lacework-global-301
3.6 Ensure That SSH Access Is Restricted From the Internet (Automated)
Profile Applicability
• Level 2
Description
GCP Firewall Rules are specific to a VPC Network. Each rule either allows or denies traffic when its conditions are met. Its conditions allow the user to specify the type of traffic, such as ports and protocols, and the source or destination of the traffic, including IP addresses, subnets, and instances.
Firewall rules are defined at the VPC network level and are specific to the network in which they are defined. The rules themselves cannot be shared among networks. Firewall rules only support IPv4 traffic. When specifying a source for an ingress rule or a destination for an egress rule by address, only an IPv4 address or IPv4 block in CIDR notation can be used. Generic (0.0.0.0/0) incoming traffic from the internet to VPC or VM instance using SSH on Port 22 can be avoided.
Rationale
GCP Firewall Rules within a VPC Network apply to outgoing (egress) traffic from instances and incoming (ingress) traffic to instances in the network. Egress and ingress traffic flows are controlled even if the traffic stays within the network (for example, instance-to-instance communication).
For an instance to have outgoing Internet access, the network must have a valid Internet gateway route or custom route whose destination IP is specified. This route simply defines the path to the Internet, to avoid the most general (0.0.0.0/0) destination IP Range specified from the Internet through SSH with the default Port 22. Generic access from the Internet to a specific IP Range needs to be restricted.
Impact
All Secure Shell (SSH) connections from outside of the network to the concerned VPC(s) will be blocked. There could be a business need where SSH access is required from outside of the network to access resources associated with the VPC. In that case, specific source IP(s) should be mentioned in firewall rules to white-list access to SSH port for the concerned VPC(s).
Audit
From the Console:
- Go to
VPC network. - Go to the
Firewall Rules. - Ensure that
Portis not equal to22andActionis not set toAllow. - Ensure
IP Rangesis not equal to0.0.0.0/0underSource filters.
From Command Line:
gcloud compute firewall-rules list --format=table'(name,direction,sourceRanges,allowed)'
Ensure that there is no rule matching the below criteria:
SOURCE_RANGESis0.0.0.0/0- AND
DIRECTIONisINGRESS - AND IPProtocol is
tcporALL - AND
PORTSis set to22orrange containing 22orNull (not set)
- When ALL TCP ports are allowed in a rule, PORT does not have any value set (
NULL) - When ALL Protocols are allowed in a rule, PORT does not have any value set (
NULL)
Remediation
From the Console:
- Go to
VPC Network. - Go to the
Firewall Rules. - Click the
Firewall Ruleyou want to modify. - Click
Edit. - Modify
Source IP rangesto specificIP. - Click
Save.
From Command Line:
1.Update the Firewall rule with the new SOURCE_RANGE from the below command:
gcloud compute firewall-rules update FirewallName --allow=[PROTOCOL[:PORT[-PORT]],...] --source-ranges=[CIDR_RANGE,...]
References
https://cloud.google.com/vpc/docs/firewalls#blockedtraffic
https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/identity-security/cloud-iap-enables-context-aware-access-to-vms-via-ssh-and-rdp-without-bastion-hosts
Additional Information
Currently, GCP VPC only supports IPV4; however, Google is already working on adding IPV6 support for VPC. In that case along with source IP range 0.0.0.0, the rule should be checked for IPv6 equivalent ::0 as well.