined using Common Expression Language (CEL). For more information about how to build conditions in custom constraints using CEL, see the CEL section of Creating and managing custom constraints.
To create a YAML file for a custom constraint:
name: organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/customConstraints/CONSTRAINT_NAME
resourceTypes:
- dataflow.googleapis.com/RESOURCE_NAME
methodTypes:
- CREATE
condition: "CONDITION"
actionType: ACTION
displayName: DISPLAY_NAME
description: DESCRIPTION
Replace the following:
ORGANIZATION_ID
: your organization ID, such as123456789
.CONSTRAINT_NAME
: the name you want for your new custom constraint. A custom constraint must start withcustom.
, and can only include uppercase letters, lowercase letters, or numbers—for example, custom.denyPrimeJobs. The maximum length of this field is 70 characters, not counting the prefix—for example,organizations/123456789/customConstraints/custom
.RESOURCE_NAME
: the name (not the URI) of the Dataflow API REST resource containing the object and field you want to restrict. For example,Job
.CONDITION
: a CEL condition that is written against a representation of a supported service resource. This field has a maximum length of 1000 characters. See Supported resources for more information about the resources available to write conditions against. For example,"resource.environment.serviceOptions.exists(value, value=='enable_prime')"
.ACTION
: the action to take if thecondition
is met. Supported values areALLOW
andDENY
.DISPLAY_NAME
: a human-friendly name for the constraint. This field has a maximum length of 200 characters.DESCRIPTION
: a human-friendly description of the constraint to display as an error message when the policy is violated. This field has a maximum length of 2000 characters.
For more information about how to create a custom constraint, see Defining custom constraints.
Set up a custom constraint
After you have created the YAML file for a new custom constraint, you must set it up to make it available for organization policies in your organization. To set up a custom constraint, use thegcloud org-policies set-custom-constraint
command:
gcloud org-policies set-custom-constraint CONSTRAINT_PATH
CONSTRAINT_PATH
with the full path to your
custom constraint file. For example, /home/user/customconstraint.yaml
.
Once completed, your custom constraints are available as organization policies
in your list of Google Cloud organization policies.
To verify that the custom constraint exists, use the
gcloud org-policies list-custom-constraints
command:
gcloud org-policies list-custom-constraints --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID
ORGANIZATION_ID
with the ID of your organization resource.
For more information, see
Viewing organization policies.
Enforce a custom organization policy
You can enforce a boolean constraint by creating an organization policy that references it, and then applying that organization policy to a Google Cloud resource.Console
- In the Google Cloud console, go to the Organization policies page.
- From the project picker, select the project for which you want to set the organization policy.
- From the list on the Organization policies page, select your constraint to view the Policy details page for that constraint.
- To configure the organization policy for this resource, click Manage policy.
- On the Edit policy page, select Override parent's policy.
- Click Add a rule.
- In the Enforcement section, select whether enforcement of this organization policy is on or off.
- Optional: To make the organization policy conditional on a tag, click Add condition. Note that if you add a conditional rule to an organization policy, you must add at least one unconditional rule or the policy cannot be saved. For more information, see Setting an organization policy with tags.
- If this is a custom constraint, you can click Test changes to simulate the effect of this organization policy. For more information, see Test organization policy changes with Policy Simulator.
- To finish and apply the organization policy, click Set policy. The policy requires up to 15 minutes to take effect.
gcloud
To create an organization policy that enforces a boolean constraint, create a policy YAML file that references the constraint:
name: projects/PROJECT_ID/policies/CONSTRAINT_NAME spec: rules: - enforce: true
Replace the following:
-
PROJECT_ID
: the project on which you want to enforce your constraint. -
CONSTRAINT_NAME
: the name you defined for your custom constraint. For example,custom.denyPrimeJobs
.
To enforce the organization policy containing the constraint, run the following command:
gcloud org-policies set-policy POLICY_PATH
Replace POLICY_PATH
with the full path to your organization policy
YAML file. The policy requires up to 15 minutes to take effect.
Example: Create a constraint to deny creation of a job with prime enabled
gcloud
Create a
denyPrimeJobs.yaml
constraint file with the following information. ReplaceORGANIZATION_ID
with your organization ID.name: organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/customConstraints/custom.denyPrimeJobs resource_types: dataflow.googleapis.com/Job condition: "resource.environment.serviceOptions.exists(value, value=='enable_prime')" action_type: DENY method_types: CREATE display_name: Restrict creation of job with prime enabled description: Deny creation of jobs with prime enabled.
Set the custom constraint.
gcloud org-policies set-custom-constraint denyPrimeJobs.yaml
Create an
enforce-policy-denyPrimeJobs.yaml
policy file with the following information. In this example, the constraint is enforced at the project level. You might also set this constraint at the organization or folder level. ReplacePROJECT_ID
with your project ID.name: projects/PROJECT_ID/policies/custom.denyPrimeJobs spec: rules: – enforce: true
Enforce the policy by running following command.
gcloud org-policies set-policy enforce-policy-denyPrimeJobs.yaml
To test the constraint, try to create a Dataflow job with the
enable_prime
option. Follow the Create a Dataflow pipeline using Java quickstart to create a WordCount job.mvn -Pdataflow-runner compile \ exec:java \ -Dexec.mainClass=org.apache.beam.examples.WordCount \ -Dexec.args="--project=PROJECT_ID \ --gcpTempLocation=gs://BUCKET_NAME/temp/ \ --output=gs://BUCKET_NAME/output \ --runner=DataflowRunner \ --region=us-central1 \ --dataflowServiceOptions=enable_prime" \ -Pdataflow-runner
The output is similar to the following example:
"details" : [ { "@type" : "type.googleapis.com/google.rpc.ErrorInfo", "reason" : "CUSTOM_ORG_POLICY_VIOLATION" }]
The audit log should show violation details like following:
policyViolationInfo: { orgPolicyViolationInfo: { violationInfo: [ 0: { constraint: "customConstraints/custom.denyPrimeJobs" errorMessage: "Restrict creation of job with prime enabled" policyType: "CUSTOM_CONSTRAINT" }]}}
Expression fields for conditions
The following table contains the expression fields that you can use to create conditions. Conditions are written in Common Expression Language (CEL). The value of the expression fields is case-sensitive.
For descriptions of the following expression fields and which values you can specify, see the Dataflow Job
JSON representation.
Expression field | Value type |
---|---|
name |
string |
type |
string |
transformNameMapping |
map |
location |
string |
environment |
message |
environment.serviceOptions |
list of string |
environment.serviceKmsKeyName |
string |
environment.serviceAccountEmail |
string |
environment.workerRegion |
string |
environment.workerZone |
string |
environment.streamingMode |
string |
environment.debugOptions |
message |
environment.debugOptions.enableHotKeyLogging |
bool |
Example use cases
Some example use cases are listed in the following table.
Use Case | Action | Custom Constraint |
---|---|---|
Disallow use of prime job | DENY | resource.environment.serviceOptions.exists(value, value=='enable_prime') |
Prevents VMs from accepting SSH keys that are stored in project metadata. | DENY | !resource.environment.serviceOptions.exists(value, value=='block_project_ssh_keys') |
Disallow jobs without setting the maximum number of seconds the job can run | DENY | !resource.environment.serviceOptions.exists(value, value.contains('max_workflow_runtime_walltime_seconds=') |
What's next
- See Introduction to the Organization Policy Service to learn more about organization policies.
- Learn more about how to create and manage organization policies.
- See the full list of predefined Organization policy constraints.