Use custom organization policies

This page shows you how to use Organization Policy Service custom constraints to restrict specific operations on the following Google Cloud resources:

  • compute.googleapis.com/ExternalVpnGateway
  • compute.googleapis.com/TargetVpnGateway
  • compute.googleapis.com/VpnGateway
  • compute.googleapis.com/VpnTunnel

To learn more about Organization Policy, see Custom organization policies.

About organization policies and constraints

The Google Cloud Organization Policy Service 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 constraints and use those custom constraints in an organization policy.

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, refer to Hierarchy evaluation rules.

Before you begin

  1. Sign in to your Google Cloud account. If you're new to Google Cloud, create an account to evaluate how our products perform in real-world scenarios. New customers also get $300 in free credits to run, test, and deploy workloads.
  2. In the Google Cloud console, on the project selector page, select or create a Google Cloud project.

    Go to project selector

  3. Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.

  4. Install the Google Cloud CLI.
  5. To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:

    gcloud init
  6. In the Google Cloud console, on the project selector page, select or create a Google Cloud project.

    Go to project selector

  7. Make sure that billing is enabled for your Google Cloud project.

  8. Install the Google Cloud CLI.
  9. To initialize the gcloud CLI, run the following command:

    gcloud init
  10. Ensure that you know your organization ID.

Required roles

To get the permissions that you need to manage custom organization policies, ask your administrator to grant you the Organization Policy Administrator (roles/orgpolicy.policyAdmin) IAM role on the organization resource. For more information about granting roles, see Manage access to projects, folders, and organizations.

You might also be able to get the required permissions through 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 custom constraint, create a YAML file using the following format:

name: organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/customConstraints/CONSTRAINT_NAME
resourceTypes:
- RESOURCE_NAME
methodTypes:
- CREATE
- UPDATE
condition: "CONDITION"
actionType: ACTION
displayName: DISPLAY_NAME
description: DESCRIPTION

Replace the following:

  • ORGANIZATION_ID: your organization ID, such as 123456789.

  • CONSTRAINT_NAME: the name you want for your new custom constraint. A custom constraint must start with custom., and can only include uppercase letters, lowercase letters, or numbers. For example, custom.requireIpv6OnlyVpn. The maximum length of this field is 70 characters.

  • RESOURCE_NAME: the fully qualified name of the Google Cloud resource containing the object and field you want to restrict. For example, compute.googleapis.com/VpnGateway.

  • 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.stackType == 'IPV6_ONLY'".

  • ACTION: the action to take if the condition is met. Possible values are ALLOW and DENY.

  • 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 the gcloud org-policies set-custom-constraint command:
gcloud org-policies set-custom-constraint CONSTRAINT_PATH
Replace 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
Replace 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

  1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the Organization policies page.

    Go to Organization policies

  2. From the project picker, select the project for which you want to set the organization policy.
  3. From the list on the Organization policies page, select your constraint to view the Policy details page for that constraint.
  4. To configure the organization policy for this resource, click Manage policy.
  5. On the Edit policy page, select Override parent's policy.
  6. Click Add a rule.
  7. In the Enforcement section, select whether enforcement of this organization policy is on or off.
  8. 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.
  9. 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.
  10. 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.requireIpv6OnlyVpn.

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.

Test the custom organization policy

The following example creates a custom constraint and policy that requires all new HA VPNs in a specific project to support only IPv6.

Before you begin, you should know the following:

  • Your organization ID
  • A project ID

Create the constraint

  1. Save the following file as constraint-require-ipv6-only-vpn.yaml:

    name: organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/customConstraints/custom.requireIpv6OnlyVpn
    resourceTypes:
    - compute.googleapis.com/VpnGateway
    methodTypes:
    - CREATE
    condition: "resource.stackType == 'IPV6_ONLY'"
    actionType: ALLOW
    displayName: Only allow IPv6 traffic through HA VPN gateways.
    description: All HA VPN gateways must have IPV6_ONLY stack type.
    

    This defines a constraint where every HA VPN gateway must allow only IPv6 traffic.

  2. Apply the constraint:

    gcloud org-policies set-custom-constraint ~/constraint-require-ipv6-only-vpn.yaml
    
  3. Verify that the constraint exists:

    gcloud org-policies list-custom-constraints --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID
    

    The output is similar to the following:

    CUSTOM_CONSTRAINT                       ACTION_TYPE  METHOD_TYPES   RESOURCE_TYPES                      DISPLAY_NAME
    custom.requireIpv6OnlyVpn               ALLOW        CREATE         compute.googleapis.com/VpnGateway   Only allow IPv6 traffic through HA VPN gateways.
    ...
    

Create the policy

  1. Save the following file as policy-require-ipv6-only-vpn.yaml:

    name: projects/PROJECT_ID/policies/custom.enableGkeAutopilot
    spec:
      rules:
      - enforce: true
    

    Replace PROJECT_ID with your project ID.

  2. Apply the policy:

    gcloud org-policies set-policy ~/policy-require-ipv6-only-vpn.yaml
    
  3. Verify that the policy exists:

    gcloud org-policies list --project=PROJECT_ID
    

    The output is similar to the following:

    CONSTRAINT                             LIST_POLICY    BOOLEAN_POLICY    ETAG
    custom.requireIpv6OnlyVpn              -              SET               COCsm5QGENiXi2E=
    

After you apply the policy, wait for about two minutes for Google Cloud to start enforcing the policy.

Test the policy

gcloud compute vpn-gateways create ipv4gw \
    --network=default
    --region=us-central1
    --stack-type=IPV4_ONLY

The output is similar to the following:

Operation denied by custom org policies: ["customConstraints/custom.requireIpv6OnlyVpn": "IPv4 Cloud VPN gateways are not allowed."]

Example custom organization policies for common use cases

The following table provides the syntax of some custom constraints for common use cases:

Description Constraint syntax
Only allow IPv6 traffic through HA VPN gateways
  name: organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/customConstraints/custom.requireIpv6OnlyVpnGateways
  resourceTypes:
  - compute.googleapis.com/VpnGateway
  methodTypes:
  - CREATE
  condition: "resource.stackType == 'IPV6_ONLY'"
  actionType: ALLOW
  displayName: Only allow IPv6 traffic through HA VPN gateways
  description: All HA VPN gateways must have IPV6_ONLY stack type.
Force all Cloud VPN tunnels to use IKEv2 protocol
  name: organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/customConstraints/custom.requireIkev2
  resourceTypes:
  - compute.googleapis.com/VpnTunnel
  methodTypes:
  - CREATE
  condition: "resource.ikeVersion == 2"
  actionType: ALLOW
  displayName: Require all Cloud VPN tunnels to use IKEv2 protocol.
  description: All Cloud VPN tunnels must use IKEv2 protocol.

Cloud VPN supported resources

The following table lists the Cloud VPN resources that you can reference in custom constraints.

Resource Field
compute.googleapis.com/ExternalVpnGateway resource.description
resource.interfaces.ipAddress
resource.interfaces.ipv6Address
resource.name
resource.redundancyType
compute.googleapis.com/TargetVpnGateway resource.description
resource.name
resource.network
compute.googleapis.com/VpnGateway resource.description
resource.gatewayIpVersion
resource.name
resource.network
resource.stackType
resource.vpnInterfaces.interconnectAttachment
compute.googleapis.com/VpnTunnel resource.description
resource.ikeVersion
resource.localTrafficSelector
resource.name
resource.peerExternalGateway
resource.peerExternalGatewayInterface
resource.peerGcpGateway
resource.peerIp
resource.remoteTrafficSelector
resource.router
resource.targetVpnGateway
resource.vpnGateway
resource.vpnGatewayInterface

What's next