This document describes the audit logs created by Cloud SQL for SQL Server as part of Cloud Audit Logs.
Overview
Google Cloud services write audit logs to help you answer the questions, "Who did what, where, and when?" within your Google Cloud resources.
Your Google Cloud projects contain only the audit logs for resources that are directly within the Google Cloud project. Other Google Cloud resources, such as folders, organizations, and billing accounts, contain the audit logs for the entity itself.
For a general overview of Cloud Audit Logs, see Cloud Audit Logs overview. For a deeper understanding of the audit log format, see Understand audit logs.
Available audit logs
The following types of audit logs are available for Cloud SQL for SQL Server:
-
Admin Activity audit logs
Includes "admin write" operations that write metadata or configuration information.
You can't disable Admin Activity audit logs.
-
Data Access audit logs
Includes "admin read" operations that read metadata or configuration information. Also includes "data read" and "data write" operations that read or write user-provided data.
To receive Data Access audit logs, you must explicitly enable them.
-
System Event audit logs
Identifies automated Google Cloud actions that modify the configuration of resources.
You can't disable System Event audit logs.
For fuller descriptions of the audit log types, see Types of audit logs.
Audited operations
The following table summarizes which API operations correspond to each audit log type in Cloud SQL for SQL Server:
Audit logs category | Cloud SQL for SQL Server operations |
---|---|
Admin Activity audit logs | Cloud SQL Admin API operations that modify instance metadata (DATA_WRITE): cloudsql.backupRuns.create cloudsql.backupRuns.delete cloudsql.instances.addServerCa cloudsql.instances.clone cloudsql.instances.connect cloudsql.instances.create cloudsql.instances.createTagBinding cloudsql.instances.delete cloudsql.instances.deleteTagBinding cloudsql.instances.demoteMaster cloudsql.instances.failover cloudsql.instances.promoteReplica cloudsql.instances.resetSslConfig cloudsql.instances.restart cloudsql.instances.restoreBackup cloudsql.instances.rotateServerCa cloudsql.instances.startReplica cloudsql.instances.stopReplica cloudsql.instances.truncateLog cloudsql.instances.update cloudsql.sslCerts.create cloudsql.sslCerts.delete |
Data Access audit logs | Cloud SQL Admin API operations that read instance metadata (DATA_READ): cloudsql.backupRuns.get cloudsql.backupRuns.list cloudsql.databases.create cloudsql.databases.delete cloudsql.databases.get cloudsql.databases.list cloudsql.databases.update cloudsql.instances.executeSql cloudsql.instances.export cloudsql.instances.get cloudsql.instances.import cloudsql.instances.list cloudsql.instances.listEffectiveTags cloudsql.instances.listServerCas cloudsql.instances.listTagBindings cloudsql.instances.login cloudsql.sslCerts.get cloudsql.sslCerts.list cloudsql.users.create cloudsql.users.delete cloudsql.users.get cloudsql.users.list cloudsql.users.update |
System Event audit logs | Cloud SQL for SQL Server system actions performed on the instance: cloudsql.instances.automatedBackup cloudsql.instances.automaticStorageIncrease |
Audit log format
Audit log entries include the following objects:
The log entry itself, which is an object of type
LogEntry
. Useful fields include the following:- The
logName
contains the resource ID and audit log type. - The
resource
contains the target of the audited operation. - The
timeStamp
contains the time of the audited operation. - The
protoPayload
contains the audited information.
- The
The audit logging data, which is an
AuditLog
object held in theprotoPayload
field of the log entry.Optional service-specific audit information, which is a service-specific object. For earlier integrations, this object is held in the
serviceData
field of theAuditLog
object; later integrations use themetadata
field.
For other fields in these objects, and how to interpret them, review Understand audit logs.
Proto payload
protoPayload
contains the
operation data associated with an
audited event. Cloud SQL
generates protoPayload
when the update, automatic storage increase, and automated backup operations complete.
The following tables describe the audit log metadata fields of these operations:
Update: cloudsql.instances.update
Metadata field | |
---|---|
intents |
A list of intents and their properties' old and new values. |
intent |
The type of update operation. The value can be |
property |
The intent property that's updated. |
oldValue |
The value of the property before the update operation starts. |
newValue |
The value of the property after the update operation completes. |
Automatic storage increase: cloudsql.instances.automaticStorageIncrease
Metadata field | |
---|---|
storageIncreaseStartTime |
The start time of the automatic storage increase operation. |
storageIncreaseCompletionTime |
The end time of the automatic storage increase operation. |
oldStorageSizeGb |
The storage size before the automatic storage increase operation starts. |
newStorageSizeGb |
The storage size after the automatic storage increase operation completes. |
Automated backup: cloudsql.instances.automatedBackup
Metadata field | |
---|---|
windowStartTime |
The start time of the automated backup window. |
windowEndTime |
The end time of the automated backup window. |
backupStartTime |
The start time of the automated backup operation. |
backupCompletionTime |
The end time of the automated backup operation. |
windowStatus |
The status of a backup created during the backup window. |
For more information, see View audit logs for automated backups.
Log name
Cloud Audit Logs log names include resource identifiers indicating the Google Cloud project or other Google Cloud entity that owns the audit logs, and whether the log contains Admin Activity, Data Access, Policy Denied, or System Event audit logging data.
The following are the audit log names, including variables for the resource identifiers:
projects/PROJECT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Factivity projects/PROJECT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fdata_access projects/PROJECT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fsystem_event projects/PROJECT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fpolicy folders/FOLDER_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Factivity folders/FOLDER_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fdata_access folders/FOLDER_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fsystem_event folders/FOLDER_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fpolicy billingAccounts/BILLING_ACCOUNT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Factivity billingAccounts/BILLING_ACCOUNT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fdata_access billingAccounts/BILLING_ACCOUNT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fsystem_event billingAccounts/BILLING_ACCOUNT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fpolicy organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Factivity organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fdata_access organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fsystem_event organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com%2Fpolicy
Service name
Cloud SQL for SQL Server audit logs use the service name
cloudsql.googleapis.com
.
For a list of all the Cloud Logging API service names and their corresponding monitored resource type, see Map services to resources.
Resource types
Cloud SQL for SQL Server audit logs use the resource type
cloudsql_database
for all audit logs.
For a list of all the Cloud Logging monitored resource types and descriptive information, see Monitored resource types.
Caller identities
The IP address of the caller is held in the RequestMetadata.caller_ip
field of
the AuditLog
object. Logging might redact certain
caller identities and IP addresses.
For information about what information is redacted in audit logs, see Caller identities in audit logs.
Enable audit logging
System Event audit logs are always enabled; you can't disable them.
Admin Activity audit logs are always enabled; you can't disable them.
Data Access audit logs are disabled by default and aren't written unless explicitly enabled (the exception is Data Access audit logs for BigQuery, which can't be disabled).
For information about enabling some or all of your Data Access audit logs, see Enable Data Access audit logs.
Permissions and roles
IAM permissions and roles determine your ability to access audit logs data in Google Cloud resources.
When deciding which Logging-specific permissions and roles apply to your use case, consider the following:
The Logs Viewer role (
roles/logging.viewer
) gives you read-only access to Admin Activity, Policy Denied, and System Event audit logs. If you have just this role, you cannot view Data Access audit logs that are in the_Default
bucket.The Private Logs Viewer role
(roles/logging.privateLogViewer
) includes the permissions contained inroles/logging.viewer
, plus the ability to read Data Access audit logs in the_Default
bucket.Note that if these private logs are stored in user-defined buckets, then any user who has permissions to read logs in those buckets can read the private logs. For more information about log buckets, see Routing and storage overview.
For more information about the IAM permissions and roles that apply to audit logs data, see Access control with IAM.
View logs
You can query for all audit logs or you can query for logs by their
audit log name. The audit log name includes the
resource identifier
of the Google Cloud project, folder, billing account, or
organization for which you want to view audit logging information.
Your queries can specify indexed LogEntry
fields.
For more information about querying your logs, see
Build queries in the Logs Explorer
The Logs Explorer lets you view filter individual log entries. If you want to use SQL to analyze groups of log entries, then use the Log Analytics page. For more information, see:
Most audit logs can be viewed in Cloud Logging by using the Google Cloud console, the gcloud CLI, or the Logging API. However, for audit logs related to billing, you can only use the gcloud CLI or the Logging API.
Console
In the Google Cloud console, you can use the Logs Explorer to retrieve your audit log entries for your Google Cloud project, folder, or organization:
-
In the Google Cloud console, go to the Logs Explorer page:
If you use the search bar to find this page, then select the result whose subheading is Logging.
Select an existing Google Cloud project, folder, or organization.
To display all audit logs, enter either of the following queries into the query-editor field, and then click Run query:
logName:"cloudaudit.googleapis.com"
protoPayload."@type"="type.googleapis.com/google.cloud.audit.AuditLog"
To display the audit logs for a specific resource and audit log type, in the Query builder pane, do the following:
In Resource type, select the Google Cloud resource whose audit logs you want to see.
In Log name, select the audit log type that you want to see:
- For Admin Activity audit logs, select activity.
- For Data Access audit logs, select data_access.
- For System Event audit logs, select system_event.
- For Policy Denied audit logs, select policy.
Click Run query.
If you don't see these options, then there aren't any audit logs of that type available in the Google Cloud project, folder, or organization.
If you're experiencing issues when trying to view logs in the Logs Explorer, see the troubleshooting information.
For more information about querying by using the Logs Explorer, see Build queries in the Logs Explorer.
gcloud
The gcloud CLI provides a command-line interface to the Logging API. Supply a valid resource identifier in each of the log names. For example, if your query includes a PROJECT_ID, then the project identifier you supply must refer to the currently selected Google Cloud project.
To read your Google Cloud project-level audit log entries, run the following command:
gcloud logging read "logName : projects/PROJECT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com" \ --project=PROJECT_ID
To read your folder-level audit log entries, run the following command:
gcloud logging read "logName : folders/FOLDER_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com" \ --folder=FOLDER_ID
To read your organization-level audit log entries, run the following command:
gcloud logging read "logName : organizations/ORGANIZATION_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com" \ --organization=ORGANIZATION_ID
To read your Cloud Billing account-level audit log entries, run the following command:
gcloud logging read "logName : billingAccounts/BILLING_ACCOUNT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com" \ --billing-account=BILLING_ACCOUNT_ID
Add the --freshness
flag
to your command to read logs that are more than 1 day old.
For more information about using the gcloud CLI, see
gcloud logging read
.
REST
When building your queries, supply a valid resource identifier in each of the log names. For example, if your query includes a PROJECT_ID, then the project identifier you supply must refer to the currently selected Google Cloud project.
For example, to use the Logging API to view your project-level audit log entries, do the following:
Go to the Try this API section in the documentation for the
entries.list
method.Put the following into the Request body part of the Try this API form. Clicking this prepopulated form automatically fills the request body, but you need to supply a valid PROJECT_ID in each of the log names.
{ "resourceNames": [ "projects/PROJECT_ID" ], "pageSize": 5, "filter": "logName : projects/PROJECT_ID/logs/cloudaudit.googleapis.com" }
Click Execute.
Route audit logs
You can route audit logs to supported destinations in the same way that you can route other kinds of logs. Here are some reasons you might want to route your audit logs:
To keep audit logs for a longer period of time or to use more powerful search capabilities, you can route copies of your audit logs to Cloud Storage, BigQuery, or Pub/Sub. Using Pub/Sub, you can route to other applications, other repositories, and to third parties.
To manage your audit logs across an entire organization, you can create aggregated sinks that can route logs from any or all Google Cloud projects in the organization.
- If your enabled Data Access audit logs are pushing your Google Cloud projects over your log allotments, you can create sinks that exclude the Data Access audit logs from Logging.
For instructions about routing logs, see Route logs to supported destinations.
Pricing
For more information about pricing, see Cloud Logging pricing summary.