- Resource: Finding
- State
- SecurityMarks
- Severity
- Mute
- FindingClass
- Indicator
- ProcessSignature
- MemoryHashSignature
- Detection
- YaraRuleSignature
- SignatureType
- Vulnerability
- Cve
- Reference
- Cvssv3
- AttackVector
- AttackComplexity
- PrivilegesRequired
- UserInteraction
- Scope
- Impact
- RiskRating
- ExploitationActivity
- Package
- SecurityBulletin
- ExternalSystem
- TicketInfo
- MitreAttack
- Tactic
- Technique
- Access
- Geolocation
- ServiceAccountDelegationInfo
- Connection
- Protocol
- MuteInfo
- StaticMute
- DynamicMuteRecord
- Process
- File
- DiskPath
- EnvironmentVariable
- ContactDetails
- Contact
- Compliance
- Exfiltration
- ExfilResource
- IamBinding
- Action
- Container
- Label
- Kubernetes
- Pod
- Node
- NodePool
- Role
- Kind
- Binding
- Subject
- AuthType
- AccessReview
- Object
- Database
- AttackExposure
- State
- CloudDlpInspection
- CloudDlpDataProfile
- ParentType
- KernelRootkit
- OrgPolicy
- Application
- BackupDisasterRecovery
- SecurityPosture
- PolicyDriftDetails
- LogEntry
- CloudLoggingEntry
- LoadBalancer
- CloudArmor
- SecurityPolicy
- Requests
- AdaptiveProtection
- Attack
- Notebook
- ToxicCombination
- GroupMembership
- GroupType
- DataAccessEvent
- Operation
- DataFlowEvent
- Operation
- Methods
Resource: Finding
Security Command Center finding.
A finding is a record of assessment data like security, risk, health, or privacy, that is ingested into Security Command Center for presentation, notification, analysis, policy testing, and enforcement. For example, a cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerability in an App Engine application is a finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string, "parent": string, "resourceName": string, "state": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
The relative resource name of the finding. Example: "organizations/{organization_id}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}", "folders/{folder_id}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}", "projects/{projectId}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}". |
parent |
The relative resource name of the source the finding belongs to. See: https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names#relative_resource_name This field is immutable after creation time. For example: "organizations/{organization_id}/sources/{source_id}" |
resource |
For findings on Google Cloud resources, the full resource name of the Google Cloud resource this finding is for. See: https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names#full_resource_name When the finding is for a non-Google Cloud resource, the resourceName can be a customer or partner defined string. This field is immutable after creation time. |
state |
The state of the finding. |
category |
The additional taxonomy group within findings from a given source. This field is immutable after creation time. Example: "XSS_FLASH_INJECTION" |
external |
The URI that, if available, points to a web page outside of Security Command Center where additional information about the finding can be found. This field is guaranteed to be either empty or a well formed URL. |
source |
Source specific properties. These properties are managed by the source that writes the finding. The key names in the sourceProperties map must be between 1 and 255 characters, and must start with a letter and contain alphanumeric characters or underscores only. An object containing a list of |
security |
Output only. User specified security marks. These marks are entirely managed by the user and come from the SecurityMarks resource that belongs to the finding. |
event |
The time the finding was first detected. If an existing finding is updated, then this is the time the update occurred. For example, if the finding represents an open firewall, this property captures the time the detector believes the firewall became open. The accuracy is determined by the detector. If the finding is later resolved, then this time reflects when the finding was resolved. This must not be set to a value greater than the current timestamp. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
create |
The time at which the finding was created in Security Command Center. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
severity |
The severity of the finding. This field is managed by the source that writes the finding. |
canonical |
The canonical name of the finding. It's either "organizations/{organization_id}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}", "folders/{folder_id}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}" or "projects/{project_number}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}", depending on the closest CRM ancestor of the resource associated with the finding. |
mute |
Indicates the mute state of a finding (either muted, unmuted or undefined). Unlike other attributes of a finding, a finding provider shouldn't set the value of mute. |
finding |
The class of the finding. |
indicator |
Represents what's commonly known as an indicator of compromise (IoC) in computer forensics. This is an artifact observed on a network or in an operating system that, with high confidence, indicates a computer intrusion. For more information, see Indicator of compromise. |
vulnerability |
Represents vulnerability-specific fields like CVE and CVSS scores. CVE stands for Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (https://cve.mitre.org/about/) |
mute |
Output only. The most recent time this finding was muted or unmuted. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
external |
Output only. Third party SIEM/SOAR fields within SCC, contains external system information and external system finding fields. An object containing a list of |
mitre |
MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques related to this finding. See: https://attack.mitre.org |
access |
Access details associated with the finding, such as more information on the caller, which method was accessed, and from where. |
connections[] |
Contains information about the IP connection associated with the finding. |
mute |
Records additional information about the mute operation, for example, the mute configuration that muted the finding and the user who muted the finding. |
mute |
Output only. The mute information regarding this finding. |
processes[] |
Represents operating system processes associated with the Finding. |
contacts |
Output only. Map containing the points of contact for the given finding. The key represents the type of contact, while the value contains a list of all the contacts that pertain. Please refer to: https://cloud.google.com/resource-manager/docs/managing-notification-contacts#notification-categories
An object containing a list of |
compliances[] |
Contains compliance information for security standards associated to the finding. |
parent |
Output only. The human readable display name of the finding source such as "Event Threat Detection" or "Security Health Analytics". |
description |
Contains more details about the finding. |
exfiltration |
Represents exfiltrations associated with the finding. |
iam |
Represents IAM bindings associated with the finding. |
next |
Steps to address the finding. |
module |
Unique identifier of the module which generated the finding. Example: folders/598186756061/securityHealthAnalyticsSettings/customModules/56799441161885 |
containers[] |
Containers associated with the finding. This field provides information for both Kubernetes and non-Kubernetes containers. |
kubernetes |
Kubernetes resources associated with the finding. |
database |
Database associated with the finding. |
attack |
The results of an attack path simulation relevant to this finding. |
files[] |
File associated with the finding. |
cloud |
Cloud Data Loss Prevention (Cloud DLP) inspection results that are associated with the finding. |
cloud |
Cloud DLP data profile that is associated with the finding. |
kernel |
Signature of the kernel rootkit. |
org |
Contains information about the org policies associated with the finding. |
application |
Represents an application associated with the finding. |
backup |
Fields related to Backup and DR findings. |
security |
The security posture associated with the finding. |
log |
Log entries that are relevant to the finding. |
load |
The load balancers associated with the finding. |
cloud |
Fields related to Cloud Armor findings. |
notebook |
Notebook associated with the finding. |
toxic |
Contains details about a group of security issues that, when the issues occur together, represent a greater risk than when the issues occur independently. A group of such issues is referred to as a toxic combination. This field cannot be updated. Its value is ignored in all update requests. |
group |
Contains details about groups of which this finding is a member. A group is a collection of findings that are related in some way. This field cannot be updated. Its value is ignored in all update requests. |
data |
Data access events associated with the finding. |
data |
Data flow events associated with the finding. |
State
The state of the finding.
Enums | |
---|---|
STATE_UNSPECIFIED |
Unspecified state. |
ACTIVE |
The finding requires attention and has not been addressed yet. |
INACTIVE |
The finding has been fixed, triaged as a non-issue or otherwise addressed and is no longer active. |
SecurityMarks
User specified security marks that are attached to the parent Security Command Center resource. Security marks are scoped within a Security Command Center organization -- they can be modified and viewed by all users who have proper permissions on the organization.
JSON representation |
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{ "name": string, "marks": { string: string, ... }, "canonicalName": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
The relative resource name of the SecurityMarks. See: https://cloud.google.com/apis/design/resource_names#relative_resource_name Examples: "organizations/{organization_id}/assets/{asset_id}/securityMarks" "organizations/{organization_id}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}/securityMarks". |
marks |
Mutable user specified security marks belonging to the parent resource. Constraints are as follows:
An object containing a list of |
canonical |
The canonical name of the marks. Examples: "organizations/{organization_id}/assets/{asset_id}/securityMarks" "folders/{folder_id}/assets/{asset_id}/securityMarks" "projects/{project_number}/assets/{asset_id}/securityMarks" "organizations/{organization_id}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}/securityMarks" "folders/{folder_id}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}/securityMarks" "projects/{project_number}/sources/{source_id}/findings/{findingId}/securityMarks" |
Severity
The severity of the finding.
Enums | |
---|---|
SEVERITY_UNSPECIFIED |
This value is used for findings when a source doesn't write a severity value. |
CRITICAL |
Vulnerability: A critical vulnerability is easily discoverable by an external actor, exploitable, and results in the direct ability to execute arbitrary code, exfiltrate data, and otherwise gain additional access and privileges to cloud resources and workloads. Examples include publicly accessible unprotected user data and public SSH access with weak or no passwords. Threat: Indicates a threat that is able to access, modify, or delete data or execute unauthorized code within existing resources. |
HIGH |
Vulnerability: A high risk vulnerability can be easily discovered and exploited in combination with other vulnerabilities in order to gain direct access and the ability to execute arbitrary code, exfiltrate data, and otherwise gain additional access and privileges to cloud resources and workloads. An example is a database with weak or no passwords that is only accessible internally. This database could easily be compromised by an actor that had access to the internal network. Threat: Indicates a threat that is able to create new computational resources in an environment but not able to access data or execute code in existing resources. |
MEDIUM |
Vulnerability: A medium risk vulnerability could be used by an actor to gain access to resources or privileges that enable them to eventually (through multiple steps or a complex exploit) gain access and the ability to execute arbitrary code or exfiltrate data. An example is a service account with access to more projects than it should have. If an actor gains access to the service account, they could potentially use that access to manipulate a project the service account was not intended to. Threat: Indicates a threat that is able to cause operational impact but may not access data or execute unauthorized code. |
LOW |
Vulnerability: A low risk vulnerability hampers a security organization's ability to detect vulnerabilities or active threats in their deployment, or prevents the root cause investigation of security issues. An example is monitoring and logs being disabled for resource configurations and access. Threat: Indicates a threat that has obtained minimal access to an environment but is not able to access data, execute code, or create resources. |
Mute
Mute state a finding can be in.
Enums | |
---|---|
MUTE_UNSPECIFIED |
Unspecified. |
MUTED |
Finding has been muted. |
UNMUTED |
Finding has been unmuted. |
UNDEFINED |
Finding has never been muted/unmuted. |
FindingClass
Represents what kind of Finding it is.
Enums | |
---|---|
FINDING_CLASS_UNSPECIFIED |
Unspecified finding class. |
THREAT |
Describes unwanted or malicious activity. |
VULNERABILITY |
Describes a potential weakness in software that increases risk to Confidentiality & Integrity & Availability. |
MISCONFIGURATION |
Describes a potential weakness in cloud resource/asset configuration that increases risk. |
OBSERVATION |
Describes a security observation that is for informational purposes. |
SCC_ERROR |
Describes an error that prevents some SCC functionality. |
POSTURE_VIOLATION |
Describes a potential security risk due to a change in the security posture. |
TOXIC_COMBINATION |
Describes a group of security issues that, when the issues occur together, represent a greater risk than when the issues occur independently. A group of such issues is referred to as a toxic combination. |
SENSITIVE_DATA_RISK |
Describes a potential security risk to data assets that contain sensitive data. |
Indicator
Represents what's commonly known as an indicator of compromise (IoC) in computer forensics. This is an artifact observed on a network or in an operating system that, with high confidence, indicates a computer intrusion. For more information, see Indicator of compromise.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"ipAddresses": [
string
],
"domains": [
string
],
"signatures": [
{
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
ip |
The list of IP addresses that are associated with the finding. |
domains[] |
List of domains associated to the Finding. |
signatures[] |
The list of matched signatures indicating that the given process is present in the environment. |
uris[] |
The list of URIs associated to the Findings. |
ProcessSignature
Indicates what signature matched this process.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "signatureType": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
signature |
Describes the type of resource associated with the signature. |
Union field
|
|
memory |
Signature indicating that a binary family was matched. |
yara |
Signature indicating that a YARA rule was matched. |
MemoryHashSignature
A signature corresponding to memory page hashes.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"binaryFamily": string,
"detections": [
{
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
binary |
The binary family. |
detections[] |
The list of memory hash detections contributing to the binary family match. |
Detection
Memory hash detection contributing to the binary family match.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "binary": string, "percentPagesMatched": number } |
Fields | |
---|---|
binary |
The name of the binary associated with the memory hash signature detection. |
percent |
The percentage of memory page hashes in the signature that were matched. |
YaraRuleSignature
A signature corresponding to a YARA rule.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "yaraRule": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
yara |
The name of the YARA rule. |
SignatureType
Possible resource types to be associated with a signature.
Enums | |
---|---|
SIGNATURE_TYPE_UNSPECIFIED |
The default signature type. |
SIGNATURE_TYPE_PROCESS |
Used for signatures concerning processes. |
SIGNATURE_TYPE_FILE |
Used for signatures concerning disks. |
Vulnerability
Refers to common vulnerability fields e.g. cve, cvss, cwe etc.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "cve": { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
cve |
CVE stands for Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (https://cve.mitre.org/about/) |
offending |
The offending package is relevant to the finding. |
fixed |
The fixed package is relevant to the finding. |
security |
The security bulletin is relevant to this finding. |
Cve
CVE stands for Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures. Information from the CVE record that describes this vulnerability.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "id": string, "references": [ { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
id |
The unique identifier for the vulnerability. e.g. CVE-2021-34527 |
references[] |
Additional information about the CVE. e.g. https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2021-34527 |
cvssv3 |
Describe Common Vulnerability Scoring System specified at https://www.first.org/cvss/v3.1/specification-document |
upstream |
Whether upstream fix is available for the CVE. |
impact |
The potential impact of the vulnerability if it was to be exploited. |
exploitation |
The exploitation activity of the vulnerability in the wild. |
observed |
Whether or not the vulnerability has been observed in the wild. |
zero |
Whether or not the vulnerability was zero day when the finding was published. |
exploit |
Date the first publicly available exploit or PoC was released. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
first |
Date of the earliest known exploitation. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
Reference
Additional Links
JSON representation |
---|
{ "source": string, "uri": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
source |
Source of the reference e.g. NVD |
uri |
Uri for the mentioned source e.g. https://cve.mitre.org/cgi-bin/cvename.cgi?name=CVE-2021-34527. |
Cvssv3
Common Vulnerability Scoring System version 3.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "baseScore": number, "attackVector": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
base |
The base score is a function of the base metric scores. |
attack |
Base Metrics Represents the intrinsic characteristics of a vulnerability that are constant over time and across user environments. This metric reflects the context by which vulnerability exploitation is possible. |
attack |
This metric describes the conditions beyond the attacker's control that must exist in order to exploit the vulnerability. |
privileges |
This metric describes the level of privileges an attacker must possess before successfully exploiting the vulnerability. |
user |
This metric captures the requirement for a human user, other than the attacker, to participate in the successful compromise of the vulnerable component. |
scope |
The Scope metric captures whether a vulnerability in one vulnerable component impacts resources in components beyond its security scope. |
confidentiality |
This metric measures the impact to the confidentiality of the information resources managed by a software component due to a successfully exploited vulnerability. |
integrity |
This metric measures the impact to integrity of a successfully exploited vulnerability. |
availability |
This metric measures the impact to the availability of the impacted component resulting from a successfully exploited vulnerability. |
AttackVector
This metric reflects the context by which vulnerability exploitation is possible.
Enums | |
---|---|
ATTACK_VECTOR_UNSPECIFIED |
Invalid value. |
ATTACK_VECTOR_NETWORK |
The vulnerable component is bound to the network stack and the set of possible attackers extends beyond the other options listed below, up to and including the entire Internet. |
ATTACK_VECTOR_ADJACENT |
The vulnerable component is bound to the network stack, but the attack is limited at the protocol level to a logically adjacent topology. |
ATTACK_VECTOR_LOCAL |
The vulnerable component is not bound to the network stack and the attacker's path is via read/write/execute capabilities. |
ATTACK_VECTOR_PHYSICAL |
The attack requires the attacker to physically touch or manipulate the vulnerable component. |
AttackComplexity
This metric describes the conditions beyond the attacker's control that must exist in order to exploit the vulnerability.
Enums | |
---|---|
ATTACK_COMPLEXITY_UNSPECIFIED |
Invalid value. |
ATTACK_COMPLEXITY_LOW |
Specialized access conditions or extenuating circumstances do not exist. An attacker can expect repeatable success when attacking the vulnerable component. |
ATTACK_COMPLEXITY_HIGH |
A successful attack depends on conditions beyond the attacker's control. That is, a successful attack cannot be accomplished at will, but requires the attacker to invest in some measurable amount of effort in preparation or execution against the vulnerable component before a successful attack can be expected. |
PrivilegesRequired
This metric describes the level of privileges an attacker must possess before successfully exploiting the vulnerability.
Enums | |
---|---|
PRIVILEGES_REQUIRED_UNSPECIFIED |
Invalid value. |
PRIVILEGES_REQUIRED_NONE |
The attacker is unauthorized prior to attack, and therefore does not require any access to settings or files of the vulnerable system to carry out an attack. |
PRIVILEGES_REQUIRED_LOW |
The attacker requires privileges that provide basic user capabilities that could normally affect only settings and files owned by a user. Alternatively, an attacker with Low privileges has the ability to access only non-sensitive resources. |
PRIVILEGES_REQUIRED_HIGH |
The attacker requires privileges that provide significant (e.g., administrative) control over the vulnerable component allowing access to component-wide settings and files. |
UserInteraction
This metric captures the requirement for a human user, other than the attacker, to participate in the successful compromise of the vulnerable component.
Enums | |
---|---|
USER_INTERACTION_UNSPECIFIED |
Invalid value. |
USER_INTERACTION_NONE |
The vulnerable system can be exploited without interaction from any user. |
USER_INTERACTION_REQUIRED |
Successful exploitation of this vulnerability requires a user to take some action before the vulnerability can be exploited. |
Scope
The Scope metric captures whether a vulnerability in one vulnerable component impacts resources in components beyond its security scope.
Enums | |
---|---|
SCOPE_UNSPECIFIED |
Invalid value. |
SCOPE_UNCHANGED |
An exploited vulnerability can only affect resources managed by the same security authority. |
SCOPE_CHANGED |
An exploited vulnerability can affect resources beyond the security scope managed by the security authority of the vulnerable component. |
Impact
The Impact metrics capture the effects of a successfully exploited vulnerability on the component that suffers the worst outcome that is most directly and predictably associated with the attack.
Enums | |
---|---|
IMPACT_UNSPECIFIED |
Invalid value. |
IMPACT_HIGH |
High impact. |
IMPACT_LOW |
Low impact. |
IMPACT_NONE |
No impact. |
RiskRating
The possible values of impact of the vulnerability if it was to be exploited.
Enums | |
---|---|
RISK_RATING_UNSPECIFIED |
Invalid or empty value. |
LOW |
Exploitation would have little to no security impact. |
MEDIUM |
Exploitation would enable attackers to perform activities, or could allow attackers to have a direct impact, but would require additional steps. |
HIGH |
Exploitation would enable attackers to have a notable direct impact without needing to overcome any major mitigating factors. |
CRITICAL |
Exploitation would fundamentally undermine the security of affected systems, enable actors to perform significant attacks with minimal effort, with little to no mitigating factors to overcome. |
ExploitationActivity
The possible values of exploitation activity of the vulnerability in the wild.
Enums | |
---|---|
EXPLOITATION_ACTIVITY_UNSPECIFIED |
Invalid or empty value. |
WIDE |
Exploitation has been reported or confirmed to widely occur. |
CONFIRMED |
Limited reported or confirmed exploitation activities. |
AVAILABLE |
Exploit is publicly available. |
ANTICIPATED |
No known exploitation activity, but has a high potential for exploitation. |
NO_KNOWN |
No known exploitation activity. |
Package
Package is a generic definition of a package.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "packageName": string, "cpeUri": string, "packageType": string, "packageVersion": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
package |
The name of the package where the vulnerability was detected. |
cpe |
The CPE URI where the vulnerability was detected. |
package |
Type of package, for example, os, maven, or go. |
package |
The version of the package. |
SecurityBulletin
SecurityBulletin are notifications of vulnerabilities of Google products.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "bulletinId": string, "submissionTime": string, "suggestedUpgradeVersion": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
bulletin |
ID of the bulletin corresponding to the vulnerability. |
submission |
Submission time of this Security Bulletin. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
suggested |
This represents a version that the cluster receiving this notification should be upgraded to, based on its current version. For example, 1.15.0 |
ExternalSystem
Representation of third party SIEM/SOAR fields within SCC.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"name": string,
"assignees": [
string
],
"externalUid": string,
"status": string,
"externalSystemUpdateTime": string,
"caseUri": string,
"casePriority": string,
"caseSla": string,
"caseCreateTime": string,
"caseCloseTime": string,
"ticketInfo": {
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Full resource name of the external system, for example: "organizations/1234/sources/5678/findings/123456/externalSystems/jira", "folders/1234/sources/5678/findings/123456/externalSystems/jira", "projects/1234/sources/5678/findings/123456/externalSystems/jira" |
assignees[] |
References primary/secondary etc assignees in the external system. |
external |
The identifier that's used to track the finding's corresponding case in the external system. |
status |
The most recent status of the finding's corresponding case, as reported by the external system. |
external |
The time when the case was last updated, as reported by the external system. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
case |
The link to the finding's corresponding case in the external system. |
case |
The priority of the finding's corresponding case in the external system. |
case |
The SLA of the finding's corresponding case in the external system. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
case |
The time when the case was created, as reported by the external system. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
case |
The time when the case was closed, as reported by the external system. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
ticket |
Information about the ticket, if any, that is being used to track the resolution of the issue that is identified by this finding. |
TicketInfo
Information about the ticket, if any, that is being used to track the resolution of the issue that is identified by this finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "id": string, "assignee": string, "description": string, "uri": string, "status": string, "updateTime": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
id |
The identifier of the ticket in the ticket system. |
assignee |
The assignee of the ticket in the ticket system. |
description |
The description of the ticket in the ticket system. |
uri |
The link to the ticket in the ticket system. |
status |
The latest status of the ticket, as reported by the ticket system. |
update |
The time when the ticket was last updated, as reported by the ticket system. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
MitreAttack
MITRE ATT&CK tactics and techniques related to this finding. See: https://attack.mitre.org
JSON representation |
---|
{ "primaryTactic": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
primary |
The MITRE ATT&CK tactic most closely represented by this finding, if any. |
primary |
The MITRE ATT&CK technique most closely represented by this finding, if any. primaryTechniques is a repeated field because there are multiple levels of MITRE ATT&CK techniques. If the technique most closely represented by this finding is a sub-technique (e.g. |
additional |
Additional MITRE ATT&CK tactics related to this finding, if any. |
additional |
Additional MITRE ATT&CK techniques related to this finding, if any, along with any of their respective parent techniques. |
version |
The MITRE ATT&CK version referenced by the above fields. E.g. "8". |
Tactic
MITRE ATT&CK tactics that can be referenced by SCC findings. See: https://attack.mitre.org/tactics/enterprise/
Enums | |
---|---|
TACTIC_UNSPECIFIED |
Unspecified value. |
RECONNAISSANCE |
TA0043 |
RESOURCE_DEVELOPMENT |
TA0042 |
INITIAL_ACCESS |
TA0001 |
EXECUTION |
TA0002 |
PERSISTENCE |
TA0003 |
PRIVILEGE_ESCALATION |
TA0004 |
DEFENSE_EVASION |
TA0005 |
CREDENTIAL_ACCESS |
TA0006 |
DISCOVERY |
TA0007 |
LATERAL_MOVEMENT |
TA0008 |
COLLECTION |
TA0009 |
COMMAND_AND_CONTROL |
TA0011 |
EXFILTRATION |
TA0010 |
IMPACT |
TA0040 |
Technique
MITRE ATT&CK techniques that can be referenced by SCC findings. See: https://attack.mitre.org/techniques/enterprise/ Next ID: 65
Enums | |
---|---|
TECHNIQUE_UNSPECIFIED |
Unspecified value. |
MASQUERADING |
T1036 |
MATCH_LEGITIMATE_NAME_OR_LOCATION |
T1036.005 |
BOOT_OR_LOGON_INITIALIZATION_SCRIPTS |
T1037 |
STARTUP_ITEMS |
T1037.005 |
NETWORK_SERVICE_DISCOVERY |
T1046 |
PROCESS_DISCOVERY |
T1057 |
COMMAND_AND_SCRIPTING_INTERPRETER |
T1059 |
UNIX_SHELL |
T1059.004 |
PYTHON |
T1059.006 |
EXPLOITATION_FOR_PRIVILEGE_ESCALATION |
T1068 |
PERMISSION_GROUPS_DISCOVERY |
T1069 |
CLOUD_GROUPS |
T1069.003 |
INDICATOR_REMOVAL_FILE_DELETION |
T1070.004 |
APPLICATION_LAYER_PROTOCOL |
T1071 |
DNS |
T1071.004 |
SOFTWARE_DEPLOYMENT_TOOLS |
T1072 |
VALID_ACCOUNTS |
T1078 |
DEFAULT_ACCOUNTS |
T1078.001 |
LOCAL_ACCOUNTS |
T1078.003 |
CLOUD_ACCOUNTS |
T1078.004 |
PROXY |
T1090 |
EXTERNAL_PROXY |
T1090.002 |
MULTI_HOP_PROXY |
T1090.003 |
ACCOUNT_MANIPULATION |
T1098 |
ADDITIONAL_CLOUD_CREDENTIALS |
T1098.001 |
SSH_AUTHORIZED_KEYS |
T1098.004 |
ADDITIONAL_CONTAINER_CLUSTER_ROLES |
T1098.006 |
INGRESS_TOOL_TRANSFER |
T1105 |
NATIVE_API |
T1106 |
BRUTE_FORCE |
T1110 |
SHARED_MODULES |
T1129 |
ACCESS_TOKEN_MANIPULATION |
T1134 |
TOKEN_IMPERSONATION_OR_THEFT |
T1134.001 |
EXPLOIT_PUBLIC_FACING_APPLICATION |
T1190 |
DOMAIN_POLICY_MODIFICATION |
T1484 |
DATA_DESTRUCTION |
T1485 |
SERVICE_STOP |
T1489 |
INHIBIT_SYSTEM_RECOVERY |
T1490 |
RESOURCE_HIJACKING |
T1496 |
NETWORK_DENIAL_OF_SERVICE |
T1498 |
CLOUD_SERVICE_DISCOVERY |
T1526 |
STEAL_APPLICATION_ACCESS_TOKEN |
T1528 |
ACCOUNT_ACCESS_REMOVAL |
T1531 |
STEAL_WEB_SESSION_COOKIE |
T1539 |
CREATE_OR_MODIFY_SYSTEM_PROCESS |
T1543 |
ABUSE_ELEVATION_CONTROL_MECHANISM |
T1548 |
UNSECURED_CREDENTIALS |
T1552 |
MODIFY_AUTHENTICATION_PROCESS |
T1556 |
IMPAIR_DEFENSES |
T1562 |
DISABLE_OR_MODIFY_TOOLS |
T1562.001 |
EXFILTRATION_OVER_WEB_SERVICE |
T1567 |
EXFILTRATION_TO_CLOUD_STORAGE |
T1567.002 |
DYNAMIC_RESOLUTION |
T1568 |
LATERAL_TOOL_TRANSFER |
T1570 |
MODIFY_CLOUD_COMPUTE_INFRASTRUCTURE |
T1578 |
CREATE_SNAPSHOT |
T1578.001 |
CLOUD_INFRASTRUCTURE_DISCOVERY |
T1580 |
OBTAIN_CAPABILITIES |
T1588 |
ACTIVE_SCANNING |
T1595 |
SCANNING_IP_BLOCKS |
T1595.001 |
CONTAINER_ADMINISTRATION_COMMAND |
T1609 |
ESCAPE_TO_HOST |
T1611 |
CONTAINER_AND_RESOURCE_DISCOVERY |
T1613 |
STEAL_OR_FORGE_AUTHENTICATION_CERTIFICATES |
T1649 |
Access
Represents an access event.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "principalEmail": string, "callerIp": string, "callerIpGeo": { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
principal |
Associated email, such as "foo@google.com". The email address of the authenticated user or a service account acting on behalf of a third party principal making the request. For third party identity callers, the |
caller |
Caller's IP address, such as "1.1.1.1". |
caller |
The caller IP's geolocation, which identifies where the call came from. |
user |
Type of user agent associated with the finding. For example, an operating system shell or an embedded or standalone application. |
user |
The caller's user agent string associated with the finding. |
service |
This is the API service that the service account made a call to, e.g. "iam.googleapis.com" |
method |
The method that the service account called, e.g. "SetIamPolicy". |
principal |
A string that represents the principalSubject that is associated with the identity. Unlike |
service |
The name of the service account key that was used to create or exchange credentials when authenticating the service account that made the request. This is a scheme-less URI full resource name. For example: "//iam.googleapis.com/projects/{PROJECT_ID}/serviceAccounts/{ACCOUNT}/keys/{key}". |
service |
The identity delegation history of an authenticated service account that made the request. The |
user |
A string that represents a username. The username provided depends on the type of the finding and is likely not an IAM principal. For example, this can be a system username if the finding is related to a virtual machine, or it can be an application login username. |
Geolocation
Represents a geographical location for a given access.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "regionCode": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
region |
A CLDR. |
ServiceAccountDelegationInfo
Identity delegation history of an authenticated service account.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "principalEmail": string, "principalSubject": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
principal |
The email address of a Google account. |
principal |
A string representing the principalSubject associated with the identity. As compared to |
Connection
Contains information about the IP connection associated with the finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"destinationIp": string,
"destinationPort": integer,
"sourceIp": string,
"sourcePort": integer,
"protocol": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
destination |
Destination IP address. Not present for sockets that are listening and not connected. |
destination |
Destination port. Not present for sockets that are listening and not connected. |
source |
Source IP address. |
source |
Source port. |
protocol |
IANA Internet Protocol Number such as TCP(6) and UDP(17). |
Protocol
IANA Internet Protocol Number such as TCP(6) and UDP(17).
Enums | |
---|---|
PROTOCOL_UNSPECIFIED |
Unspecified protocol (not HOPOPT). |
ICMP |
Internet Control Message Protocol. |
TCP |
Transmission Control Protocol. |
UDP |
User Datagram Protocol. |
GRE |
Generic Routing Encapsulation. |
ESP |
Encap Security Payload. |
MuteInfo
Mute information about the finding, including whether the finding has a static mute or any matching dynamic mute rules.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "staticMute": { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
static |
If set, the static mute applied to this finding. Static mutes override dynamic mutes. If unset, there is no static mute. |
dynamic |
The list of dynamic mute rules that currently match the finding. |
StaticMute
Information about the static mute state. A static mute state overrides any dynamic mute rules that apply to this finding. The static mute state can be set by a static mute rule or by muting the finding directly.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"state": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
state |
The static mute state. If the value is |
apply |
When the static mute was applied. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
DynamicMuteRecord
The record of a dynamic mute rule that matches the finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "muteConfig": string, "matchTime": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
mute |
The relative resource name of the mute rule, represented by a mute config, that created this record, for example |
match |
When the dynamic mute rule first matched the finding. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
Process
Represents an operating system process.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string, "binary": { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
The process name, as displayed in utilities like |
binary |
File information for the process executable. |
libraries[] |
File information for libraries loaded by the process. |
script |
When the process represents the invocation of a script, |
args[] |
Process arguments as JSON encoded strings. |
arguments |
True if |
env |
Process environment variables. |
env |
True if |
pid |
The process ID. |
parent |
The parent process ID. |
File
File information about the related binary/library used by an executable, or the script used by a script interpreter
JSON representation |
---|
{
"path": string,
"size": string,
"sha256": string,
"hashedSize": string,
"partiallyHashed": boolean,
"contents": string,
"diskPath": {
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
path |
Absolute path of the file as a JSON encoded string. |
size |
Size of the file in bytes. |
sha256 |
SHA256 hash of the first hashedSize bytes of the file encoded as a hex string. If hashedSize == size, sha256 represents the SHA256 hash of the entire file. |
hashed |
The length in bytes of the file prefix that was hashed. If hashedSize == size, any hashes reported represent the entire file. |
partially |
True when the hash covers only a prefix of the file. |
contents |
Prefix of the file contents as a JSON-encoded string. |
disk |
Path of the file in terms of underlying disk/partition identifiers. |
DiskPath
Path of the file in terms of underlying disk/partition identifiers.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "partitionUuid": string, "relativePath": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
partition |
UUID of the partition (format https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/persistent_block_device_naming#by-uuid) |
relative |
Relative path of the file in the partition as a JSON encoded string. Example: /home/user1/executable_file.sh |
EnvironmentVariable
A name-value pair representing an environment variable used in an operating system process.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string, "val": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Environment variable name as a JSON encoded string. |
val |
Environment variable value as a JSON encoded string. |
ContactDetails
Details about specific contacts
JSON representation |
---|
{
"contacts": [
{
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
contacts[] |
A list of contacts |
Contact
The email address of a contact.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "email": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
email |
An email address. For example, " |
Compliance
Contains compliance information about a security standard indicating unmet recommendations.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "standard": string, "version": string, "ids": [ string ] } |
Fields | |
---|---|
standard |
Industry-wide compliance standards or benchmarks, such as CIS, PCI, and OWASP. |
version |
Version of the standard or benchmark, for example, 1.1 |
ids[] |
Policies within the standard or benchmark, for example, A.12.4.1 |
Exfiltration
Exfiltration represents a data exfiltration attempt from one or more sources to one or more targets. The sources
attribute lists the sources of the exfiltrated data. The targets
attribute lists the destinations the data was copied to.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "sources": [ { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
sources[] |
If there are multiple sources, then the data is considered "joined" between them. For instance, BigQuery can join multiple tables, and each table would be considered a source. |
targets[] |
If there are multiple targets, each target would get a complete copy of the "joined" source data. |
total |
Total exfiltrated bytes processed for the entire job. |
ExfilResource
Resource where data was exfiltrated from or exfiltrated to.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string, "components": [ string ] } |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
The resource's full resource name. |
components[] |
Subcomponents of the asset that was exfiltrated, like URIs used during exfiltration, table names, databases, and filenames. For example, multiple tables might have been exfiltrated from the same Cloud SQL instance, or multiple files might have been exfiltrated from the same Cloud Storage bucket. |
IamBinding
Represents a particular IAM binding, which captures a member's role addition, removal, or state.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"action": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
action |
The action that was performed on a Binding. |
role |
Role that is assigned to "members". For example, "roles/viewer", "roles/editor", or "roles/owner". |
member |
A single identity requesting access for a Cloud Platform resource, for example, "foo@google.com". |
Action
The type of action performed on a Binding in a policy.
Enums | |
---|---|
ACTION_UNSPECIFIED |
Unspecified. |
ADD |
Addition of a Binding. |
REMOVE |
Removal of a Binding. |
Container
Container associated with the finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"name": string,
"uri": string,
"imageId": string,
"labels": [
{
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Name of the container. |
uri |
Container image URI provided when configuring a pod or container. This string can identify a container image version using mutable tags. |
image |
Optional container image ID, if provided by the container runtime. Uniquely identifies the container image launched using a container image digest. |
labels[] |
Container labels, as provided by the container runtime. |
create |
The time that the container was created. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
Label
Represents a generic name-value label. A label has separate name and value fields to support filtering with the contains()
function. For more information, see Filtering on array-type fields.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string, "value": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Name of the label. |
value |
Value that corresponds to the label's name. |
Kubernetes
Kubernetes-related attributes.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "pods": [ { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
pods[] |
Kubernetes Pods associated with the finding. This field contains Pod records for each container that is owned by a Pod. |
nodes[] |
Provides Kubernetes node information. |
node |
GKE node pools associated with the finding. This field contains node pool information for each node, when it is available. |
roles[] |
Provides Kubernetes role information for findings that involve Roles or ClusterRoles. |
bindings[] |
Provides Kubernetes role binding information for findings that involve RoleBindings or ClusterRoleBindings. |
access |
Provides information on any Kubernetes access reviews (privilege checks) relevant to the finding. |
objects[] |
Kubernetes objects related to the finding. |
Pod
A Kubernetes Pod.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "ns": string, "name": string, "labels": [ { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
ns |
Kubernetes Pod namespace. |
name |
Kubernetes Pod name. |
labels[] |
Pod labels. For Kubernetes containers, these are applied to the container. |
containers[] |
Pod containers associated with this finding, if any. |
Node
Kubernetes nodes associated with the finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Full resource name of the Compute Engine VM running the cluster node. |
NodePool
Provides GKE node pool information.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"name": string,
"nodes": [
{
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Kubernetes node pool name. |
nodes[] |
Nodes associated with the finding. |
Role
Kubernetes Role or ClusterRole.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"kind": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
kind |
Role type. |
ns |
Role namespace. |
name |
Role name. |
Kind
Types of Kubernetes roles.
Enums | |
---|---|
KIND_UNSPECIFIED |
Role type is not specified. |
ROLE |
Kubernetes Role. |
CLUSTER_ROLE |
Kubernetes ClusterRole. |
Binding
Represents a Kubernetes RoleBinding or ClusterRoleBinding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "ns": string, "name": string, "role": { object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
ns |
Namespace for the binding. |
name |
Name for the binding. |
role |
The Role or ClusterRole referenced by the binding. |
subjects[] |
Represents one or more subjects that are bound to the role. Not always available for PATCH requests. |
Subject
Represents a Kubernetes subject.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"kind": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
kind |
Authentication type for the subject. |
ns |
Namespace for the subject. |
name |
Name for the subject. |
AuthType
Auth types that can be used for the subject's kind field.
Enums | |
---|---|
AUTH_TYPE_UNSPECIFIED |
Authentication is not specified. |
USER |
User with valid certificate. |
SERVICEACCOUNT |
Users managed by Kubernetes API with credentials stored as secrets. |
GROUP |
Collection of users. |
AccessReview
Conveys information about a Kubernetes access review (such as one returned by a kubectl auth
can-i
command) that was involved in a finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "group": string, "ns": string, "name": string, "resource": string, "subresource": string, "verb": string, "version": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
group |
The API group of the resource. "*" means all. |
ns |
Namespace of the action being requested. Currently, there is no distinction between no namespace and all namespaces. Both are represented by "" (empty). |
name |
The name of the resource being requested. Empty means all. |
resource |
The optional resource type requested. "*" means all. |
subresource |
The optional subresource type. |
verb |
A Kubernetes resource API verb, like get, list, watch, create, update, delete, proxy. "*" means all. |
version |
The API version of the resource. "*" means all. |
Object
Kubernetes object related to the finding, uniquely identified by GKNN. Used if the object Kind is not one of Pod, Node, NodePool, Binding, or AccessReview.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"group": string,
"kind": string,
"ns": string,
"name": string,
"containers": [
{
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
group |
Kubernetes object group, such as "policy.k8s.io/v1". |
kind |
Kubernetes object kind, such as "Namespace". |
ns |
Kubernetes object namespace. Must be a valid DNS label. Named "ns" to avoid collision with C++ namespace keyword. For details see https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/namespaces/. |
name |
Kubernetes object name. For details see https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/names/. |
containers[] |
Pod containers associated with this finding, if any. |
Database
Represents database access information, such as queries. A database may be a sub-resource of an instance (as in the case of Cloud SQL instances or Cloud Spanner instances), or the database instance itself. Some database resources might not have the full resource name populated because these resource types, such as Cloud SQL databases, are not yet supported by Cloud Asset Inventory. In these cases only the display name is provided.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string, "displayName": string, "userName": string, "query": string, "grantees": [ string ], "version": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Some database resources may not have the full resource name populated because these resource types are not yet supported by Cloud Asset Inventory (e.g. Cloud SQL databases). In these cases only the display name will be provided. The full resource name of the database that the user connected to, if it is supported by Cloud Asset Inventory. |
display |
The human-readable name of the database that the user connected to. |
user |
The username used to connect to the database. The username might not be an IAM principal and does not have a set format. |
query |
The SQL statement that is associated with the database access. |
grantees[] |
The target usernames, roles, or groups of an SQL privilege grant, which is not an IAM policy change. |
version |
The version of the database, for example, POSTGRES_14. See the complete list. |
AttackExposure
An attack exposure contains the results of an attack path simulation run.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"score": number,
"latestCalculationTime": string,
"attackExposureResult": string,
"state": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
score |
A number between 0 (inclusive) and infinity that represents how important this finding is to remediate. The higher the score, the more important it is to remediate. |
latest |
The most recent time the attack exposure was updated on this finding. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
attack |
The resource name of the attack path simulation result that contains the details regarding this attack exposure score. Example: |
state |
What state this AttackExposure is in. This captures whether or not an attack exposure has been calculated or not. |
exposed |
The number of high value resources that are exposed as a result of this finding. |
exposed |
The number of medium value resources that are exposed as a result of this finding. |
exposed |
The number of high value resources that are exposed as a result of this finding. |
State
This enum defines the various states an AttackExposure can be in.
Enums | |
---|---|
STATE_UNSPECIFIED |
The state is not specified. |
CALCULATED |
The attack exposure has been calculated. |
NOT_CALCULATED |
The attack exposure has not been calculated. |
CloudDlpInspection
Details about the Cloud Data Loss Prevention (Cloud DLP) inspection job that produced the finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "inspectJob": string, "infoType": string, "infoTypeCount": string, "fullScan": boolean } |
Fields | |
---|---|
inspect |
Name of the inspection job, for example, |
info |
The type of information (or infoType) found, for example, |
info |
The number of times Cloud DLP found this infoType within this job and resource. |
full |
Whether Cloud DLP scanned the complete resource or a sampled subset. |
CloudDlpDataProfile
The data profile associated with the finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"dataProfile": string,
"parentType": enum ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
data |
Name of the data profile, for example, |
parent |
The resource hierarchy level at which the data profile was generated. |
ParentType
Parents for configurations that produce data profile findings.
Enums | |
---|---|
PARENT_TYPE_UNSPECIFIED |
Unspecified parent type. |
ORGANIZATION |
Organization-level configurations. |
PROJECT |
Project-level configurations. |
KernelRootkit
Kernel mode rootkit signatures.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string, "unexpectedCodeModification": boolean, "unexpectedReadOnlyDataModification": boolean, "unexpectedFtraceHandler": boolean, "unexpectedKprobeHandler": boolean, "unexpectedKernelCodePages": boolean, "unexpectedSystemCallHandler": boolean, "unexpectedInterruptHandler": boolean, "unexpectedProcessesInRunqueue": boolean } |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Rootkit name, when available. |
unexpected |
True if unexpected modifications of kernel code memory are present. |
unexpected |
True if unexpected modifications of kernel read-only data memory are present. |
unexpected |
True if |
unexpected |
True if |
unexpected |
True if kernel code pages that are not in the expected kernel or module code regions are present. |
unexpected |
True if system call handlers that are are not in the expected kernel or module code regions are present. |
unexpected |
True if interrupt handlers that are are not in the expected kernel or module code regions are present. |
unexpected |
True if unexpected processes in the scheduler run queue are present. Such processes are in the run queue, but not in the process task list. |
OrgPolicy
Contains information about the org policies associated with the finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "name": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
The resource name of the org policy. Example: "organizations/{organization_id}/policies/{constraint_name}" |
Application
Represents an application associated with a finding.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "baseUri": string, "fullUri": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
base |
The base URI that identifies the network location of the application in which the vulnerability was detected. For example, |
full |
The full URI with payload that can be used to reproduce the vulnerability. For example, |
BackupDisasterRecovery
Information related to Google Cloud Backup and DR Service findings.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "backupTemplate": string, "policies": [ string ], "host": string, "applications": [ string ], "storagePool": string, "policyOptions": [ string ], "profile": string, "appliance": string, "backupType": string, "backupCreateTime": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
backup |
The name of a Backup and DR template which comprises one or more backup policies. See the Backup and DR documentation for more information. For example, |
policies[] |
The names of Backup and DR policies that are associated with a template and that define when to run a backup, how frequently to run a backup, and how long to retain the backup image. For example, |
host |
The name of a Backup and DR host, which is managed by the backup and recovery appliance and known to the management console. The host can be of type Generic (for example, Compute Engine, SQL Server, Oracle DB, SMB file system, etc.), vCenter, or an ESX server. See the Backup and DR documentation on hosts for more information. For example, |
applications[] |
The names of Backup and DR applications. An application is a VM, database, or file system on a managed host monitored by a backup and recovery appliance. For example, |
storage |
The name of the Backup and DR storage pool that the backup and recovery appliance is storing data in. The storage pool could be of type Cloud, Primary, Snapshot, or OnVault. See the Backup and DR documentation on storage pools. For example, |
policy |
The names of Backup and DR advanced policy options of a policy applying to an application. See the Backup and DR documentation on policy options. For example, |
profile |
The name of the Backup and DR resource profile that specifies the storage media for backups of application and VM data. See the Backup and DR documentation on profiles. For example, |
appliance |
The name of the Backup and DR appliance that captures, moves, and manages the lifecycle of backup data. For example, |
backup |
The backup type of the Backup and DR image. For example, |
backup |
The timestamp at which the Backup and DR backup was created. A timestamp in RFC3339 UTC "Zulu" format, with nanosecond resolution and up to nine fractional digits. Examples: |
SecurityPosture
Represents a posture that is deployed on Google Cloud by the Security Command Center Posture Management service. A posture contains one or more policy sets. A policy set is a group of policies that enforce a set of security rules on Google Cloud.
JSON representation |
---|
{
"name": string,
"revisionId": string,
"postureDeploymentResource": string,
"postureDeployment": string,
"changedPolicy": string,
"policySet": string,
"policy": string,
"policyDriftDetails": [
{
object ( |
Fields | |
---|---|
name |
Name of the posture, for example, |
revision |
The version of the posture, for example, |
posture |
The project, folder, or organization on which the posture is deployed, for example, |
posture |
The name of the posture deployment, for example, |
changed |
The name of the updated policy, for example, |
policy |
The name of the updated policyset, for example, |
policy |
The ID of the updated policy, for example, |
policy |
The details about a change in an updated policy that violates the deployed posture. |
PolicyDriftDetails
The policy field that violates the deployed posture and its expected and detected values.
JSON representation |
---|
{ "field": string, "expectedValue": string, "detectedValue": string } |
Fields | |
---|---|
field |
The name of the updated field, for example constraint.implementation.policy_rules[0].enforce |
expected |
The value of this field that was configured in a posture, for example, |
detected |
The detected value that violates the deployed posture, for example, |
LogEntry
An individual entry in a log.
JSON representation |
---|
{ // Union field |
Fields | |
---|---|
Union field
|
|
cloud |
An individual entry in a log stored in Cloud Logging. |
CloudLoggingEntry
Metadata taken from a Cloud Logging LogEntry
JSON representation |
---|
{ "insertId": string, "logId": string, "resourceContainer": string, "timestamp": string } |
Fields | |
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insert |
A unique identifier for the log entry. |
log |
The type of the log (part of |
resource |
The organization, folder, or project of the monitored resource that produced this log entry. |
timestamp |