AWS::Config::OrganizationConfigRule - AWS CloudFormation

AWS::Config::OrganizationConfigRule

Adds or updates an AWS Config rule for your entire organization to evaluate if your AWS resources comply with your desired configurations. For information on how many organization AWS Config rules you can have per account, see Service Limits in the AWS Config Developer Guide.

Only a management account and a delegated administrator can create or update an organization AWS Config rule. When calling the OrganizationConfigRule resource with a delegated administrator, you must ensure AWS Organizations ListDelegatedAdministrator permissions are added. An organization can have up to 3 delegated administrators.

The OrganizationConfigRule resource enables organization service access through the EnableAWSServiceAccess action and creates a service-linked role AWSServiceRoleForConfigMultiAccountSetup in the management or delegated administrator account of your organization. The service-linked role is created only when the role does not exist in the caller account. AWS Config verifies the existence of role with GetRole action.

To use the OrganizationConfigRule resource with delegated administrator, register a delegated administrator by calling AWS Organization register-delegated-administrator for config-multiaccountsetup.amazonaws.com.

There are two types of rules: AWS Config Managed Rules and AWS Config Custom Rules. You can use PutOrganizationConfigRule to create both AWS Config Managed Rules and AWS Config Custom Rules.

AWS Config Managed Rules are predefined, customizable rules created by AWS Config. For a list of managed rules, see List of AWS Config Managed Rules. If you are adding an AWS Config managed rule, you must specify the rule's identifier for the RuleIdentifier key.

AWS Config Custom Rules are rules that you create from scratch. There are two ways to create AWS Config custom rules: with Lambda functions (AWS Lambda Developer Guide) and with Guard (Guard GitHub Repository), a policy-as-code language. AWS Config custom rules created with AWS Lambda are called AWS Config Custom Lambda Rules and AWS Config custom rules created with Guard are called AWS Config Custom Policy Rules.

If you are adding a new AWS Config Custom Lambda rule, you first need to create an AWS Lambda function in the management account or a delegated administrator that the rule invokes to evaluate your resources. You also need to create an IAM role in the managed account that can be assumed by the Lambda function. When you use PutOrganizationConfigRule to add a Custom Lambda rule to AWS Config, you must specify the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) that AWS Lambda assigns to the function.

Syntax

To declare this entity in your AWS CloudFormation template, use the following syntax:

Properties

ExcludedAccounts

A comma-separated list of accounts excluded from organization AWS Config rule.

Required: No

Type: Array of String

Minimum: 0

Maximum: 1000

Update requires: No interruption

OrganizationConfigRuleName

The name that you assign to organization AWS Config rule.

Required: Yes

Type: String

Pattern: .*\S.*

Minimum: 1

Maximum: 64

Update requires: Replacement

OrganizationCustomPolicyRuleMetadata

An object that specifies metadata for your organization's AWS Config Custom Policy rule. The metadata includes the runtime system in use, which accounts have debug logging enabled, and other custom rule metadata, such as resource type, resource ID of AWS resource, and organization trigger types that initiate AWS Config to evaluate AWS resources against a rule.

Required: No

Type: OrganizationCustomPolicyRuleMetadata

Update requires: No interruption

OrganizationCustomRuleMetadata

An OrganizationCustomRuleMetadata object.

Required: No

Type: OrganizationCustomRuleMetadata

Update requires: No interruption

OrganizationManagedRuleMetadata

An OrganizationManagedRuleMetadata object.

Required: No

Type: OrganizationManagedRuleMetadata

Update requires: No interruption

Return values

Ref

When you pass the logical ID of this resource to the intrinsic Ref function, Ref returns the OrganizationConfigRuleName.

For more information about using the Ref function, see Ref.

Fn::GetAtt

Examples

Managed Rule

The following example creates a managed organization config rule.

JSON

{ "BasicOrganizationConfigRule": { "Type": "AWS::Config::OrganizationConfigRule", "Properties": { "OrganizationConfigRuleName": "OrganizationConfigRuleName", "OrganizationManagedRuleMetadata": { "RuleIdentifier": "CLOUD_TRAIL_ENABLED", "Description": "Cloudtrail enabled rule" }, "ExcludedAccounts": [ "accountId" ] } } }

YAML

BasicOrganizationConfigRule: Type: "AWS::Config::OrganizationConfigRule" Properties: OrganizationConfigRuleName: "OrganizationConfigRuleName" OrganizationManagedRuleMetadata: RuleIdentifier: "CLOUD_TRAIL_ENABLED" Description: "Cloudtrail enabled rule" ExcludedAccounts: - "accountId"

Custom Rule

The following example creates a custom organization config rule.

JSON

{ "BasicOrganizationConfigRule": { "Type": "AWS::Config::OrganizationConfigRule", "Properties": { "OrganizationConfigRuleName": "OrganizationConfigRuleName", "OrganizationCustomRuleMetadata": { "LambdaFunctionArn": "CustomRuleLambdaArn", "OrganizationConfigRuleTriggerTypes": [ "ScheduledNotification" ] }, "ExcludedAccounts": [ "accountId" ] } } }

YAML

BasicOrganizationConfigRule: Type: "AWS::Config::OrganizationConfigRule" Properties: OrganizationConfigRuleName: "OrganizationConfigRuleName" OrganizationCustomRuleMetadata: LambdaFunctionArn: "CustomRuleLambdaArn" OrganizationConfigRuleTriggerTypes: - "ScheduledNotification" ExcludedAccounts: - "accountId"